Pinyin final: "e1"

/ɤ˥/

The Pinyin final "e1" 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 "e1" can appear in.

Pronunciation Tips

The “Cheat Code”

Think of a relaxed “uh” sound said with the tongue pulled slightly back and no lip rounding—then hold it steady in Tone 1 (high, level).


Mouth Mechanics (step-by-step)

Use these steps for e1 in syllables like e1, de1, ge1, he1, zhe1, ke1, che1, she1:

  1. Start neutral: Let your jaw drop a little—about the same openness as in “uh” (not as wide as “ah”).
  2. Tongue position: Keep the tongue relaxed and slightly pulled back.
    • The middle/back of the tongue should feel a bit raised (but not tense).
    • The tongue tip rests low, behind the bottom front teeth.
  3. Lips: Keep lips relaxed and unrounded (don’t purse them).
  4. Throat feel: Aim for an open, steady vowel—no squeezing, no “growl.”
  5. Tone 1: Once the vowel is placed, keep pitch high and level the whole time (no rising or falling).

English Approximation (how to get close)

English does not have exactly the same vowel, but you can get very close by adjusting familiar sounds:

  1. “uh” in “duh”
    • Use the vowel in duh, but pull your tongue slightly farther back and keep it steadier (less “lazy” drift).
  2. The vowel in “the” (when unstressed), as in “the book”
    • Use that quick neutral vowel, but make it clearer and longer, and pull the tongue slightly back.
  3. “u” in “but” (many American accents)
    • Start from that vowel, then remove any hint of lip rounding and aim it slightly farther back in the mouth.

Key modification: English “uh” often sounds very central and can slide; Mandarin e here should feel more back and more stable.


Common Mistakes (English speakers)

  • Accidentally rounding the lips (making it sound closer to “oh/oo”). Keep lips neutral.
  • Turning it into “eh” (like bed). That’s too front and too bright.
  • Adding an “r” color (common in some American accents), making it sound like “err.” Keep it clean, with no r-sound.
  • Letting Tone 1 drift (starting high but then falling). Tone 1 must stay high and level.

Practice Pairs (visual anchors)

These English words are approximations—use them as a starting point, then apply the mouth mechanics above.

Pinyin (Tone 1) Closest English anchor What to copy / how to adjust
e1 “uh” (as in duh) Copy the relaxed “uh”, pull tongue slightly back, keep lips unrounded
de1 “duh” Start from duh, then make the vowel backer and steady high-level tone
ge1 “guh” (as in guts without the -ts) Use a short guh, then stabilize the vowel and keep lips neutral
he1 “huh” Similar to huh but cleaner, no question intonation, keep Tone 1
zhe1 “jer-” (start of jerk, without the r) Use the j feeling, but remove r-coloring; keep the vowel back and steady
ke1 “kuh” (as in cut, without the -t) Use kuh but no rounding, keep vowel back, Tone 1 steady
che1 “chuh” (as in chuck, without the -uck) Keep it not “choh”; no rounding, maintain high-level tone
she1 “shuh” (as in shut, without the -ut) Keep vowel back (not “shay”), Tone 1 steady

Comparisons & caveats (important!)

A) Two different “e1” are used in the Marilyn Method

There are two main vowel outcomes written with “e1,” depending on the initial:

  1. Back “e” after many initials (the main one):
    e1, de1, ge1, he1, zhe1, ke1, che1, she1
    • This is the back, unrounded “uh-like” vowel described above.
    • Think: steady, back “uh.”
  2. Front “ye-/ie-” type after y/i/j/q/x/n/l/t/d/m/b/p (and “üe-” after ü-):
    ye1, bie1, pie1, mie1, tie1, nie1, jie1, qie1, xie1, die1, lie1 and yue1, jue1, que1, xue1
    • Here the written “e” is not the same back vowel. It behaves more like a front “eh” quality, often preceded by a y/glide (“y-” sound), and sometimes with ü (“yue-/jue-/que-/xue-”).
    • Practical takeaway: Don’t force the back “uh” vowel into ye1 / jie1 / xie1 / qie1 etc. Those start with a clear y-like glide and sound more forward.

B) How “e” differs from o and u

  • e (as in ge1): lips not rounded, vowel feels back but not “o”.
  • o in Mandarin often involves more rounding and a different mouth shape. If your lips round, you’re drifting toward o.
  • u is strongly rounded; if your lips purse, you’ve left e territory.

C) How “e” differs from ê/ei-type “eh/ay” feelings

English speakers often brighten vowels. Mandarin e here should not become: - “eh” (like bed)
- “ay” (like say)

If it starts to sound like “ghey / hey” in English, it’s too front and too tense.

D) Retroflex initials (zhe1 / che1 / she1): keep the vowel steady

With zh/ch/sh, English speakers sometimes change the vowel toward something like “er” or “aw.”
- Keep the vowel clean, back, and unrounded—and avoid any r-coloring.

Pinyin with e1

biē
chē
diē
ē
jiē
juē
liē
miē
niē
piē
qiē
quē
shē
tiē
xiē
xuē
yuē
zhē

Mnemonics for e1

In front of the elevator.

Prompt snippets

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Characters with e1

tiē = ti + e1
to stick / to paste / to post (e.g. on a blog) / to keep close to / to fit snugly / to subsidize / allowance (e.g. money for food or housing) / sticker / classifier for sticking plaster: strip
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= k + e1
classifier for small spheres, pearls, corn grains, teeth, hearts, satellites etc
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jiē = ji + e1
yuē = yu + e1
to make an appointment / to invite / approximately / pact / treaty / to economize / to restrict / to reduce (a fraction) / concise
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= g + e1
= g + e1
= k + e1
(literary) branch; stem; stalk / (literary) ax handle
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= k + e1
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= k + e1
tree branch / stem / ax handle
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xuē = xu + e1
surname Xue / vassal state during the Zhou Dynasty (1046-256 BC)
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xuē = xu + e1
wormwood like grass (classical)
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= h + e1
= k + e1
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xiē = xi + e1
xiē = xi + e1
wedge / to hammer in (variant of 揳[xie1])
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xiē = xi + e1
variant of 蠍|蝎[xie1]
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quē = qu + e1
used in place of 缺 (old) / mistake
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quē = qu + e1
surname Que
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= y + e1
to tuck (into a pocket) / to hide / to conceal
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