The "full" Pinyin system additionally uses tone marks (written above the vowels) to represent the four tones of Mandarin. The first tone (high level tone) is represented by a bar, the second one (rising tone) by an acute, the third one (low tone) by a reversed circumflex and the fourth one (falling tone) by a grave accent. Vowels without tone are left unmarked. These tone marks normally are only used in Mandarin textbooks, but they are essential for correct pronunciation of Mandarin syllables. |
The "full" Pinyin system additionally uses tone marks (written above the vowels) to represent the four tones of Mandarin. The first tone (high level tone) is represented by a macron ("bar"), the second one (rising tone) by an acute, the third one (low tone) by a reversed circumflex ("wing") and the fourth one (falling tone) by a grave accent. Vowels without tone are left unmarked. These tone marks normally are only used in Mandarin textbooks, but they are essential for correct pronunciation of Mandarin syllables. |
Since most computer fonts don't contain the bar and reverse circumflex accents, another commonly used convention is to postfix the individual syllables with a digit representing their tone (e.g., "tóng" is written "tong2") |
Since most computer fonts don't contain the macron or reverse circumflex accents, another commonly used convention is to postfix the individual syllables with a digit representing their tone (e.g., "tóng" is written "tong2") |
Pinyin uses the Roman alphabet, hence the pronunciation is relatively straightforward for Westerners. A pitfall for novices is, however, the unusual pronunciation of "x", "q" and (for English speakers) "c" and "z". The sounds represented by "x" and "q" in Western languages don't exist in Chinese, so the Pinyin system "recycles" them and assigns them other sounds: "x" represents a soft "sh" (like the "sh" in "sharp" but not as fully sounding), "q" represents a soft "ch" (again, like the "ch" in "chin" but not quite). The "c" is pronounced like "ts", "z" like "ds". Finally, "ü" stands for the same sound as in German and "u" is pronounced like "ü" if it follows "y", "x", "j" or "q".
If you obey these basic rules, you will still sound somewhat strange to a Chinese, but you'll be on the right track.
More detailed pronuciation rules:
Sometimes the boundaries between syllables aren't obvious. In this case, they are separated by an apostrophe. For example, the word "xian" could either be pronounced as one syllable or as two ("xi-an"). In the latter case, it would be written as "xi'an".
The "full" Pinyin system additionally uses tone marks (written above the vowels) to represent the four tones of Mandarin. The first tone (high level tone) is represented by a macron ("bar"), the second one (rising tone) by an acute, the third one (low tone) by a reversed circumflex ("wing") and the fourth one (falling tone) by a grave accent. Vowels without tone are left unmarked. These tone marks normally are only used in Mandarin textbooks, but they are essential for correct pronunciation of Mandarin syllables.
Since most computer fonts don't contain the macron or reverse circumflex accents, another commonly used convention is to postfix the individual syllables with a digit representing their tone (e.g., "tóng" is written "tong2")
This needs thorough checking. I'm not a linguist and not an English native speaker, so my descriptions of how to produce the individual sounds may be wrong or misleading...
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