The Pinyin final "e3" 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 "e3" can appear in.
Think of a relaxed “uh” sound made farther back in the throat, with no English “r” color, and say it with a 3rd-tone dip.
This vowel is not a perfect match in English, but you can get close with these approximations:
Important modification: Many American English speakers automatically color “uh” with a slight r-like resonance in some contexts. For Mandarin e3, keep it clean—no “er/urr” quality.
Approximate English words are only “sound neighbors”—use them to aim your mouth shape, then shift to the Mandarin target.
| Pinyin (3rd tone) | Closest English “helper” | What to copy from English | What to change for Mandarin |
|---|---|---|---|
| e3 | “duh” | the relaxed “uh” | move it back, remove any “r” color, add 3rd tone |
| ge3 | “guh” (as in “gun” without the “n”) | g + “uh” feeling | keep vowel backer, lips neutral, no final consonant |
| ke3 | “cuh” (like the start of “cut”) | k + “uh” | same vowel change; keep it clean and tone-controlled |
| she3 | “sure” (very roughly) | “sh” start | do not make an English “ur/r”; keep a clean back vowel |
| re3 | “r” + “uh” (very roughly) | the idea of starting with an r-like sound | don’t use a strong English “r”; keep it smooth and Mandarin-style |
In the Marilyn Method, two different vowel qualities are being spelled with “e” in pinyin:
1) Back “e” (the main topic here):
- e3, ge3, ke3, zhe3, che3, she3, re3: These use the same back, unrounded vowel. It’s the “deep/back uh-like” sound.
2) Front “e” sound after y-/i-/ü- type glides (spelled with e but pronounced more like “ye/üe”):
- ye3, jie3, qie3, xie3, bie3, pie3, tie3, lie3 (these behave like -ie)
- yue3, jue3, xue3 (these behave like -üe)
What this means:
- e3 / ge3 / she3 / re3: make the vowel back (a back “uh-like” vowel).
- ye3 / xie3 / jie3: the vowel is front “ye”-like (it will feel closer to “yeh,” but still Mandarin-clean).
- yue3 / jue3 / xue3: the vowel is front and rounded because of ü (lips round, tongue front/high).
So, even though pinyin writes e in all these, your mouth should not do the same thing in all of them.
In careful practice, pronounce the full dip–rise. In faster sentences, 3rd tone can sound more like a low tone unless it’s emphasized. For textbook practice of e3, keep the full contour so your foundation is solid.
Scene setting and image style: a cozy living area is cleverly integrated within a refurbished vintage elevator car, framed by distressed wrought-iron cage work and polished wooden panels. A compact, plush velvet loveseat sits against one wall beneath a glowing brass dome light and an analog floor indicator dial. The floor is covered by an antique patterned rug, with a small, built-in bookshelf carved directly into the dark wood paneling holding miniature tomes. Opposite the seating, a tiny, elegant electric fireplace insert is nestled into the structure, casting a warm light through the elevator gates. An antique pull-cord mechanism dangles subtly in the corner, contrasting with the rich, unexpected comfort of the tiny, enclosed parlor. Art Deco style.
Wir verwenden Cookies, um die grundlegende Funktionalität der Website sicherzustellen (essenzielle Cookies) und um Zugriffe zu analysieren sowie personalisierte Anzeigen bereitzustellen (nicht-essenzielle Cookies von Google Analytics und Google AdSense). Bitte wählen Sie, ob Sie allen Cookies zustimmen möchten oder nur essenzielle Cookies zulassen. Weitere Informationen finden Sie in unserer Datenschutzerklärung .