Pinyin final: "ou1"

/ou̯˥/

The Pinyin final "ou1" 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 "ou1" can appear in.

Pronunciation Tips

The “Cheat Code”

Think of the “oh” in English “go”, but make it shorter, purer, and clearly gliding into a small “oo” shape at the very end.


Mouth Mechanics (step-by-step)

The final ou1 is a two-part glide: it starts like a rounded “o” and then moves toward “u/oo”.

  1. Relax your jaw and open your mouth a little (not wide like “ah”).
  2. Round your lips into a medium “O” shape—imagine you’re about to say “oh.”
  3. Keep your tongue relaxed and low-mid in the mouth (don’t bunch it up like English “r”).
  4. Start voicing a steady “o” sound, then smoothly tighten the lip rounding as you finish.
  5. As you finish, pull the lips slightly forward (as if to say “oo”), but don’t change it into a full separate syllable.
  6. For tone 1, keep the pitch high and level for the whole sound (no dip, no slide).

A useful physical feeling: one continuous vowel that “narrows” at the end, rather than two clearly separated vowels.


English Approximation (what to copy and how to adjust)

English doesn’t match this perfectly, because many English “o” sounds are colored by accent and can drift toward “ow” (with extra movement). Still, you can get close:

  • “go” (American English): use the vowel in “go”, but make it shorter and cleaner, and don’t let it turn into a big “ow.”
  • “toe”: use the vowel in “toe”, focusing on the first, steady part; then add only a small narrowing at the end.
  • “so”: copy the “so” vowel, but keep it more even and less dramatic.

Important adjustment: In English, many speakers end “go/toe/so” with an obvious glide. For ou, the glide exists, but it’s typically more controlled and smoother, with less “w” feeling than a strong English “oh” in some accents.


Common Mistakes (English-speaker traps)

  • Making it “ow” like “cow.” That English sound starts with a more open vowel (closer to “ah”) and then moves to “oo.” ou does not start that open.
  • Adding an extra syllable: saying something like “oh-oo.” It should be one continuous vowel, not two beats.
  • Letting the tongue tense up or adding an English “r” color (especially after certain initials). Keep the vowel clean and forward.
  • Tone drift: for ou1, don’t let pitch fall at the end. Keep it high and flat.

Practice Pairs (Pinyin vs. English cue)

These English words are pronunciation cues, not translations. Focus only on the underlined sound.

Pinyin (tone 1) English cue What to copy
ou1 go Copy the “oh” quality; keep it short + smooth
dou1 toe Copy the steady “to-” vowel, then a small narrowing
tou1 toe Same vowel target; (ignore English spelling—listen for the vowel)
lou1 low (American “loh”) Copy the first part; don’t make it a big “ow”
gou1 go Copy the clean “oh”; avoid extra “w”
hou1 whoa (first vowel) Use the “wo-” vowel but keep it even
zhou1 / chou1 / shou1 show (first vowel) Copy only the vowel color, not the English diphthong movement

Comparisons & caveats (similar sounds to watch out for)

A) ou vs. English “ow” (as in “cow”)

  • English “ow” usually starts more open (closer to “a” in “father”) and then glides to “oo.”
  • Chinese ou starts already rounded and more “o-like,” then glides slightly toward “u.”

Result: If you say “cow” quality, your starting vowel is too open.

B) ou vs. o in Pinyin (where “o” appears alone or in “-ong/-uo” patterns)

  • ou is a clear glide ending toward “u/oo.”
  • A plain o in other contexts can feel more stable (less of a glide) depending on the syllable pattern.

Tip: For ou, always feel that gentle narrowing at the end.

C) ou after different initials: the final stays the same

The provided syllables (e.g., mou1, dou1, tou1, lou1, kou1, gou1, hou1, zou1, sou1, zhou1, chou1, shou1) all share the same ou core. The initial consonant changes, but the vowel target should remain consistent:

  • Keep the same rounded start and the same small “oo” narrowing at the end.
  • Don’t let certain initials “pull” your vowel into an English habit (for example, making shou1 sound like English “show” with a big diphthong).

D) Caveat: you1 / diu1 / niu1 / liu1 / jiu1 / qiu1 / xiu1

These syllables include a y-like glide before ou (you can hear/feel a brief “y” leading into the same ou). The ou part is still the same target, but:

  • Start with a quick “y” connection (like the beginning of “yes”), then immediately round into ou.
  • Avoid turning it into two syllables (“yoh-oo”). It’s still one smooth syllable with a lead-in glide.

Pinyin with ou1

chōu
diū
dōu
gōu
hōu
jiū
kōu
liū
lōu
mōu
niū
ōu
pōu
qiū
shōu
sōu
tōu
xiū
yōu
zhōu
zōu

Mnemonics for ou1

In front of the outhouse.

Prompt snippets

Perched on the edge of a rugged cliff, a small blue plastic outhouse stands against the vast expanse of the ocean. Its weathered paint glows under the sunlight, contrasting sharply with the deep blues of the sea and sky. Waves crash far below, and the wind whips around it, giving the lonely structure an oddly heroic, almost whimsical presence on the precipice.

Add a new mnemonic for ou1

Characters with ou1

qiū = qi + ou1
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ōu = Ø + ou1
ōu = Ø + ou1
ōu = Ø + ou1
niū = ni + ou1
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zōu = z + ou1
ōu = Ø + ou1
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ōu = Ø + ou1
old name for Wenzhou City 溫州市|温州市[Wen1 zhou1 shi4] in Zhejiang 浙江[Zhe4 jiang1]
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sōu = s + ou1
Japanese variant of 搜[sou1]
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qiū = qi + ou1
Catalpa / Mallotus japonicus
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jiū = ji + ou1
(onom.) wailing of child / chirp / kiss (Tw)
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sōu = s + ou1
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gōu = g + ou1
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xiū = xi + ou1
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gōu = g + ou1
bamboo frame for drying clothes / bamboo cage
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qiū = qi + ou1
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jiū = ji + ou1
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yōu = y + ou1
Oh! (exclamation of dismay etc) / see 呦呦[you1 you1]
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