Difference between revisions of "The "o" and "u" vowels"
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The "o" vowel sound in Mandarin can be a little tricky, because you probably expect it to sound like the English word <span class="enpron">"oh"</span>, but that sound is mostly represented by [[-ou]] in pinyin. Let's dig into the details. | The "o" vowel sound in Mandarin can be a little tricky, because you probably expect it to sound like the English word <span class="enpron">"oh"</span>, but that sound is mostly represented by [[-ou]] in pinyin. Let's dig into the details. | ||
− | * [[-o]] actually represents two different sounds in pinyin. The one at the top, [[o]], is the pure "o" sound, although it sounds a bit terse and cut off, compared to the English word <span class="enpron">"oh"</span>. The syllable [[lo]] rhymes with [[o]]. ''All the other [[-o]] syllables in this column sound a bit different''. The syllables [[bo]], [[po]], [[mo]], [[fo]] | + | * [[-o]] actually represents two different sounds in pinyin. The one at the top, [[o]], is the pure "o" sound, although it sounds a bit terse and cut off, compared to the English word <span class="enpron">"oh"</span>. The syllable [[lo]] rhymes with [[o]]. ''All the other [[-o]] syllables in this column sound a bit different''. The syllables [[bo]], [[po]], [[mo]], [[fo]] seem to rhyme with the [[-uo]] column (coming up later in this section). For these syllables, the [[-o]] sound comes across like kind of a <span class="enpron">"oo-uh"</span> sound, which you should ''really listen to a lot'' until you get a feel for it. |
* [[-ou]], as previously mentioned, is easy. It sounds pretty much like the English word <span class="enpron">"oh"</span>. No tricks! Just don't confuse it with [[-uo]]. | * [[-ou]], as previously mentioned, is easy. It sounds pretty much like the English word <span class="enpron">"oh"</span>. No tricks! Just don't confuse it with [[-uo]]. | ||
Latest revision as of 10:04, 13 May 2020
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In series Pinyin quick start guide
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Referenced finals
Although we treated the "a" vowel, the "e" vowel, and the "i" vowel separately, we're going to present "o" and "u" together because, well... these two sounds kind of have a thing for each other, and it makes sense to do it this way.
Contents
Pinyin's Main "o" Vowel Sound
The "o" vowel sound in Mandarin can be a little tricky, because you probably expect it to sound like the English word "oh", but that sound is mostly represented by -ou in pinyin. Let's dig into the details.
- -o actually represents two different sounds in pinyin. The one at the top, o, is the pure "o" sound, although it sounds a bit terse and cut off, compared to the English word "oh". The syllable lo rhymes with o. All the other -o syllables in this column sound a bit different. The syllables bo, po, mo, fo seem to rhyme with the -uo column (coming up later in this section). For these syllables, the -o sound comes across like kind of a "oo-uh" sound, which you should really listen to a lot until you get a feel for it.
- -ou, as previously mentioned, is easy. It sounds pretty much like the English word "oh". No tricks! Just don't confuse it with -uo.
Pinyin's Main "u" Vowel Sound
- -u is super simple; it sounds like the English "oo" sound. The only catch is that the syllable at the top is written wu but pronounced "oo" (and not like "woo" as in Homer Simpson's "whoo-hoo" cry of joy). Everything in this column rhymes.
- -ua is pronounced as expected: pinyin -u + -a (the "ah" one). Remember to write the syllable at the top "wa"; it still rhymes with the three syllables below it: gua, kua, hua.
- -uai is just -u + -ai (two pinyin sounds you already know). Remember to write the syllable at the top "wai"; it still rhymes with the three syllables below it: guai, kuai, huai.
- -uei is a tricky one, because all three letters "uei" never occur together in an actual pinyin syllable. At the top, the syllable is written wei, which seems straightforward enough, and sounds like the English word "way". But the rhyming syllables below include the "u" but drop the letter "e", making them dui, tui, sui, gui, kui, hui. Remember that dui (like the others) is pronounced like "dway" and not "dwee"!
- -uo, as mentioned above, makes a sort of "oo-uh" sound, and not a "whoa" sound. Notice that the syllable at the top is spelled wo. This is an important syllable, because it's used to say the word for "I" in Chinese! Just don't be the one pronouncing this word the same as the English words "whoa" or "woe" . Everything under wo (duo, tuo, nuo, etc.) rhymes with it.
- -uan is easy. It's just the pinyin sounds -u + -an. The syllable at the top is written wan, and sounds like the English word "wand", minus the "d" sound. Everything under wan in that column rhymes with it: duan, tuan, nuan, etc.
- -uang is almost identical to -uan, just swiping out the final -n for a final -ng. The syllable at the top is written wang. Everything under wang in that column rhymes with it: guang, kuang, huang.
- -uen is just pinyin -u + -en, but is also a little tricky in that both letters "ue" never occur together in an actual pinyin syllable. At the top you have wen, and the rhyming syllables below it are written dun, tun, lun, etc. (the "e" is omitted).
- -ueng is just pinyin -u + -eng, but is a quite rare final. Here, the only one we have is weng, which is also a rare syllable.
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- | -e- | -o- | -o | -ou | -ong | -i- | -u- | -u | -ua | -uai | -uei | -uo | -uan | -uang | -uen | -ueng | -ü- | ||
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∅- | [ɔ] o | [ɤʊ̯] ou | [u] wu | [u̯ɑ] wa | [u̯aɪ̯] wai | [u̯eɪ̯] wei | [u̯ɔ] wo | [u̯an] wan | [u̯ɑŋ] wang | [u̯ən] wen | [u̯əŋ] weng | ∅- | |||||||
b- | [pu̯ɔ] po | [pu] pu | b- | ||||||||||||||||
p- | [pʰu̯ɔ] p'o | [pʰɤʊ̯] p'ou | [pʰu] p'u | p- | |||||||||||||||
m- | [mu̯ɔ] mo | [mɤʊ̯] mou | [mu] mu | m- | |||||||||||||||
f- | [fu̯ɔ] fo | [fɤʊ̯] fou | [fu] fu | f- | |||||||||||||||
d- | [tɤʊ̯] tou | [tʊŋ] tung | [tu] tu | [tu̯eɪ̯] tui | [tu̯ɔ] to | [tu̯an] tuan | [tu̯ən] tun | d- | |||||||||||
t- | [tʰɤʊ̯] t'ou | [tʰʊŋ] t'ung | [tʰu] t'u | [tʰu̯eɪ̯] t'ui | [tʰu̯ɔ] t'o | [tʰu̯an] t'uan | [tʰu̯ən] t'un | t- | |||||||||||
n- | [nɤʊ̯] nou | [nʊŋ] nung | [nu] nu | [nu̯ɔ] no | [nu̯an] nuan | n- | |||||||||||||
l- | [lu̯ɔ] lo | [lɤʊ̯] lou | [lʊŋ] lung | [lu] lu | [lu̯ɔ] lo | [lu̯an] luan | [lu̯ən] lun | l- | |||||||||||
z- | [tsɤʊ̯] tsou | [tsʊŋ] tsung | [tsu] tsu | [tsu̯eɪ̯] tsui | [tsu̯ɔ] tso | [tsu̯an] tsuan | [tsu̯ən] tsun | z- | |||||||||||
c- | [tsʰɤʊ̯] ts'ou | [tsʰʊŋ] ts'ung | [tsʰu] ts'u | [tsʰu̯eɪ̯] ts'ui | [tsʰu̯ɔ] ts'o | [tsʰu̯an] ts'uan | [tsʰu̯ən] ts'un | c- | |||||||||||
s- | [sɤʊ̯] sou | [sʊŋ] sung | [su] su | [su̯eɪ̯] sui | [su̯ɔ] so | [su̯an] suan | [su̯ən] sun | s- | |||||||||||
g- | [kɤʊ̯] kou | [kʊŋ] kung | [ku] ku | [ku̯ɑ] kua | [ku̯aɪ̯] kuai | [ku̯eɪ̯] kui | [ku̯ɔ] ko | [ku̯an] kuan | [ku̯ɑŋ] kuang | [ku̯ən] kun | g- | ||||||||
k- | [kʰɤʊ̯] k'ou | [kʰʊŋ] k'ung | [kʰu] k'u | [kʰu̯ɑ] k'ua | [kʰu̯aɪ̯] k'uai | [kʰu̯eɪ̯] k'ui | [kʰu̯ɔ] k'o | [kʰu̯an] k'uan | [kʰu̯ɑŋ] k'uang | [kʰu̯ən] k'un | k- | ||||||||
h- | [xɤʊ̯] hou | [xʊŋ] hung | [xu] hu | [xu̯ɑ] hua | [xu̯aɪ̯] huai | [xu̯eɪ̯] hui | [xu̯ɔ] ho | [xu̯an] huan | [xu̯ɑŋ] huang | [xu̯ən] hun | h- | ||||||||
-a- | -e- | -o- | -o | -ou | -ong | -i- | -u- | -u | -ua | -uai | -uei | -uo | -uan | -uang | -uen | -ueng | -ü- |
This section has been quite full! Be sure to listen to the audio a lot and get really familiar with these sounds. Then move on to the "c" and "z" sounds.
Sources and further reading
- Sinosplice: Chinese Pronunciation
- ChinesePod: Non-Nasal U with Easy Consonants, Nasal U with Easy Consonants