The Pinyin final "ei3" 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 "ei3" can appear in.
Think of the vowel in “say” (the ay sound), but keep it clean and short and say it with Tone 3 (dip then rise).
Key feeling: One smooth vowel that moves from “eh” → “ee”, not two separate vowels.
These are near matches; the goal is to copy the vowel glide while avoiding extra English habits.
“say” — use the vowel in sAY (the “ay” part).
Match: the main vowel glide.
Adjust: make it shorter and cleaner, with no trailing “y” sound lingering at the end.
“they” — use the vowel in thEY.
Match: the same ay-like quality.
Adjust: don’t let it turn into a long, tense English diphthong; keep it compact.
“eight” — use the vowel in EIGHt.
Match: the ay glide.
Adjust: ignore the final consonant; focus only on the vowel, and keep it tight and controlled.
If your English “ay” is very strong (very “ee”-heavy at the end), aim for more “eh” at the start and a lighter finish.
| Pinyin (Tone 3) | Closest English cue | What to copy |
|---|---|---|
| ei3 | “say” (vowel only) | Smooth eh→ee glide + Tone 3 dip |
| bei3 | “bay” | The -ay vowel (keep it short/clean) |
| mei3 | “may” | The vowel quality; avoid extra trailing “y” |
| nei3 | “nay” | Same vowel; keep lips relaxed |
| lei3 | “lay” | Same glide; don’t over-lengthen |
| wei3 | “way” | Copy -ay; start with a light “w” |
| fei3 | “fate” (vowel only) | Copy the vowel; ignore the final consonant |
| gei3 | “gay” | Same vowel; clean ending |
Use the English word only as a sound hint—the Mandarin result should be shorter, cleaner, and tonal.
Practical check: if your jaw drops a lot at the start, you’re drifting toward ai, not ei.
If you feel vibration in your nose or a nasal “n/ng” closure, you’re not doing ei.
Syllables like dui3, gui3, hui3, zui3, cui3, sui3, tui3, shui3, rui3 contain a w + ei sequence (often written ui, but pronounced like (w)ei).
- Keep the w quick and light (rounded lips briefly), then go straight into the ei glide.
- Don’t turn dui3 into “doo-ee” or “dway” with an exaggerated English-style glide. It should feel like one tight syllable.
Tone 3 is mid → low → rise. When said clearly or alone, you’ll hear the full dip; in fast speech, it may sound mostly low unless it’s emphasized.
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