How to Use This Site

For Chinese-learning newbies, this site shows Chinese characters (Hanzi) and their alphabet-based pronunciation (Pinyin). Use the Blog Archive (on the left sidebar) to navigate to the different lessons. Note: Your first lesson in speaking Chinese should be Tones (click here). Also remember: the letter "q" is pronounced as "ch" and the letter "x" is pronounced as "sh" while the letter "c" sounds like "ts." The pronunciation for the letter "e" sounds like "uh" while the letter "o" sounds more like "wuh" --- Crazy, eh? :-)

Sunday, June 3, 2007

Learning the Tones - this is the first thing you should do!

Tones

Mandarin Chinese has four pitched tones and a "toneless" tone. The reason for having these tones is probably that the Chinese language has very few possible syllables -- approximately 400 -- while English has about 12,000. For this reason, there may be more homophonic words , words with the same sound expressing different meanings, in Chinese than in most other languages. Apparently tones help the relatively small number of syllables to multiply and thereby alleviate but not completely solve the problem. Learning Chinese in context, therefore, is very important.

For example, the Chinese use only one syllable "da" and yet can tell the difference between "to hang over something" ( da1 ), "to answer" (da2), "to hit" (da3), and "big" (da4). The answer in the tones.

The numbers after each of the syllables indicates the tone. In normal text this is indicated as . In the diagram below you can see the tones.

Tone
Mark
Description
1st
High and level.
2nd
Starts medium in tone, then rises to the top.
3rd
Starts low, dips to the bottom, then rises toward the top.
4th
Starts at the top, then falls sharp and strong to the bottom.
Neutral
Flat, with no emphasis.



This diagram helps visualize the pitches of the four tones:

The tone of a syllable may change in some situations. For example, these are the characters for "mother" . As separate characters each is pronounced as "ma," but when put together, the second "ma" becomes toneless: . Rules like this are, however, very few and very easy to remember.

3 comments:

ChineseQuest said...

Really nice explanation of tones, Vincent. Clear, simple, and to the point. Good post.

John

Unknown said...

Very basic information... good work and nice presentation. Thanks for sharing this with us. I am also learning chiense form http://www.chinesesphere.com/

Anonymous said...

Hi,
Mandarin is a tonel language with four distinct tones.The tones are used to clarify the meaning of words and must be learned correctly for each syllable.if you don’t use the proper tones, your spoken mandarin will be hard too understand .,Thanks for the post Learn Mandarin in Shanghai