The Pinyin initial "ni" is used in the first half of Pinyin syllables. In MandarinBanana's mnemonic system, "ni" belongs to the group of Pinyin initials which are represented in mnemonics by women. You can visit the Pinyin index to see all Pinyin syllables from this mnemonic group, or to see all Pinyin syllables "ni" can appear in.
Think of the n in “need” said cleanly and lightly, then go straight into an “ee” vowel—no extra “ny” sound unless the spelling has ni + another vowel (like niao, niu, nian).
These are close because they have the same basic n + ee sequence:
Important adjustment for English speakers: say the n more gently and quickly—don’t lean on it. Mandarin ni is crisp: n + ee with no extra consonant in between.
These English words are approximations to help you “hear” the target. Focus on matching the start (the n + vowel), not necessarily the whole English word.
| Pinyin syllable | Say it like (English approximation) | What to match |
|---|---|---|
| ni1 / ni2 / ni3 / ni4 | “knee” | The n + ee (ignore tone in English) |
| nin2 | “neen” (as in “Nene,” or say “knee” + n) | Add a final n closure at the end |
| ning2 / ning3 / ning4 | “knee” + “ng” | Keep ee, then end with ng (back-of-tongue nasal) |
| nie1 / nie2 / nie4 | “nyeh” (like “nyeh!”) | The quick n + yeh feel (see caveat below) |
| nian1 / nian2 / nian3 / nian4 | “nyen” | “ny-” glide then -en ending |
| niao3 / niao4 | “nyow” | “ny-” glide then -ow |
| niu1 / niu2 / niu3 / niu4 | “nyo” (like “yo” with an n in front) | “ny-” glide then -oh/oo blend |
| niang2 / niang4 | “nyahng” | “ny-” glide, ah, then -ng |
In Mandarin, when i is followed by another vowel, the i often behaves like a quick “y” glide into the next vowel.
So: - ni ≈ “knee” (no “y” added) - nie / nian / niao / niu / niang ≈ start with “ny-” (because i is acting like a glide)
English speakers sometimes blur n and l when rushing.
- n: tongue tip touches the gum ridge and air goes through the nose.
- l: tongue tip touches similarly, but air flows around the sides of the tongue (not through the nose).
Keep ni clearly nasal at the beginning.
Learners may say nü as ni because English doesn’t have the front-rounded ü vowel naturally.
Even though both start with n, the vowel quality is very different.
Mandarin has more than one “i”-like vowel. The i in ni is the clear ee-type. It is not the “buzzier,” more central vowel that appears in zhi/chi/shi/ri. If your ni starts sounding dull or “r-like,” bring the tongue forward and high for a bright ee.