The Pinyin final "ou1" 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 "ou1" can appear in.
Think of the “oh” in English “go”, but make it shorter, purer, and clearly gliding into a small “oo” shape at the very end.
The final ou1 is a two-part glide: it starts like a rounded “o” and then moves toward “u/oo”.
A useful physical feeling: one continuous vowel that “narrows” at the end, rather than two clearly separated vowels.
English doesn’t match this perfectly, because many English “o” sounds are colored by accent and can drift toward “ow” (with extra movement). Still, you can get close:
Important adjustment: In English, many speakers end “go/toe/so” with an obvious glide. For ou, the glide exists, but it’s typically more controlled and smoother, with less “w” feeling than a strong English “oh” in some accents.
These English words are pronunciation cues, not translations. Focus only on the underlined sound.
| Pinyin (tone 1) | English cue | What to copy |
|---|---|---|
| ou1 | go | Copy the “oh” quality; keep it short + smooth |
| dou1 | toe | Copy the steady “to-” vowel, then a small narrowing |
| tou1 | toe | Same vowel target; (ignore English spelling—listen for the vowel) |
| lou1 | low (American “loh”) | Copy the first part; don’t make it a big “ow” |
| gou1 | go | Copy the clean “oh”; avoid extra “w” |
| hou1 | whoa (first vowel) | Use the “wo-” vowel but keep it even |
| zhou1 / chou1 / shou1 | show (first vowel) | Copy only the vowel color, not the English diphthong movement |
Result: If you say “cow” quality, your starting vowel is too open.
Tip: For ou, always feel that gentle narrowing at the end.
The provided syllables (e.g., mou1, dou1, tou1, lou1, kou1, gou1, hou1, zou1, sou1, zhou1, chou1, shou1) all share the same ou core. The initial consonant changes, but the vowel target should remain consistent:
These syllables include a y-like glide before ou (you can hear/feel a brief “y” leading into the same ou). The ou part is still the same target, but:
Perched on the edge of a rugged cliff, a small blue plastic outhouse stands against the vast expanse of the ocean. Its weathered paint glows under the sunlight, contrasting sharply with the deep blues of the sea and sky. Waves crash far below, and the wind whips around it, giving the lonely structure an oddly heroic, almost whimsical presence on the precipice.