Pinyin initial: "f"

/f/

The Pinyin initial "f" is used in the first half of Pinyin syllables. In MandarinBanana's mnemonic system, "f" belongs to the group of Pinyin initials which are represented in mnemonics by men. You can visit the Pinyin index to see all Pinyin syllables from this mnemonic group, or to see all Pinyin syllables "f" can appear in.

Pronunciation Tips

The “Cheat Code”

Think of the f in “fun”—a clean, steady lip-to-teeth friction sound with no voicing.


Mouth Mechanics (step-by-step)

  1. Relax your throat; don’t “hum.” This sound is unvoiced (your vocal cords should stay quiet).
  2. Top teeth lightly touch the inner edge of your lower lip.
    • Not biting hard—just a light contact.
  3. Blow a narrow stream of air out between teeth and lip.
    • You should feel gentle friction on the lower lip.
  4. Keep the lips fairly neutral (not rounded unless the vowel needs it).
    • For fo-, your lips will naturally round because of the following sound, but the f itself stays the same.
  5. Connect smoothly into the vowel.
    • In Mandarin, the initial f should be crisp and quick, then the vowel carries the tone.

A quick self-check: put a finger lightly on your throat—during f there should be no buzzing.


English Approximation (2–3 words)

These English words contain a very similar f sound:

  • “fine” — the f at the beginning matches the Mandarin initial f.
  • “fun” — the f at the beginning matches; keep it light and not exaggerated.
  • “coffee” — the ff sound in the middle (“coffee”) matches the same friction.

How to use this for Mandarin: say the English f, then immediately move into the Mandarin final (vowel part) without inserting an extra vowel like “uh.”


Common Mistakes (English speakers)

  • Voicing it (turning it into “v”):
    English speakers sometimes let the throat buzz, producing something like v. Mandarin f should stay unvoiced.
  • Adding an extra vowel after f:
    Avoid fuh-a for fa. It should be fa, one smooth syllable.
  • Over-biting the lip:
    Too much pressure makes the sound harsh and slows you down. Use light contact.
  • Over-rounding too early (especially before o):
    Don’t start with a “w” sound. Keep a clean f, then round for fo as you enter the vowel.

Practice Pairs (Pinyin ↔ English approximation)

Pinyin syllable English approximation What to copy from English
fa (fa1/fa2/fa3/fa4) “fa” (as in “fa-sol-la”) / “fah!” Initial f + open a feeling
fei (fei1/fei2/fei3/fei4) “fade” (start) / “fail” (start) Initial f + ay glide feeling
fou (fou2/fou3) “foe” Initial f + oh-like vowel (don’t add “w”)
fan (fan1/fan2/fan3/fan4) “fan” Initial f + “an” ending (keep it clean)
fen (fen1/fen2/fen3/fen4) “fun” (but change the vowel) Copy f only; then use a more “uh/schwa”-like vowel
fang (fang1/fang2/fang3/fang4) “fong” (approx.) / “song” (ending) Copy f, then aim for the back “-ng” ending
feng (feng1/feng2/feng3/feng4) “fung” (approx.) Copy f, then a central vowel + “-ng” ending
fo (fo2) “for” (American accent, without strong r) Copy f + rounded “o” feel (avoid heavy “r”)

Note: The English words are only to help you see and feel the initial f. The Mandarin vowel and tone will still differ.


Comparisons and caveats (similar Pinyin sounds)

f vs. h

Both are “breathy,” but f is made with lip + teeth friction, while h is made in the throat with no lip-to-teeth contact. If you can’t feel friction on your lower lip, you’re probably drifting toward h.

f vs. v

Mandarin f stays unvoiced. If it sounds like “vine,” you’ve voiced it. Keep the throat quiet.

f vs. p (especially p / ph)

p is a stop sound: lips close, then release (often with a puff of air in Mandarin p). f is continuous friction—no full closure, no “pop.”

Watch the rounding in “fo-”

In syllables like fo (pronounced with a w-like glide in the vowel), English speakers may accidentally start with fw- or w-. Keep the f pure first; the rounding belongs to the vowel that follows.

Pinyin with f

fān
fán
fǎn
fàn
fāng
fáng
fǎng
fàng
fēi
féi
fěi
fèi
fēn
fén
fěn
fèn
fēng
féng
fěng
fèng
fóu
fǒu

Mnemonics for f

F is for Frankenstein's Monster.

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Characters with f

fǎng = f + ang3
fáng = f + ang2
fán = f + an2
fěi = f + ei3
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忿
fèn = f + (e)n4
anger / indignation / hatred
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fèi = f + ei4
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fēng = f + (e)ng1
fǎng = f + ang3
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fèi = f + ei4
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féi = f + ei2
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fěi = f + ei3
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fēng = f + (e)ng1
Zhou Dynasty capital / surname Feng
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= f + o2
Japanese variant of 佛
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= f + a2
to turn the soil / upturned soil / (used in place names)
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fēng = f + (e)ng1
rainy / place name in Shaanxi / Feng River in Shaanxi 陝西|陕西, tributary of Wei River 渭水[Wei4 Shui3]
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fāng = f + ang1
name of a district in Sichuan
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fāng = f + ang1
fān = f + an1
pennant
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fēn = f + (e)n1
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= f + a4
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