The Pinyin initial "ch" is used in the first half of Pinyin syllables. In MandarinBanana's mnemonic system, "ch" 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 "ch" can appear in.
Think of “ch” as a strong, aspirated, tongue-curled “ch”—like the “ch” in “church,” but with the tongue pulled slightly back and a clear puff of air.
English does not have this exact sound in the same place in the mouth, but you can get very close:
If your “ch” sounds too soft or too far forward, you’re probably making an English-style “ch” rather than the Chinese ch.
These English words are approximations meant to cue the feel of the sound (tongue curl + puff of air). The matching part is the starting consonant.
| Pinyin (ch-) | Approx. English cue | What to imitate |
|---|---|---|
| cha | chop | Initial ch, but with more air and tongue slightly farther back |
| chai | child | Initial ch, then glide toward “ai” |
| chao | chow | Initial ch, then “ow” |
| chou | choke | Initial ch, then “oh” |
| che | church (start) | Initial ch; keep the “ch” crisp, don’t melt into “sh” |
| chan | chant | Initial ch, then “an” + final “n” (tongue ends forward) |
| chen | chunk (start) | Initial ch, then a short central vowel feel + “n” |
| chang | chong (as in “Chong-”) | Initial ch, then “ah” + final “ng” (back of tongue up) |
| cheng | chunk (start) | Initial ch, then central vowel feel + final “ng” |
Tip for accuracy: keep the English cue only as a starting point; the real target is retracted tongue + stop-and-release + strong air.
A simple test: hold your palm a few inches in front of your mouth—ch should blow air onto it clearly.
If your sound can be sustained like “shhhhh,” you are not making ch.
If your “ch” starts to resemble the “ch” in “cheese” with a very fronted tongue position, you may be drifting toward q.
In syllables like chi, the “i” is not the same as the “ee” in see. After ch, it becomes a special vowel-like sound that feels “r-colored” or “tongue-back.”
Practical cue: say ch correctly first (curl + puff), then keep the tongue pulled back rather than sliding forward into a bright “ee.”
Charlie Chaplin is a slight, expressive silent film actor with a pale, melancholic face and bright, mischievous dark eyes. He is defined by his signature small, square "toothbrush" moustache and thick, wavy black hair tucked under a weathered, black felt bowler hat. He wears a distinctive, ill-fitting ensemble: a tight-fitting black tailcoat over a tattered white tuxedo shirt with a limp, crooked bow tie, paired with enormously baggy grey trousers held up by thin suspenders. His shoes are massive, oversized black leather boots that curve upward at the toes. He is consistently seen gripping a limber, curved bamboo walking cane, which he uses with acrobatic grace. His posture is slightly splayed, with feet pointed outward in a "duck-like" stance.