Signification
A question asking about quantity.
Contexte culturel
In the bazaar, asking 'Chand ta' is often the start of a bulk-buying negotiation. If you buy more 'ta', you expect a better price. When asking about children, it's polite to follow up the answer with 'Khoda hefzeshoon kone' (May God protect them). Some people avoid counting things like money or pieces of food out loud in front of others to avoid 'Cheshm-e Zakhm' (the evil eye). Bread is sacred. When you ask for 'Chand ta', the baker handles the bread with great respect. Never put bread on the floor.
The Finger Rule
If you can point and count it with your fingers, use 'Chand ta'.
No Plurals!
This is the #1 mistake. Never say 'Chand ta sib-ha'. Keep it 'Chand ta sib'.
Signification
A question asking about quantity.
The Finger Rule
If you can point and count it with your fingers, use 'Chand ta'.
No Plurals!
This is the #1 mistake. Never say 'Chand ta sib-ha'. Keep it 'Chand ta sib'.
Polite People
When asking about people you don't know well, use 'Chand nafar' to sound more educated and respectful.
Answering
When you answer, use the same 'ta' structure: 'Do ta', 'Se ta', etc.
Teste-toi
Fill in the blank with the correct phrase to ask 'How many apples?'.
....... سیب میخوای؟
Apples are countable, so we use 'چند تا'.
Which sentence is grammatically correct?
Choose the correct one:
Nouns after 'چند تا' must be singular.
Match the question to the situation.
Situation: You are at a bakery.
Bread is counted by the loaf in Iran, so 'چند تا' is used.
Complete the dialogue.
A: من سه تا برادر دارم. B: واقعا؟ من فقط ....... برادر دارم.
When saying 'one' as a quantity in this context, 'yeki' is the most natural colloquial form.
🎉 Score : /4
Aides visuelles
Countable vs Uncountable
Chand ta (Countable)
- • Apples
- • Books
- • Cars
- • People
Cheghadr (Uncountable)
- • Water
- • Rice
- • Love
- • Money
Banque d exercices
4 exercices....... سیب میخوای؟
Apples are countable, so we use 'چند تا'.
Choose the correct one:
Nouns after 'چند تا' must be singular.
Situation: You are at a bakery.
Bread is counted by the loaf in Iran, so 'چند تا' is used.
A: من سه تا برادر دارم. B: واقعا؟ من فقط ....... برادر دارم.
When saying 'one' as a quantity in this context, 'yeki' is the most natural colloquial form.
🎉 Score : /4
Questions fréquentes
10 questionsNo, for money (price), use 'Cheghadr' or 'Chande'. However, you can use 'Chand ta' for individual coins or bills (e.g., 'Chand ta اسکناس؟').
In spoken Persian, yes, it sounds very natural. In formal writing, it is often omitted.
You can just say 'Chand ta?' while pointing. It's perfectly correct.
Use 'Chand nafar' for a more polite and standard approach, though 'Chand ta' is okay with close friends.
No. For 'How many hours', use 'Chand saat'. For 'What time is it', use 'Saat chande?'.
No, 'ta' is universal. It doesn't matter if the noun is masculine, feminine (not that Persian has gender!), big, or small.
It's two words 'Chand ta', but in fast speech, it sounds like one word 'Chanta'.
Yes! 'Chand ta sib khardam' means 'I bought a few apples'.
The formal version is 'adad' for objects and 'nafar' for people.
Only if they are countable, like 'a few ideas' (chand ta fekr) or 'a few problems' (chand ta moshkel).
Expressions liées
چقدر
similarHow much
چند نفر
specialized formHow many people
چند عدد
specialized formHow many units
یکی دو تا
builds onOne or two / A few
چند بار
specialized formHow many times