Chinese Lessons

Curriculum

Tuition Policy

Interpretations

Translations

Voiceover

FAQ

Why Chinese

Chinese Culture

Tour China

Map of China

Contact Us

About Us

Links

Terms of Use

Home

Student Lessons

Chinese Tones

Mandarin Chinese has four pitched tones and a "toneless" tone. The reason for having these tones is 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 more 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.

First Tone

Second Tone

Third Tone

Fourth Tone

Pinyin

Pinyin is a system of romanization (phonemic notation and transcription to Roman script) for Standard Mandarin, where pin means "spell" and yin means "sound".   The most common variant of pinyin in use is called Hanyu Pinyin (Simplified Chinese: 汉语拼音, Traditional Chinese. By letting Roman characters refer to specific Chinese sounds, pinyin produces a compact and accurate romanization, which is convenient for native Chinese speakers and scholars.

Initial Consonants and Vowels

Audio Library of Common Chinese Words

The Chinese lessons outlined in the components area below are designed to re-enforce your lessons, and are not an acceptable tool for self-study.   CLC recommends that students review each component when their teacher has determined that said component can be most useful.  Each component is roughly 20-minutes long.  Please advise CLC via email of any problems you encounter in your effort to listen to the components outlined below. 

Actions

Animals

Numbers & Calendar

Colors

Family

Food

Fruits

Greetings

House

Human Body

Professions

Vegetables

*PLEASE NOTE THAT THE COMPONENTS LISTED ABOVE WILL FUNCTION WITH WINDOWS XP MEDI