The Pinyin final "e2" 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 "e2" can appear in.
Think of “uh” (as in duh), but make it more “back in the throat,” flatter, and cleaner—then say it with Tone 2 (rise).
This exact vowel is not a standard English vowel in most accents, but you can get very close by modifying familiar sounds:
Key adjustment for English speakers: English “uh” is often lazy/reduced and can pick up extra coloring. For e2, make it steady, clean, and slightly back—like a carefully “placed” uh.
These English words are approximations to cue the mouth shape. Match only the vowel part shown.
| Pinyin (Tone 2) | Closest English cue | What to copy from English |
|---|---|---|
| e2 | duh | the “uh” vowel, but held steady and slightly back |
| de2 | duh | d + “uh” (then add a rising tone) |
| ne2 | nun | the “uh” vowel (keep lips neutral; add rise) |
| ge2 | guh | g + “uh” with a clean, steady vowel |
| ke2 | k in skate + uh | a clean k then the steady “uh” vowel (no extra glide) |
| he2 | huh | the “uh” vowel (avoid rounding toward “ho”) |
| zhe2 | judge (vowel only) | the central vowel quality, but keep it pure and add Tone 2 |
| she2 | shush (first vowel) | the “uh”-like vowel after “sh” (no rounding) |
| ze2 | suds (vowel only) | the central “uh” vowel quality |
Note: English cues vary by accent. Use them as a mouth-shape reminder, not as an exact match.
In the Marilyn Method, some syllables spelled with -e- are pronounced with a back “uh” quality (like e2, de2, ge2, he2, zhe2, she2, ze2)—while others spelled with -ie- / -e- after y/j/q/x are a clear “ye/eh”-type vowel (like bie2, die2, jie2, xie2, ye2, nie2) or a rounded front glide + “eh” (like jue2, xue2, que2).
Practical rule:
- e2 after d/n/g/k/h/zh/sh/z → think steady back “uh” (clean, unrounded).
- -ie- / ye- (bie2, xie2, ye2, etc.) → starts with a “y” glide and has a more front “eh” quality.
- -ue- / -üe- (jue2, xue2, que2) → starts with rounded lips (like a tight “yoo” shape without the “oo” sound), then goes to “eh.”
If your lips are rounding, you’re drifting away from e2.
Many English speakers “help” the rising tone by changing the vowel quality (turning it into an “eh” or “ay”). Keep the vowel stable and let only the pitch rise.
If you can hold e2 steadily on one vowel (no glide), with neutral lips, and then add a clear mid-to-high rise, you are producing the core sound correctly for e2 (and for de2 / ne2 / ge2 / ke2 / he2 / zhe2 / she2 / ze2).