The Pinyin final "o2" is used in the second half of Pinyin syllables. In MandarinBanana's mnemonic system, the second half of a Pinyin syllable is always represented by a location. You can visit the Pinyin index to see all Pinyin syllables from this mnemonic group, or to see all Pinyin syllables "o2" can appear in.
Think of the “aw” sound in “awe”, but make it shorter and rounder, and (in most syllables) let it start with a quick “w” glide into that “aw.”
Use these steps to reliably produce o2:
Important feel: lips round first (w-feel), then open into a rounded “aw.”
English doesn’t have an exact match in every accent, but you can get very close:
These English words are approximations—use them as a target feeling, then adjust toward the Mandarin sound (shorter, rounder, no “r”).
| Pinyin (Tone 2) | Closest English anchor | What to copy from the English word |
|---|---|---|
| o2 | awe | the rounded “aw” vowel (keep it shorter) |
| bo2 | “wore” (without r) | the w + rounded vowel start |
| po2 | “pour” (without r) | rounded vowel + clear breathy p feel (don’t add r) |
| mo2 | “more” (without r) | m + rounded vowel (no r-coloring) |
| fo2 | “for” (without r) | f + rounded vowel (no r) |
| duo2 | “dwarf” (start only, without r) | dw- style rounded launch into “aw” |
| tuo2 | “toward” (start only, without r) | tw- rounded launch (avoid full English “or”) |
| nuo2 | “noir” (without r) | n + rounded vowel (no r) |
| luo2 | “law” (with a quick w-feel) | l + rounded “aw”; add a brief rounded launch |
| guo2 | “GW-” in “Gwen” + “awe” | g + w start, then “aw” |
| huo2 | “whoa” (but shorter, less “oh”) | rounded onset; land on aw-like quality |
| zhuo2 | “draw” (but with tongue curled back, no r) | dr- + aw feeling; keep “aw” rounded |
| ruo2 | “raw” (but Mandarin r-, no English r) | r-like start then rounded “aw” (no English r-coloring) |
| zuo2 | “dz-” + “awe” | quick ts/dz-like start then rounded vowel |
| cuo2 | “ts-” + “awe” | ts start with a little extra air, then rounded vowel |
In the syllables provided (bo2, po2, mo2, fo2, duo2, tuo2, nuo2, luo2, guo2, huo2, zhuo2, ruo2, zuo2, cuo2), the vowel is not a plain standalone “o.” It typically has a w-glide: think (w) + aw.
- If you pronounce duo2 like “doh,” it will sound off. Aim for dwaw-like timing: quick rounded launch, then “aw.”
English “go/no” often has a glide (it changes over the vowel). Mandarin o2 should feel more stable—not “oh-oo,” but a steadier, round “aw”-like quality.
Learners often treat o and uo as totally separate. In practice, after the initials in your list, this final behaves like -uo (with that w-glide). Treat them as the same core target: rounded launch → aw-like vowel.
Pairs like zuo2 / cuo2 differ mainly in the consonant (c has stronger air than z). Keep the o2 part consistent: don’t change the vowel just because the initial feels different.
Tone 2 should rise smoothly across the syllable. Avoid turning it into an English question intonation that rises too late or too sharply; begin the rise earlier and keep it even.