Chinese Pinyin Lesson 2 | Six Simple Finals/Vowels: a, o, e, i, u, ü | Learn Chinese in Chinatown ™




Faye

Teacher of Pinyin Lessons

Six Mandarin Chinese Vowels in Pinyin: a, o, e, i, u, ü

The six simple finals: a, o, e, i, u, ü are the most fundamental elements of Chinese vowels in Hanyu Pinyin from the single-vowel category . For each Pinyin learner, these six of them are probably the first thing you will learn. Because they’re the easiest to learn, most Chinese native speakers learn these Pinyin vowels first from primary school. Let’s learn Chinese Pinyin in the native way!

Single Vowels(Finals) Pronunciation Guide

Notes: The following guide is given in terms of English pronunciation. They are approximate, as there are some sounds of Pinyin do not correspond directly to sounds in English. Please listen to the audio first, and then repeat with the mouth shape.

a: Pronounced like the /a/ in English word /father/The mouth is wide open, the tongue is at its lowest, and the lips are unrounded.
o: Pronounced like the /o/ in English word /fox/The opening of the mouth is medium, the tongue position is mid-high and slightly to the back, and the lips are rounded.
e: Pronounced like the /er/ in English word /serve/ in British accentTo produce this vowel, first pronounce o, and then change the shape of the mouth from rounded to unrounded; At the same time spread the lips apart, as if you were smiling.
i: Pronounced like the /ee/ in English word /bee/The opening of the mouth is narrow, the lips are spread, and the tongue position is high and slightly to the front. (except after the initials: z c s, zh ch sh r, details later)
u: Pronounced like the /woo/ in English word /wood/The opening of the mouth is narrow, the lips are fully rounded, and the tongue position is high and slightly to the back.
ü: Pronounced like the ü in German or FrenchTo produce this vowel, first pronounce i, and then change the shape of the mouth from unrounded to rounded.

Examples of Chinese Characters Using Single Finals: a, o, e, i, u, ü

In this part, we will learn some Pinyin of Chinese characters that use these single finals. Please listen to the audio first, then repeat and try to figure out the correspondence between these sounds and the spelling patterns (graphemes) that represent them.

Single Vowels Used in Pinyin Characters Meanings As in English Words
a 爸爸 n. Papa, father like a in Mama, Papa
o I/me like o in Fox
e 饿了 be hungry like er in Serve in British accent
i (number) one like ee in Bee; English letter E
u (number) Five like the /woo/ in English word wood
ü n. fish The “ü” vowel is a totally different sound, and it does not exist in English but in French or German.yu is just the pure “ü” sound by itself, and the two dots are not written for yu.

Tone Drills of Single Finals: a, o, e, i, u, ü

Listen to the audio first, and then repeat tone drills of a, o, e, i, u, ü.

Single Vowels with four tones

« Chinese Pinyin Lesson 1: Introduction to Pinyin

Chinese Pinyin Lesson 3 | Chinese Tones of Pinyin: 4 Tones & the Neutral Tone >> »

Related Posts

Asking for and Giving Directions in Chinese

How to Ask for Directions in Chinese | On the Road, Map

Having the choice to ask for and give direction is one of the feasible capacities we truly need to dominate all through regular daily existence. It’s in like manner one…

Read more

Lesson 10: How to Say “Thank You” in Chinese for Any Situation

Assuming that you’re learning Chinese, you could find the numerous ways local Mandarin speakers can offer thanks past bowing or the essential 谢谢 (xièxie) — “Much obliged.” We’ll show you…

Read more
Key sentences learnt in Lessons 1-9

Key sentences learnt in Lessons 1-9

Hi everybody, welcome back to our most memorable survey illustration. In this example, we’ll survey every one of the key designs which we’ve gained from illustration 1 to 9. Presently…

Read more
DAY 9 Who is she

DAY 9: Who is she? 她是谁?

In this example, you will figure out how to say the inquiry word who or whom and how to present somebody in Chinese. Lesson Audio Review Dialogue A: 他 是…

Read more
Are you American 你是美国人吗

DAY 7: Are you American? 你是美国人吗?

Hi and welcome to Regular Chinese. In the present example, we should investigate how to inquire: “Would you say you are” in Chinese? For example, would you say you are…

Read more

DAY 20: Summary of Unit 2 – Lesson 11-19

In this example, we’ll survey all the key language focuses which we’ve gained from illustration 11 to 19. Lesson Audio Review Dialogue Key sentences learnt in Lessons 11-19 1. 她们…

Read more

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *