Hello, and welcome to a short video about Mandarin Chinese.
Now if I told you that I’m fluent in a language with no alphabet, you would probably think
Well, I would be making up the part about being fluent, but Chinese is a language
Have your parents ever said ‘don’t use that tone with me’?
If so, you’re on your way to becoming a Mandarin Chinese expert, as this language
relies on four basic tones and a fifth neutral tone to pronounce words.
Let’s run through them together:
The first tone is high-pitched and remains level, like an exclamation.
The second tone is characterised by raising your vocal pitch, like when you question someone.
The third tone starts low, falls in pitch, and then goes up again.
Try dropping your chin onto your neck and raising it again.
The fourth tone falls in pitch from a high level to a low level.
Try stomping your foot gently when practising.
Proceed with caution when using these tones, because the same syllable can mean ‘mom,’
‘horse’ or ‘scold’ depending on how you say it!
From a grammatical perspective, a simple Mandarin sentence structure has a subject, a predicate
Of course, there are a few obvious differences.
Mandarin Chinese uses characters which, when combined, can form different words.
For example, let’s start with Mù, which looks like this.
By itself means a tree or wood.
But, if we add another character…
If you want to learn how to pronounce more Mandarin Chinese words, check out pinyin – the
most widely used system of Mandarin Chinese that uses the Latin alphabet.
As philosopher Laozi once said, 千里之行,始于足下 (Qiān lǐ zhī xíng, shǐ yú zú xià),
or ‘The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.’
Good luck with your first step towards learning Mandarin Chinese!