Pinyin initial: "qi"

/tɕʰi/

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

Pronunciation Tips

The “Cheat Code”

Think of “qi-” as a very “front-of-the-mouth,” hissy, strongly puffed version of the “ch” in cheese—almost like “cheese” said with a big breathy burst and a tight smile.


Mouth Mechanics (step-by-step)

  1. Smile slightly: keep the lips spread (not rounded like “shoo”).
  2. Teeth fairly close: not clenched, but closer than for English “k.”
  3. Tongue tip down: let the tip of your tongue rest low, near the back of your lower front teeth. Don’t point it upward.
  4. Tongue blade up and forward: raise the front flat part of the tongue (just behind the tip) toward the front roof of your mouth, close to where the roof becomes bumpy behind the teeth.
  5. Make a tiny “stop,” then release into a hiss: briefly block the air, then let it burst out and immediately become a tight, high “hissing” friction (this is the “ch”-like quality).
  6. Add strong aspiration (the “puff”): when you release, there should be a noticeable burst of air—stronger than in English “cheese.”
  7. Keep it “thin and bright”: the sound should feel forward and bright, not dark or throaty.

English Approximation (how to get close)

English does not have exactly the same sound, but you can get very close with these approximations:

  • “cheese” — Use the initial “ch” sound, but push it farther forward (more “hissy,” less “thick”), and add more breath on release.
  • “cheap” — Again, focus on the initial “ch”, but make it tighter and more hiss-like, with a clear puff of air before the vowel.
  • “chill” — Use the initial “ch”, and keep a slight smile; then make the release sharper and breathier.

Key modification: English “ch” is usually a bit “heavier” and not as forward/hissy. For qi-, make it more fronted, tighter, and more airy.


Common Mistakes (English speakers)

  • Making it like “chee-” with normal English “ch”: English “ch” is usually too “thick” and not hissy/forward enough.
  • Replacing it with “k” or “kee”: qi- is not a back-of-the-mouth “k” sound. It must be made with the tongue high and forward.
  • Replacing it with “sh” (“shee”): qi- starts with a brief stop + burst, not a smooth continuous “sh.”
  • Forgetting the puff of air: qi- has a strong breathy burst at the start; without it, it can sound closer to other Mandarin initials.

Practice Pairs (visual + sound mapping)

Pinyin (target) English helper (approx.) What to copy from the English word How to adjust for Mandarin qi-
qi cheap the starting “ch” make it more hissy/forward + add a stronger puff
qia chop the starting “ch” keep lips spread, not rounded; add strong puff; then go into “-a”
qie chess the starting “ch” make it tighter and brighter, then go into “-e” (like “yeh/eh” feel)
qiao chow the starting “ch” add strong puff, keep the sound fronted, then flow into “-iao”
qiu chew the starting “ch” keep a slight smile at the start (not rounded early); then glide into “-iu”

Note: These English words are only helpers. The goal is to copy the starting consonant feeling, then shift to Mandarin vowel timing and clarity.


Comparisons & Caveats (how qi- differs from similar Mandarin sounds)

qi- vs. j-

  • qi- has a strong puff of air at the start.
  • j- is made in a very similar mouth position, but without that strong breathy burst.

If your qi- sounds like j-, you probably didn’t aspirate enough.

qi- vs. ch- (as in “chi”)

  • Mandarin ch- is typically farther back and often has a more “retroflex,” thicker quality (more like a deeper “chr-/shr-” feel).
  • qi- is more forward and “smile/hiss” bright, produced closer to the front roof of the mouth.

If your qi- sounds like Mandarin chi, you are likely curling the tongue too much or placing it too far back.

qi- vs. x-

  • x- is a smooth, continuous hissy sound (no stop/burst).
  • qi- begins with a brief stop, then bursts into hiss.

If your qi- sounds like xi, you’re probably skipping the stop and turning it into a pure fricative.

Vowel caveat after qi-

In Mandarin, after q-, the written vowel may look like “i,” but the overall syllables (qi, qin, qing, qian, qiao, qiu, etc.) keep the same forward, tight, smile-like consonant setup first. Keep the consonant fronted and aspirated, then let the vowel/glide happen cleanly afterward.

Pinyin with qi

qiā
qiá
qiǎ
qià
qiān
qián
qiǎn
qiàn
qiāng
qiáng
qiǎng
qiàng
qiāo
qiáo
qiǎo
qiào
qiē
qié
qiě
qiè
qīn
qín
qǐn
qìn
qīng
qíng
qǐng
qìng
qiū
qiú
qiǔ

Mnemonics for qi

Qi is for the Queen of Hearts.

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Characters with qi

qiāng = qi + ang1
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qiāng = qi + ang1
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qiàng = qi + ang4
to irritate the nose / to choke (of smoke, smell etc) / pungent / (coll.) (Tw) to shout at sb / to scold / to speak out against sb
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= qi + Ø3
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= qi + Ø4
qián = qi + an2
used in 蕁麻|荨麻[qian2 ma2] / also pr. [xun2]
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= qi + Ø2
used in 万俟[Mo4 qi2]
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qīng = qi + (e)ng1
= qi + Ø2
old variant of 齊|齐[qi2]
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qín = qi + (e)n2
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qiū = qi + ou1
Catalpa / Mallotus japonicus
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qiān = qi + an1
road leading north and south
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= qi + Ø3
tally for going through a pass
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qín = qi + (e)n2
used in phonetic transcription -xine, -zine or -chin
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qián = qi + an2
(Minnan dialect) beside / near / (used in place names)
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= qi + Ø2
see 黃芪|黄芪[huang2 qi2]
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qìng = qi + (e)ng4
to draw a bamboo bow or crossbow
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= qi + Ø4
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= qi + Ø2
piebald horse / used for 麒[qi2], mythical unicorn
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= qi + Ø2
three legged cauldron (old) / woodworking chisel (old)
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