8 Chinese nasal simple finals | Pinyin Lesson 09 - Learn Mandarin Chinese Pronunciation
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- Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2013
- Get the full Chinese Pronunciation Course (Pinyin) at litaochinese.com/product/chin...
The full Chinese Pronunciation Course (Pinyin) includes:
1. 11 video lectures that cover the 21 initial consonants and 36 simple or compound vowels, 265 selected words and phrases, and the spelling rules for Chinese syllables and tone changes (These 11 video lectures are part of the free content in this course. You can view them free online on our RUclips channel “Learn Chinese with Litao”.)
2. Online and downloadable audio and script of all the stuff mentioned above (Only available after you purchase)
3. 191 online self-assessment questions (Only available after you purchase)
In this Chinese pronunciation lesson, you will learn:
1. 8 nasal simple finals: an, ang, en, eng, in, ing, ün, ong.
2. The Pinyin syllables combined by the 8 nasal simple finals and all the 21 initials.
3. How to spell "in", "ing" and "ün" when they stand for syllables by themselves.
Thank you for making Chinese learning so easy! You're pronunciation is clear and slow which helps me to keep pace and makes self studying a lot easier for me. Since I can't go to any institutions in this pandemic situation, you're videos help me a lot. THANK YOU!!♥️✨
Hello Mr Tao, I just wanted to say thank you very much for making it easy for me to learn Mandarin. I am from South Africa and have always wanted to learn mandarin and then God gave me you. On behalf of everyone here, thank you for being a wonderful teacher.
Thank you. I love to watch your Chinese teaching. I watch from Laos
This serves me as meditation while learning chinese brah. You're cool
Xièxie! 😄
Hey, Mr. Zheng! I am a French major first and foremost but I've always wanted to learn Chinese, so I bought some beginners books on Mandarin Chinese, but I just wasn't getting the some of the pronunciations right until I watched these videos. Now I get that these are nasal vowels (French has nasal vowels, too) and where exactly my tongue is supposed to be! Thank you so much for the excellent videos, sir!
I've always been pretty sure that pinyin was designed based mostly on French pronunciation. But I haven't been able to confirm that. Where else would anyone get the idea to pronounce, say, "feng" just the way it is pronounced in French. In my experience, French is the one European language a Chinese native speaker can pronounce naturally and easily - even when they try to learn Spanish, they actually sound more French (e.g. in words like "construccion" - they automatically sound nasal)
+Egon Pauli Funny you mention that, because one of my best French instructors was a woman from China.
Thank you for the amazing video, the best teacher ever, hello from Egypt
谢谢你老师!
Bruh got me singing. 🤣🤣 Thanks for the lesson. 谢谢!
Thank you for sharing this, very helpful as I will be using them :)
Very useful. I'll try my best!
I guess Vietnamese can learn chinese very easily since Chinese has a lot in common with Vietnamese in terms of pronunciation. In the past, VietNam was invaded by China and people had to speak Chinese. Even after that, we created our own language, but it was affected a lot by Chinese.
Um, not really. These two languages are unrelated. There are not so many similarities between them.
Vietnamese has final stops and voiced intial stops, which Chinese lacks.
Chinese has retroflex consonants, while Vietnamese doesn't really have such consonants.
(In Southern Vietnam, some people pronounce the digraph 'tr' like a Chinese 'zh', but most of them just pronounce it like a Chinese 'j'. Some of them probably pronounce 's' as a voiceless retroflex sibilant, but not many; they typically pronounce it as an alveolar sound.)
@@quocanhnguyenle4952 agree huhu, Chinese pronunciation is more complicated I think. esp an and en. ang and eng, I cannot hear the difference between these two sounds when listening to his voice
Very clear sir nice easy to understand
good
I like this video ,thank you. Could you more precisely describe the difference between 'ang' and 'eng' please?
Bú kèqi! The position of your tongue when pronouncing "ang" is lower and closer to your throat than pronouncing "eng".
Xiè xie laoshī 💟
Hànyu bù nán is a greatest lie of all 😅
very good I love this. xiè xiè
Bú kèqi!!
prefect
🙃🙃🙃🙃
Dear sir,
Are Chinese carector for initial and finals?
I need carector for all finals
6:08
快感是所有地雷
Kuàigǎn shì suǒyǒu dìléi xie xie ni
6:51
Laoshi Xie xie ni 🥰
please I know how to say AN and ANG it's just when I hear an audio I don't know if the person is trying to say AN or ANG
very good
Wo ai laoshi
Xièxie!
Xie xie ni bang wo shui han yu
I studied about *"Qing dynasty"* in history, does that mean the dynasty simply meant *"Please Dynasty?"*
"Please" uses 3rd tone, the dynasty uses 4th
Please Qǐng
Qing dynasty Qīng dài
你好 老师,你姓《张》吗?
对啊,他姓张
Its Zheng is it..?
In Russian there is no such sound.ng. The ear of Russian speakers does not distinguish difference between n and ng. What a pity.
Ну не знаю. Я хоть и из Украины и у нас тоже нет носовой "Н", но половину слов я не мог произнести обычной "Н" здесь. Попробуй скажи "Н" с открытым ртом не поднимая кончика языка и вуаля, хотя если говорить о восприятии на слух, то проблема есть, соглашусь
Ale ż język polski ma takie litery jak "ę" i "ą", które faktycznie mają elementy spółgłoski nosowej "ng". Najlepszym przykładem jest słowo "miękki" w którym możemy usłyszeć "ng" pomiędzy miękką "e" i podwójną "k". Więc chyba ci mósi być trochę łatwiej z odróżnieniem tych liter. =)
у нас в казахском языке есть носовой звук н, но более мягкий. Но при этом мне все равно трудно разобраться с an ang
الحمدلله على نعمة الإسلام
"Chinese is not difficult" "lazy"
Chinese pronounciation is not easy!!
You can do it! We***