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Chinese (3) Japanese (2)

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Chinese Part 01: Phonetics, Hello

The Chinese Phonetic Alphabet


There have been many different systems of transcription used for learning to pronounce Chinese. Today the official transcription accepted on an international basis is the Pinyin alphabet, developed in China at the end of the 1950's.


Initials

A syllable in Chinese is composed of an initial, which is a consonant that begins the syllable, and a final, wich covers the rest of the syllable.

b p m f

d t n l

g k h

j q x

z c s

zh ch sh r


m, f, n, l, h and sh are pronounced as in English.

d like "d" in "bed" (unaspirated)

j like "g" in "genius" (unaspirated)

z like "ds" in "beds"

zh like "j" in "job"

b like "p" in "spin" (unaspirated)

g a soft unaspirated "k" sound

x like "sh" in "sheep" but with the corners of the lips drawn back

r somewhat like "r" in "rain"

Particular attention should be paid to the pronunciation of the so-called "aspirated" consonants. It is necessary to breath heavily after the consonant is pronounced.

p like "p" in "pope"

t like "t" in "tap"

k like "k" in "kangaroo"

q harder than "ch" in "cheap"

c like "ts" in "cats"

ch (tongue curled back, aspirated)


Distinction between certain initials:

b / p d / t g / k j / q z / c zh / ch


Finals

In modern Chinese, there are 38 finals besides the above-represented 21 initials.


i u ü

a ia ua

o uo üe

e ie

er

ai uai

ei uei (ui)

ao iao

ou iou (iu)

an ian uan üan

en in uen (un) üen

ang iang uang

eng ieng ueng

ong iong



ie like "ye" in "yes"

e like "e" in "her"

er like "er" in "sister" (american pronounciation)

ai like "y" in "by" (light)

ei like "ay" in "bay"

ou like "o" in "go"

an like "an" in "can" (without stressing the "n")

-ng (final) a nasalized soung like the "ng" in "bang" without pronouncing the "g"

uei, uen and iou when preceded by an initial, are written as ui, un and iu respectivly.


Tones

Mandarin Chinese has four pitched tones and a "toneless" tone.


Tone     Mark     Description

1st         dā           High and level

2nd        dá           Starts medium in tone, then rises to the top

3rd        dǎ           Starts low, dips to the bottom, then rises toward the top

4th         dà          Starts at the top, then falls sharp and strong to the bottom

Neutral  da          Flat, with no emphasis




Tones Changes

A 3rd tone, when immediatlely followed by another 3rd tone, should pe pronounced in the 2nd tone.

Nǐ hǎo = Ní hǎo



Conversation


- Nǐ hǎo!

你 好!


- Zài jiàn!

再 见!

Unfortunately there is no function to upload sound format. When it is available I will do so.




nǐ (pro) You

hǎo (adj) good, well

你好! nǐhǎo! Hello, How are you?



zài (adv) again

jiàn (v) see

再见! zàijiàn! Goodbye!



Calligraphy exercises

4 first chinese characters : 你,好,再 and 见. Learn the stroke order.



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