Difference between revisions of "Erhua"

Line 15: Line 15:
 
== Common Examples of Erhua ==
 
== Common Examples of Erhua ==
  
花儿
+
* 花儿
小鸟儿
+
* 小鸟儿
盖儿
+
* 盖儿
小孩儿
+
* 小孩儿
好玩儿
+
* 好玩儿
鞋带儿
+
* 鞋带儿
牙签儿
+
* 牙签儿
破烂儿
+
* 破烂儿
羊肉串儿
+
* 羊肉串儿
生鱼片儿
+
* 生鱼片儿
没事儿
+
* 没事儿
豆腐脑儿
+
* 豆腐脑儿
小黑点儿
+
* 小黑点儿
让座儿
+
* 让座儿
边儿
+
* 边儿
土豆儿
+
* 土豆儿
小米儿
+
* 小米儿
馅儿
+
* 馅儿
小偷儿
+
* 小偷儿
一半儿
+
* 一半儿
圈儿
+
* 圈儿
转弯儿
+
* 转弯儿
没味儿
+
* 没味儿
画儿
+
* 画儿
相片儿
+
* 相片儿
有点儿
+
* 有点儿
一点儿
+
* 一点儿
小摊儿
+
* 小摊儿
一会儿
+
* 一会儿
起名儿
+
* 起名儿
  
 
== Writing Erhua ==
 
== Writing Erhua ==

Revision as of 09:37, 24 March 2015

Also known as: erization, 儿化 (érhuà) and 儿化音 (érhuàyīn).

"Erhua" refers to the addition of a final "-r" sound to a syllable in Mandarin. It is especially common in the Beijing dialect, but is also a feature of standard Chinese as well.

A Few Rules about Erhua

Erhua can be confusing to beginners because it's slightly more complicated than simply adding an "-r" sound to the end of a syllable.

  1. The character 儿 (ér) can be a syllable, as in the two-syllable word 儿子 (érzi), but erhua is not a syllable; it is pronounced as part of the syllable that it attaches to
  2. When you add erhua to the end of a syllable ending in -n or -ng, you don't pronounce the -n or -ng; you pronounce the final -r sound instead
  3. The vowel sound of a syllable may change slightly with the addition of the erhua (e.g. "shi + -r" may sound kind of like "shar")
  4. Erhua can be written as 儿, but it doesn't need to be written to be pronounced (e.g. a southerner will generally pronounce 花 as "huā", but a Beijinger will pronounce it as "huār")

Common Examples of Erhua

  • 花儿
  • 小鸟儿
  • 盖儿
  • 小孩儿
  • 好玩儿
  • 鞋带儿
  • 牙签儿
  • 破烂儿
  • 羊肉串儿
  • 生鱼片儿
  • 没事儿
  • 豆腐脑儿
  • 小黑点儿
  • 让座儿
  • 边儿
  • 土豆儿
  • 小米儿
  • 馅儿
  • 小偷儿
  • 一半儿
  • 圈儿
  • 转弯儿
  • 没味儿
  • 画儿
  • 相片儿
  • 有点儿
  • 一点儿
  • 小摊儿
  • 一会儿
  • 起名儿

Writing Erhua

For a few select words, it is customary to write out the erhua using the character 儿:

哪儿

Optional Erhua

For many other words, writing the 儿 is optional. Northerners will likely pronounce the following words, no matter whether it is written with or without the 儿.

Sources and further reading