Pinyin final: "ai4"

/ai̯˥˩/

The Pinyin final "ai4" 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 "ai4" can appear in.

Pronunciation Tips

The “Cheat Code”

Think of the vowel in English “eye”, but say it short and firmly, with a sharp falling tone.


Mouth Mechanics (step-by-step)

  1. Start open: Drop your jaw a bit and open your mouth comfortably, as if beginning “ah.”
  2. Tongue low and relaxed: Let the tongue sit low in the mouth; the tip can rest behind the lower front teeth.
  3. Begin with “ah”: Your first vowel position feels like “a” in “father” (open, not tight).
  4. Glide quickly toward “ee”: Without moving the jaw much, slide the tongue slightly upward and forward toward an “ee”-like position.
    • The key word is glide: it’s one smooth movement, not two separate vowels.
  5. Lips stay neutral: Do not round your lips; keep them relaxed.
  6. Add the 4th tone (falling): Start a bit higher and drop quickly and decisively—like giving a firm “No.”
    • Keep the vowel compact while the pitch falls.

English Approximation (what to borrow, what to change)

Use these as near matches for the vowel sound:

  • “eye” — the whole vowel in eye is close to ai.
    • Adjust it: make it shorter and cleaner (don’t drag it out like dramatic English emphasis).
  • “buy” — the vowel in buy is also a good match.
    • Adjust it: keep the lips neutral (English buy can get slightly rounded in some accents).
  • “sigh” — again, the main vowel is similar.
    • Adjust it: avoid turning it into “sah-ee” (two clear syllables). It should be one glide.

If your “eye” vowel in English tends to sound very wide or drawled, aim for a quicker “ah → ee” slide with less mouth movement.


Common Mistakes (English-speaker pitfalls)

  • Making it two separate vowels: saying something like “ah-ee” with a noticeable break. Keep it one smooth glide.
  • Over-lengthening: English often stretches diphthongs. Chinese ai4 is typically tighter and more controlled.
  • Changing the lip shape: rounding or puckering (which can accidentally pull it toward ao-like territory).
  • Missing the 4th tone: saying a flat “ai” or a gentle fall. The 4th tone should be quick and decisive.

Practice Pairs (visual sound anchors)

Pinyin (target) English anchor (approx.) What to copy What to change
ai4 eye the “eye” vowel make it shorter + add a sharp fall
bai4 bye “bye” vowel keep lips neutral; crisp falling tone
mai4 my “my” vowel don’t drawl; firm fall
dai4 die “die” vowel avoid “dye-uh”; clean glide
lai4 lie “lie” vowel shorter; stronger fall
gai4 / kai4 guy (approx.) similar diphthong feel don’t round lips; keep “ai” quality
hai4 high “high” vowel keep it compact; falling tone

(English anchors are approximations; the goal is to hear and feel the ah→ee glide plus the falling tone.)


Comparisons & Caveats (similar Pinyin sounds to watch)

  • ai vs. a:
    • a is a steady open vowel (more like “ah”).
    • ai must move: it starts open and glides upward/front. If you keep it flat, it won’t sound like ai.
  • ai vs. ei:
    • ai starts more open (an “ah”-like start).
    • ei starts narrower/tenser (more like “eh” moving toward “ee,” similar to the vowel in English “say” without a strong “y” ending).
    • If your ai starts too “eh”-like, it may drift toward ei.
  • ai vs. ao:
    • ai glides toward an ee-like end with neutral lips.
    • ao glides toward an oo-like end and often involves noticeable lip rounding.
    • If your lips round or your tongue pulls back, you may accidentally create ao-type resonance.
  • ai in different syllables (initials don’t change the vowel target):
    • In bai4, pai4, dai4, tai4, gai4, kai4, hai4, zhai4, chai4, shai4, zai4, cai4, sai4, wai4, the final ai stays the same; only the starting consonant changes.
    • For guai4/kuai4/huai4/zhuai4/chuai4/shuai4, there is an added w-glide before ai—so you’ll feel a quick “w + ai”: start with rounded lips for the w, then immediately return to neutral lips for the ai glide, while still keeping the 4th tone sharp and falling.

Pinyin with ai4

ài
bài
cài
chài
chuài
dài
gài
guài
hài
huài
kài
kuài
lài
mài
nài
pài
sài
shài
shuài
tài
wài
zài
zhài
zhuài

Mnemonics for ai4

In the airplane's bathroom.

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Characters with ai4

kuài = ku + ai4
to balance an account / accountancy / accounting
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nài = n + ai4
(bound form) to bear; to endure; to withstand
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dài = d + ai4
(literary) to arrest / to seize / to overtake / until
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tài = t + ai4
safe / peaceful / most / grand
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tài = t + ai4
Mt Tai 泰山[Tai4 Shan1] in Shandong / abbr. for Thailand
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dài = d + ai4
band / belt / girdle / ribbon / tire / area / zone / region / CL:條|条[tiao2] / to wear / to carry / to take along / to bear (i.e. to have) / to lead / to bring / to look after / to raise
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gài = g + ai4
lid / top / cover / canopy / to cover / to conceal / to build
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ài = Ø + ai4
pass / defile / narrow / confined / in distress
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sài = s + ai4
to compete / competition / match / to surpass / better than / superior to / to excel
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gài = g + ai4
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gài = g + ai4
gài = g + ai4
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zài = z + ai4
to carry / to convey / to load / to hold / to fill up / and / also / as well as / simultaneously
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dài = d + ai4
to put on or wear (glasses, hat, gloves etc) / to respect / to bear / to support
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dài = d + ai4
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chuài = chu + ai4
to kick / to trample / to tread on
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zhài = zh + ai4
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zhài = zh + ai4
stronghold / stockade / camp / (stockaded) village
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kuài = ku + ai4
old variant of 澮|浍[kuai4]
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zhuài = zhu + ai4
to pull / to tug at (sth)
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