Chinese Grammar Notion Template [Visual Preview]
A visual tour of the Chinese Grammar Notion template: how grammar points are structured, tagged by HSK level, and turned into a searchable, review-ready reference you actually use.
Grammar is where most Chinese learners quietly stall. Vocabulary apps gamify words, but grammar points end up scattered across textbook margins, screenshots, and half-remembered explanations. When you need the pattern for "了 vs 过" mid-conversation, it's nowhere. This template fixes that by turning grammar into a structured, searchable database you can actually study from.
Here's a visual walkthrough of how it's built and why each piece is there.
The core: one grammar point per row
Every grammar point is a single database entry. Not a paragraph buried in a doc — a discrete, taggable record. That's the foundation that makes everything else (filtering by level, building review decks, searching mid-study) possible.
Each grammar point page holds:
- The pattern — the structure written out (e.g.
Subject + 把 + Object + Verb + Complement) - A plain-language explanation of what it does and when to use it
- Example sentences in characters, pinyin, and English
- Common mistakes — the errors learners actually make with this pattern
Having examples in all three (characters / pinyin / English) on the same page is deliberate. You can cover one column and self-test, which turns a reference page into an active review tool.
Tagged by HSK level
The property that makes the whole thing usable is HSK level. Every grammar point is tagged HSK 1 through 6 (and beyond), so you can:
- Filter to exactly the level you're studying
- See what grammar a given level expects before an exam
- Avoid drowning in advanced patterns while you're still on the basics
This is what separates a useful grammar reference from an overwhelming one. You're never looking at all of it — just the slice that's relevant to where you are.
The other properties that earn their place
Beyond HSK level, each point carries a few tags that power the study views:
- Category (Select): aspect particles, complements, measure words, sentence structures, etc. — so related patterns group together
- Status (Select): new / learning / mastered — your honest progress
- Difficulty (Select): an at-a-glance sense of which points need more reps
These aren't decoration. Each one drives a view you'll actually open.
What a single grammar point looks like
To make the structure concrete, here's how a real entry — say, the 把 (bǎ) construction — is laid out inside its page:
- Pattern:
Subject + 把 + Object + Verb + Complement - Explanation: Used to show what happens to an object — emphasizing the result or disposal of the thing being acted on. You reach for 把 when the action does something to the object.
- Examples (characters / pinyin / English): 我把书放在桌子上。/ Wǒ bǎ shū fàng zài zhuōzi shàng. / I put the book on the table.
- Common mistakes: Learners forget that 把 sentences almost always need a complement or result after the verb — you can't just say 我把书. There has to be a disposal or outcome.
That last field, common mistakes, is the one that earns its place fastest. Knowing the pattern isn't the hard part; avoiding the specific error you'll otherwise make a hundred times is. Capturing it on the same page means the correction is right there every time you review.
The views, visually
This is where the preview matters most. The same database shows up several ways:
By HSK level (board)
A board grouped by level. Open it and see your entire grammar map laid out, HSK 1 on the left through HSK 6 on the right. It's the clearest picture of how far you've come and what's ahead.
Currently learning (filtered)
Filtered to Status = learning. Your active study set — the handful of patterns you're drilling right now, nothing else competing for attention.
By category (board)
Grouped by grammar category, so when you want to nail down, say, all the complements at once, they're together.
Needs review (filtered)
Points marked new or that you haven't mastered, sorted so the weakest spots surface first. This is your built-in spaced-repetition-lite without leaving Notion.
How you'd actually study with it
- Filter to your HSK level and skim what's expected.
- Move points to
learningas you start working on them — they flow into your active view. - Self-test using the example sentences: cover the English, read the characters; cover the characters, produce them from English.
- Mark
masteredonly when you can use the pattern unprompted, not just recognize it. - Open
needs reviewregularly to keep old patterns from slipping.
The template doesn't replace a textbook or a teacher. It does something they don't: it gives every grammar point a permanent, searchable home, tagged so you only ever see what's relevant, with the structure to turn passive reading into active recall.
Who it's for
If you're self-studying for the HSK, juggling multiple resources, or just tired of losing grammar explanations the moment you close the book, this is the layer that holds it all together. Duplicate it, tag your way through your current level, and you've got a grammar reference that grows with you instead of scattering.