Easy Learning

Learn Mandarin Chinese – Ask “Who are you?” (Lesson 3)

Questions and answers about full names and surnames. Become multilingual today with Lenguin’s comprehensive language courses. ║ Let’s Get Multi ╚════════════════════════════════════════ Take one-on-one Chinese lessons ►► http://lenguin.com/chinese1on1 Practice what you learned in this video ►► http://lenguin.com/yt Subscribe to get multi! ►► http://lenguin.com/yt/subscribe Watch the entire course free ►► http://lenguin.com/yt/chinese ║ Support ╚════════════════════════════════════════ ♥ ♥ Want to help us grow? We want to make lots of courses. ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ Help us reach that goal, visit ► http://lenguin.com/support ♥ ♥ ║ More ╚════════════════════════════════════════ Next Lesson ► http://youtu.be/a0ZdGjQ9Wks ♫ Listen to the Lenguin soundtrack ► http://lenguin.com/ost ║ Connect ╚════════════════════════════════════════ Follow us on Twitter ► http://twitter.com/LenguinPenguin Like us on Facebook ► http://fb.com/LenguinPenguin Pin us on Pinterest ► https://pinterest.com/LenguinPenguin ║ Sections ╚════════════════════════════════════════ Display 1 – 0:42- Who are you? Display 2 – 4:31- Reversed Display 3 – 5:36- Who is he? Display 4 – 6:33 – Pronouns Display 5 – 8:09 – He / She Display 6 – 9:04 – What’s your surname? Display 7 – 9:57 – Who / What Download them here ► http://lenguin.com/learn/chinese/who-are-you/video-displays ║ Credits ╚════════════════════════════════════════ Producer – Fame Ketover Writers – John Harvey, Lucille Barale, Roberta Barry, Thomas Madden, Susan Pola Script Supervisor – Fame Ketover Chinese Speakers – Chuan Chao, Ying-chih Chen, Hsiao-jung Chen, Eva Diao, Jan Hu, Tsung-mi Li, Yunhui Yang Original Music – Fame Ketover Editor – Fame Ketover Special Thanks – Check our Patreon Page to have your name listed here Stock Imagery – Wikimedia Commons, Shutterstock © 2015 Fames Games, all rights reserved. The Lenguin name and penguin mascot are trademarks of Fames Games. ║ Lesson Transcript ╚════════════════════════════════════════ Full transcript ► http://lenguin.com/learn/chinese/who-are-you/video-transcript Partial transcript ———————————————– Hi, I’m Fame Ketover of Lenguin.com, and this is Mandarin Chinese. Open up and say “ah” because today we’re going to be talking about vowel sounds. The vowel sounds of Chinese all have approximate equivalents in English. We’re going to go through some Chinese surnames to practice the sounds. Let’s start, listen to the vowel sound. Notice that the vowel sound “a” is spelled with the letter A as in Okinawa. Try repeating the surname after the speaker. Notice the vowel sound “i” is spelled with an I as in Tahiti. Try repeating. Notice that the sound “u” is spelled with a U. Though not quite the same, it’s like the English vowel U in Honalulu. Try repeating. Notice that even though its spelled the same, this does not sound much like the English vowel we use for “Hong Kong”. It sounds more like the short double-o vowel in “hook”. About the only word with this sound spelled with a single O in English is “woman”. Try repeating. Notice that the sound “e” is spelled with an E as in chicken. Notice also that this is not the vowel sound spelled with an E as in “hen”. Try repeating. You might find this sound “e” a bit close to the sound “a” and to the sound “o”. The exercises at Lenguin.com will give you help in making these distinctions. Now we’re going to check out some diphthongs or vowel combinations. Listen to this surname. Up until this point, we’ve treated the sound spelled W and Y as if they were regular consonants. But phonetically, they’re shorted vowels, or semivowels, which glide into the full vowel of the syllable. They’re so close to being vowels that when a semivowel is followed by a vowel, with the same articulation, it might be difficult to hear any transition. The syllable written WU may sound like “u” and the syllable written YI may sound like “i”. Semivowels may follow consonants, and when they do, the Pinyin system writes them with the equivalent vowel letter: U instead of W, and I instead of Y. Listen to the speaker read the rows of surnames in this display.