Pinyin

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Pinyin — Pronunciation, Tones, Tone Sandhi & Quick Hacks | Masons Au Pair

Pinyin — Pronunciation, Tones, Tone Sandhi & Quick Hacks

Hànyǔ Pīnyīn is the standard system that writes Mandarin sounds with Latin letters. Learn a handful of rules and you’ll read menus, type Chinese, and pronounce names much more accurately.

The Five Tones (4 + Neutral)

Contours

  • 1st — high & steady:
  • 2nd — rising (like a question):
  • 3rd — low dipping: (often just “low-rise” in fast speech)
  • 4th — sharp falling:
  • Neutral — light/short: ma

Quick Practice

  • mā má mǎ mà · ma
  • bā bá bǎ bà · ba
  • shī shí shǐ shì · shi

Clap on each syllable to keep them equally long (except neutral).

Where Does the Tone Mark Go?

  • Put the tone over the main vowel in this priority: a > o > e > i > u > ü.
  • Special: in iu and ui, mark the second letterliú, duì, shuǐ.
  • Use ü (umlaut) after n/l: nǚ, lǜ. After j/q/x/y, it’s written as u but pronounced ü: jūn = jün.
  • Apostrophe separates syllables when the next starts with a/o/eXī'ān (not Xiān).

Sound Map — Initials & Finals (Quick)

Initials (consonant starts)

b p m f · d t n l · g k h · j q x · zh ch sh r · z c s · y w

  • j/q/x are like “jee/chee/shee” but with the tongue very forward and lips spread.
  • zh/ch/sh are retroflex (tip curled back); not the same as j/q/x.
  • r is like French “j” in journal or English “zhr”.
  • z/c ≈ “ds/ts”; h can sound like German “ch” in Bach.

Finals (vowel parts)

a o e · ai ei ao ou · an en ang eng · i ia ie iao iu ian iang ing iong · u ua uo uai ui uan uang un · ü üe yuan yun

  • bo/po/mo/fo are pronounced with an implied uobuo (spelled bo).
  • The “i” in zhi, chi, shi, ri, zi, ci, si isn’t “ee”; it’s a syllabic sound after those initials.

Essential Tone Sandhi (Tone Changes in Flow)

  • 3rd + 3rd → 2nd + 3rd: nǐ hǎo → ní hǎo. In longer chains of 3rd tones, the non-final ones rise.
  • 不 (bù) becomes before a 4th tone: bú shì, but bù máng.
  • 一 (yī) changes tone when it’s the numeral “one”:
    • Before a 4th tone: yí yàng
    • Before 1st/2nd/3rd tones → : yì bān · yì qǐ · yì nǐan

Write the dictionary tone, but pronounce the sandhi in real speech.

Typing & Reading Tips

Type Chinese

  • Enable a Pinyin IME (phone/PC). Type syllables without tones: nihao → 你好.
  • Pick characters by context; add more letters to narrow choices (e.g., shur for 输入).

Learn with Pinyin Wisely

  • Always write the tone mark when you take notes.
  • Link each word to a short audio (shadow it 3×).

10-Minute Daily Drill (No Excuses)

  1. Tone ladder (2 min): mā má mǎ màbā bá bǎ bà.
  2. Minimal pairs (3 min): mā / má · shī / shí · qí / xí.
  3. Sandhi (3 min): nǐ hǎo → ní hǎo · bù + 4th → bú.
  4. Shadow a phrase (2 min): Nǐ hǎo, wǒ jiào… · Qǐng wèn, dìtiě zhàn zài nǎr?

Common Pitfalls (Fix These Fast)

  • Mixing j/q/x with zh/ch/sh — move the tongue forward for j/q/x; curl back for zh/ch/sh.
  • Forgetting ü — write it after n/l (nǚ, lǜ); remember it’s hidden after j/q/x/y.
  • Third tone too long — in sentences it’s often a low dip or just rising before another 3rd.
  • No tone marks in notes — add them, or you’ll memorize the wrong word.

Useful Examples with Tones

  • Xī'ān (city) — apostrophe separates + ān.
  • Yǒu méiyǒu? — “Do (you) have?”
  • Bú yào, xièxie. — “No thanks.” (bù → bú before 4th tone yào)
  • Nǐ hǎo → Ní hǎo (in real speech).

Quick Reference (Keep on Your Phone)

Tone Order for Marks

a > o > e > i > u > ü (ui/iu → mark the 2nd)

Sandhi Cheats

3rd+3rd → 2nd+3rd · bù→bú (before 4th) · yī→yí (before 4th), yī→yì (else)

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