Mandarin Chinese/Printable version
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Pinyin
This chapter you will learn:
- Pinyin
- Pronouns
- Numbers 1-99
Pinyin/Consonants
Lesson
[edit | edit source]In pinyin, there are 23 consonants. Do not be alarmed by this number, many are pronounced as they are in English.
Here is a list.
b p m f
d t n l
g k h
j q x
zh ch sh r
z c s
w y
The pronunciations of all these consonants, except for q, x, zh and c, are similar to those in English.
- q - ch as in "cheese"
- x - sh as in "sheet"
- zh - j as in "jack"
- c - ts as in "hats"
See, Chinese is easier than people say it is.
In Short...
[edit | edit source]- 23 consonants
- b p m f d t n l g k h j q x zh ch sh r z c s w y
- Most are like English
- "q" and "x" are "ch" and "sh" respectively
- "c" is "ts"
- "zh" is like "jack"
Pinyin/A, O, and E
There are three (3) types of vowels in Chinese- Simple, Compound, Nasal
- Simple consists of a single vowel
- Compound is two (2) or more
- Nasal ends in -n or -ng
This lesson, you will learn three (3) simple finals and one (1) compound final
Simple Finals
[edit | edit source]There are six (6) vowels in Chinese: a, e, i, o, u and ü
Vowel | Pronunciation | IPA | English Example |
---|---|---|---|
a | ah | a | father |
e | uh | ʊ | bud |
o | oh | o | toe |
Compound Finals
[edit | edit source]"a" and "o" can combine to form "ao"- how
- This IS the same sound as in well known, "Ni Hao"
In Short...
[edit | edit source]- Three types
- Simple
- Compound
- Nasal
- a is ahh
- e is uh
- o is oh
- ao is ow
Pinyin/I and N
Simple Finals
[edit | edit source]Vowel | Pronunciation | IPA | English Example |
---|---|---|---|
i | ee* | i | bee |
* After zh, sh, ch z, s, c and r, "i" is pronounced b'''i'''t (ɪ)
Compound Finals
[edit | edit source]i- can begin a final, and in general is pronounced y-. In fact, it is changed as such when it has no initial
Final | Pronunciation | IPA | Example |
---|---|---|---|
ai | eye | aɪ | eye |
ei | ey | e | hey |
ia | yeah | ja | German "Ja!" |
ie | yeh | jɛ | yet |
Nasal Finals
[edit | edit source]Final | Pronunciation | IPA | Example |
---|---|---|---|
an | ahn | an | Ann |
en | uhn | ʊn | won |
ian | yahn | jan | No Example |
in | een | in | No Example |
In Short...
[edit | edit source]- i is pronounced ee, except after zh, sh, ch, z, s, c and r
- Here it is bit
- ai is "eye"
- ei is hey
- i- is y-
Guess What! It's... Quiz Time!
Pinyin/U
This lesson you will learn:
- The letters U and Ü
- Compound and Nasal finals containing the letter U
- Tones
- NG
The Letter U
[edit | edit source]"U" is pronounced "oo".
The "u" after x, q and j is not really a "u" it is really "ü". This also applies for compound finals starting with "u" |
Compound and Nasal Finals Containing U
[edit | edit source]- ou- oh
- iou- yo
- uo- woah
- uei- way
- ua- water
- uai- why
- uan- wahn
- uen- wuhn
iou, uei, and uen change when they have initials. They become iu, ui and un respectively |
Like with "i", "u" become "w" initially.
Tones
[edit | edit source]As many know, Chinese is a tonal language. This means that the way you pronounce a word can change its meaning. For example:
You do not need to learn these characters (at least not yet) |
Character | Meaning | Pinyin | Tone |
---|---|---|---|
妈妈 | Mom | Māma | Flat |
麻 | Hemp | Má | Rising |
马 | Horse | Mǎ | Change |
骂 | To Scold | Mà | Falling |
吗 | Question Particle | Ma | Neutral |
- The flat line means your voice is Higher and Level: āēīōūǖ
- The falling line means your voice drops, like you are angry: àèìòùǜ
- The line going down and up means your voice drops and rises again: ǎěǐǒǔǚ
- The rising line means your voice goes up, like you are asking a question: áéíóúǘ
- No line means you voice is Lower and Level: aeiouü
Ü is the ONE vowel sound in Chinese but not English. If you know German, yes, it is the same sound, and to those who know French it is a "U". But for the rest of us...
The Letter Ü
[edit | edit source]Pronounce this vowel "ee" but with your lips rounded like you were pronouncing "oo"
Rules About, and Compounds With Ü
[edit | edit source]- üe- +eh
- ün- +n
- üan- +ahn
Like i become y and u becomes w, ü becomes yu. The finals after this rule
Final | Without Initial |
---|---|
ü | yu |
üe | yue |
ün | yun |
üan | yuan |
NG
[edit | edit source]NG acts just like N in a nasal final. And here they are: ang, iang, uang, eng, ing, yong, ong
Pinyin/Pronouns
Your First Words!
This lesson you will learn personal pronoun
|-
|You (sing.)
|
Samples of the 4 tones
|
|
Pinyin/Numbers
Ojhhhl
|-poppop
|1poop
|
Congratulations, you have finished Chapter One! Now for a test
Pinyin/Consonants
Lesson
[edit | edit source]In pinyin, there are 23 consonants. Do not be alarmed by this number, many are pronounced as they are in English.
Here is a list.
b p m f
d t n l
g k h
j q x
zh ch sh r
z c s
w y
The pronunciations of all these consonants, except for q, x, zh and c, are similar to those in English.
- q - ch as in "cheese"
- x - sh as in "sheet"
- zh - j as in "jack"
- c - ts as in "hats"
See, Chinese is easier than people say it is.
In Short...
[edit | edit source]- 23 consonants
- b p m f d t n l g k h j q x zh ch sh r z c s w y
- Most are like English
- "q" and "x" are "ch" and "sh" respectively
- "c" is "ts"
- "zh" is like "jack"
Sentences/Hello
First meet someone
[edit | edit source]"你好" means "Hello", sometimes it can be consider as "Nice to meet you". When first meet someone,Chinese native speakers usually speak in this word and used in most other senses. And 您好 is a more formal way.
Familiar Greetings
[edit | edit source]Generally, people use kinds of words or phrases with features to ask for another when they are in a good relationship, such as "你吃了吗?". Those words are like what was used in English such as "how are you?" and "how is going?"
If you are very close to another
[edit | edit source]
Sentences/How are you
This sentence is How are you? It is pronounced as Nǐ hǎo ma
Sentences/He is a student
他是学生
[edit | edit source]他 is the subject,the word 是 is the Predicate of this sentence, and the word 学生 is the Object. As same as in English, Chinese have also had a basic sentence structure witch contains only one simple subject and a simple predicate.
- See this sentence:他晕倒了。
In this sentence, 他 is the subject while the phrase "晕倒了" is the predicate.
Sentences/What is her name
What's her name?
[edit | edit source]In Chinese, this sentence 她叫什么名字? is a basic interrogative sentence.什么 is the word to transfer the interrogative.This sentence can be also written as "她的名字是什么?"
Interrogative
[edit | edit source]In chinese, those words which used in interrogative including 什么, 谁, 哪个, 哪里, and so on.
Sentences/I am 42
This Sentence is I am 42 years old. You pronounce it as Wǒ sìshí'èr suì.
Sentences/Hello
First meet someone
[edit | edit source]"你好" means "Hello", sometimes it can be consider as "Nice to meet you". When first meet someone,Chinese native speakers usually speak in this word and used in most other senses. And 您好 is a more formal way.
Familiar Greetings
[edit | edit source]Generally, people use kinds of words or phrases with features to ask for another when they are in a good relationship, such as "你吃了吗?". Those words are like what was used in English such as "how are you?" and "how is going?"
If you are very close to another
[edit | edit source]