Difference between revisions of "The "a" vowel"
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The first vowel you want to learn in pinyin is "a." It can combine with all of those [[easy sounds]] you already learned in part 1 of this guide, so it's a great place to start. | The first vowel you want to learn in pinyin is "a." It can combine with all of those [[easy sounds]] you already learned in part 1 of this guide, so it's a great place to start. | ||
− | {{ | + | == Pinyin's Main "a" Vowel Sound == |
+ | |||
+ | Although the "a" sound in Chinese can vary a little bit, and is slightly changed when followed by a "[[-n]]" or a "[[-ng]]" sound, it should sound more or less consistent in the syllables introduced in this section. Remember that you can click on the sounds in the chart fragment to hear audio. | ||
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+ | * [[-a]] sounds like the "a" sound in the English words <span class="enpron">"<strong>a</strong>h"</span> or <span class="enpron">"h<strong>a</strong>"</span> or <span class="enpron">"f<strong>a</strong>ther"</span>. | ||
+ | * [[-ai]] sounds like the "ai" in the English words <span class="enpron">"Th<strong>ai</strong>"</span> and <span class="enpron">"<strong>ai</strong>sle"</span>. | ||
+ | * [[-ao]] sounds pretty much like the word <span class="enpron">"T<strong>ao</strong>"</span>/<span class="enpron">"D<strong>ao</strong>"</span> which we've imported into English from Chinese, or the <span class="enpron">"ow"</span> in the English word <span class="enpron">"how"</span>, but with a rather muted “w” sound at the end. | ||
+ | * [[-an]] sounds similar to <span class="enpron">“on”</span> (minus a strong <span class="enpron">“aw”</span> sound like in <span class="enpron">“lawn”</span>) but you may also hear a hint of the vowel sound in the English word <span class="enpron">“can”</span>. This sound doesn't match up to English sounds perfectly, but it's not hard to approximate. | ||
+ | * [[-ang]] sounds similar to the <span class="enpron">"ong"</span> sound in the word <span class="enpron">"King K<strong>ong</strong>"</span>. Because you have the nasalized "[[-ng]]" ending, the "a" vowel changes slightly, but that's not something you should have to worry about too much. | ||
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+ | == Pinyin Chart Fragment == | ||
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+ | This is just a part of the full [[pinyin chart]], limited to the sounds we've covered so far. | ||
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+ | {{#widget: Pinyin chart | ||
+ | | exclude_col_e | ||
+ | | exclude_col_o | ||
+ | | exclude_col_i | ||
+ | | exclude_col_u | ||
+ | | exclude_col_v | ||
+ | | exclude_row_null | ||
+ | | exclude_row_jqx | ||
+ | | exclude_row_zhchshr | ||
+ | }} | ||
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+ | == Pinyin's Alternate "a" Vowel Sounds == | ||
+ | |||
+ | The letter "a" in pinyin can actually make different sounds as well, when it is part of the "[[-ian]]" and "[[-üan]]" finals. Those sounds will be covered in later sections of this guide. | ||
+ | |||
+ | For now, let's move on to [[the "e" vowel]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Sources and further reading == | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Sinosplice: [http://www.sinosplice.com/learn-chinese/pronunciation-of-mandarin-chinese/2 Chinese Pronunciation] | ||
+ | * ChinesePod: [http://chinesepod.com/tools/pronunciation/section/1 A with Easy Consonants] | ||
[[Category:Pinyin]] | [[Category:Pinyin]] | ||
+ | {{Basic Pronunciation|A1|31|The vowel "a" in Mandarin isn't too hard, so let's start with that one. Now you can make actual syllables!|pinyin|ASP00004}} | ||
+ | {{Number in Series|2|Pinyin quick start guide}} | ||
+ | {{References|-a}} | ||
+ | {{References|-ai}} | ||
+ | {{References|-ao}} | ||
+ | {{References|-an}} | ||
+ | {{References|-ang}} |
Latest revision as of 02:46, 10 June 2015
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Level
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In series Pinyin quick start guide
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Referenced finals
The first vowel you want to learn in pinyin is "a." It can combine with all of those easy sounds you already learned in part 1 of this guide, so it's a great place to start.
Contents
Pinyin's Main "a" Vowel Sound
Although the "a" sound in Chinese can vary a little bit, and is slightly changed when followed by a "-n" or a "-ng" sound, it should sound more or less consistent in the syllables introduced in this section. Remember that you can click on the sounds in the chart fragment to hear audio.
- -a sounds like the "a" sound in the English words "ah" or "ha" or "father".
- -ai sounds like the "ai" in the English words "Thai" and "aisle".
- -ao sounds pretty much like the word "Tao"/"Dao" which we've imported into English from Chinese, or the "ow" in the English word "how", but with a rather muted “w” sound at the end.
- -an sounds similar to “on” (minus a strong “aw” sound like in “lawn”) but you may also hear a hint of the vowel sound in the English word “can”. This sound doesn't match up to English sounds perfectly, but it's not hard to approximate.
- -ang sounds similar to the "ong" sound in the word "King Kong". Because you have the nasalized "-ng" ending, the "a" vowel changes slightly, but that's not something you should have to worry about too much.
Pinyin Chart Fragment
This is just a part of the full pinyin chart, limited to the sounds we've covered so far.
Tone: 1 2 3 4 1234 [Show more Settings]
Show Text: IPA Zhuyin Wade-Giles
Text Size: Small Medium Large
Chart Mode: Audio Links (disables audio)
-a- | -a | -ai | -ao | -an | -ang | -e- | -o- | -i- | -u- | -ü- | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
b- | [pɑ] pa | [paɪ̯] pai | [pɑʊ̯] pao | [pan] pan | [pɑŋ] pang | b- | ||||||
p- | [pʰɑ] p'a | [pʰaɪ̯] p'ai | [pʰɑʊ̯] p'ao | [pʰan] p'an | [pʰɑŋ] p'ang | p- | ||||||
m- | [mɑ] ma | [maɪ̯] mai | [mɑʊ̯] mao | [man] man | [mɑŋ] mang | m- | ||||||
f- | [fɑ] fa | [fan] fan | [fɑŋ] fang | f- | ||||||||
d- | [tɑ] ta | [taɪ̯] tai | [tɑʊ̯] tao | [tan] tan | [tɑŋ] tang | d- | ||||||
t- | [tʰɑ] t'a | [tʰaɪ̯] t'ai | [tʰɑʊ̯] t'ao | [tʰan] t'an | [tʰɑŋ] t'ang | t- | ||||||
n- | [nɑ] na | [naɪ̯] nai | [nɑʊ̯] nao | [nan] nan | [nɑŋ] nang | n- | ||||||
l- | [lɑ] la | [laɪ̯] lai | [lɑʊ̯] lao | [lan] lan | [lɑŋ] lang | l- | ||||||
z- | [tsɑ] tsa | [tsaɪ̯] tsai | [tsɑʊ̯] tsao | [tsan] tsan | [tsɑŋ] tsang | z- | ||||||
c- | [tsʰɑ] ts'a | [tsʰaɪ̯] ts'ai | [tsʰɑʊ̯] ts'ao | [tsʰan] ts'an | [tsʰɑŋ] ts'ang | c- | ||||||
s- | [sɑ] sa | [saɪ̯] sai | [sɑʊ̯] sao | [san] san | [sɑŋ] sang | s- | ||||||
g- | [kɑ] ka | [kaɪ̯] kai | [kɑʊ̯] kao | [kan] kan | [kɑŋ] kang | g- | ||||||
k- | [kʰɑ] k'a | [kʰaɪ̯] k'ai | [kʰɑʊ̯] k'ao | [kʰan] k'an | [kʰɑŋ] k'ang | k- | ||||||
h- | [xɑ] ha | [xaɪ̯] hai | [xɑʊ̯] hao | [xan] han | [xɑŋ] hang | h- | ||||||
-a- | -a | -ai | -ao | -an | -ang | -e- | -o- | -i- | -u- | -ü- |
Pinyin's Alternate "a" Vowel Sounds
The letter "a" in pinyin can actually make different sounds as well, when it is part of the "-ian" and "-üan" finals. Those sounds will be covered in later sections of this guide.
For now, let's move on to the "e" vowel.
Sources and further reading
- Sinosplice: Chinese Pronunciation
- ChinesePod: A with Easy Consonants