The Pinyin final "ei2" 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 "ei2" can appear in.
Think of the vowel in “say” (American English), but make it cleaner and shorter, and say it with a rising tone (Tone 2).
Key feeling: a quick glide from “eh” → “ee-ish”, with neutral lips, plus a rising pitch.
These English examples are close, but you must “clean them up”:
If you speak American English: many people naturally add an extra “color” or tail to the vowel in “say/they.” For Mandarin ei, aim for a simpler, cleaner glide.
| Pinyin (Tone 2) | English anchor (approx.) | What to copy |
|---|---|---|
| ei2 | “say” | the “ay” vowel, but shorter + rising tone |
| pei2 | “pay” | “pay” vowel; keep it clean, add Tone 2 |
| fei2 | “fate” (first vowel) | the “fa-” vowel sound before the t |
| lei2 | “lay” | the “ay” vowel, not drawn out |
| shei2 | “shay” (name “Shay”) | “shay” vowel; keep lips neutral |
| zei2 | “zay” (as in “Zayn,” first vowel) | “zay” vowel; light ending |
| wei2 | “way” | “w + ay” glide; rise in pitch |
| tui2 | “tway” (as in “twain,” vowel) | “tw-” plus “ay”; don’t add extra vowel |
| kui2 | “quay” (like “key,” but with “ay”) | rounded-to-neutral transition; keep ei clear |
| hui2 | “hway” (older pronunciation of “wh-”) | breathy “h” then “way” vowel |
| rui2 | “ray” | “ray” vowel; keep it forward, add Tone 2 |
| mei2 | “may” | “may” vowel; short, clean glide |
| chui2 | “chway” | “ch-” + “way” vowel; keep ei bright |
| sui2 | “sway” | “sw-” + “ay”; smooth single syllable |
Note: Some English anchors (like “tway/chway/hway”) are not common standalone words for everyone; they are meant as sound anchors to show the consonant + “way” vowel pattern.
This final is best mastered by aiming for a short, clean “say”-like glide plus a clear rising Tone 2, keeping the vowel smooth and not over-Englishing the ending.
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