The Pinyin initial "nu" is used in the first half of Pinyin syllables. In MandarinBanana's mnemonic system, "nu" belongs to the group of Pinyin initials which are represented in mnemonics by animals. You can visit the Pinyin index to see all Pinyin syllables from this mnemonic group, or to see all Pinyin syllables "nu" can appear in.
Think of “noo” (as in new) but start with a clean n sound and keep the vowel pure and steady, not sliding into “yoo.”
English does not have this exact vowel as a single, stable sound in most accents, so use these approximations and adjustments:
What to remember: this “nu-” vowel is rounded like “oo” but positioned more forward in the mouth than English “oo.”
| Pinyin syllable | English anchor (approx.) | What to copy | What to change to match Chinese |
|---|---|---|---|
| nü (as in nu2/nu3/nu4) | new | the n start | remove the “y” glide; keep a purer, more forward rounded vowel |
| nü | noon | rounded lips | make the vowel brighter/fronted, not deep “oo” |
| nuo (as in nuo2/nuo3/nuo4) | noah | the n + open “o/oa” feel | start from nü, then open into -o smoothly (don’t insert extra syllables) |
| nuan (as in nuan3) | no + an (like “no” + “on,” fast) | the idea of n + (w)a + n transition | keep it one syllable; don’t separate into “noo-an” |
| nong (as in nong2/nong4) | long (without the “l”) | the -ong/ng ending feel | keep n- and a more compact vowel; don’t make it an English “lawng” |
Note: The English anchors are only guides. The goal is the mouth shape and steadiness, not an exact English match.