The Pinyin initial "qu" is used in the first half of Pinyin syllables. In MandarinBanana's mnemonic system, "qu" belongs to the group of Pinyin initials which are represented in mnemonics by deities. You can visit the Pinyin index to see all Pinyin syllables from this mnemonic group, or to see all Pinyin syllables "qu" can appear in.
Think of “ch” in cheese, but said farther forward and “flatter,” with a light puff of air, and it’s almost always followed by a tight “ee/ü”-like lip shape.
Important: This exact sound does not exist as a normal English consonant, so you’ll “build” it from familiar parts.
Where it matches: the initial “ch” portion of cheese/cheat/cheery.
Where it matches: the front-of-mouth “ty/che” feeling, not the exact English sound.
These English words are approximations to cue your mouth position; they are not exact matches.
| Pinyin syllable | Closest English cue | What to copy from English | What to change for Mandarin q |
|---|---|---|---|
| qu- (as in qu1–qu4, qu5) | cheese | the initial “ch” | move it more forward, add a puff of air, then form ü (rounded “ee”) |
| que- | che- in chess / che- in cherry | the initial “ch” | make the “ch” lighter + puff, then glide into ü + “eh” (not “oo”) |
| quan- | che- in chess + -an in “Anna” (approx.) | “ch” feeling + open vowel target | after q, keep a quick ü-glide, then an “eh/ɛ” before -n |
| qun- | ch in chew (only the “ch”) | just the “ch” release | don’t use oo; use ü (rounded “ee”) before -n |
| qiong- | ch in cheer + -ong (approx.) | “ch” + a quick y glide | keep the tongue high like y, then round into the -ong ending |