Pinyin final: "an4"

/a˥˩n/

The Pinyin final "an4" 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 "an4" can appear in.

Pronunciation Tips

The “Cheat Code”

Think “ahn” with a clean, quick N at the end, then say it in 4th tone (a sharp fall): àn = “AHN↓”.


Mouth Mechanics (step-by-step)

  1. Open for “a” (the vowel):
    Drop your jaw a bit and keep the mouth comfortably open. The sound is a clear “ah” (like the start of “ah-ha”), not “uh.”
  2. Keep lips neutral:
    Lips stay relaxed—don’t round them.
  3. Tongue for the vowel:
    Let the tongue rest low and relaxed. Don’t bunch it up or pull it back tightly.
  4. Finish with a short “n” (nasal ending):
    At the very end, touch the tip of your tongue lightly to the gum ridge just behind your top front teeth (the spot for English n). Let air go through the nose briefly to close the syllable.
  5. Add 4th tone (the “fall”):
    Start a little firm, then drop your pitch quickly and decisively—like giving a crisp, final-sounding “No.”

English Approximation (what to borrow from English)

English doesn’t have this sound exactly the same way Mandarin does, but you can get close:

  • “on” (as in “turn it on”) → use the “ahn” + n feeling, but remove the English rounding that often sneaks in.
    What matches: the open “ah” moving into n.
  • “Don” (the name) (American pronunciation) → use the vowel + n shape, but keep it purer and more open, not drifting toward “dawn.”
    What matches: ah + n.
  • “Ah, no…” (say “ah” then quickly close into an n) → this is a good “build-it-yourself” method.
    What matches: the clean “ah” plus a quick tongue-to-gums n.

Key adjustment: Many English speakers turn “an” into something like “æn” (as in “can”). For Mandarin an, avoid that “cat” vowel; keep it more “ah” than “a” in “cat.”


Common Mistakes (English speakers)

  • Mistake 1: Using the “cat” vowel (æ).
    Don’t say “ann” like “Ann.” Mandarin an is more open, more “ah.”
  • Mistake 2: Adding an extra vowel after n.
    Avoid “ah-nuh.” The n closes the syllable cleanly.
  • Mistake 3: Turning the ending into “ng.”
    Don’t let it become “ang”. For an, the tongue tip ends at the front n position (behind the top teeth), not the back-of-mouth ng.
  • Mistake 4: Forgetting the 4th tone shape.
    an4 must sound firm and falling, not flat or rising.

Practice Pairs (Pinyin vs. English approximation)

Pinyin (4th tone) Say it like… (approx.) What to copy What to avoid
àn “on” (in “turn it on”) the ah→n closure lip rounding; “awn”
bàn “bon” (as in “bonfire,” first part) the -on/-ahn feel “ban” like “band” vowel
dàn “Don” (name) ah + n drifting to “dawn”
nàn “non-” (as in “nonstop,” first part) open vowel into n “naan” lengthening too much
shàn “shun” (only as a reminder of ending) quick final n using “uh” as the vowel

Note: The English words are only sound reminders. Always aim for a clean “ah” plus a front “n”, then a strong fall in pitch.


Comparisons & Caveats (similar sounds to watch)

an vs ang

  • an ends with n: tongue tip touches behind top front teeth (front-of-mouth closure).
  • ang ends with ng: back of tongue raises toward the back of the mouth (no tongue-tip touch).

If you feel the closure happening far back, you’re drifting toward -ang.

an vs en

  • an has an open “ah” vowel.
  • en sounds more like a “uh/eh”-type vowel before n.

If your vowel feels too small or central (like “uh”), it’s not an.

an vs ian / yan / yuan / üan (spelled -uan/-uan/-uan patterns)

  • Plain -an: an4, ban4, pan4, man4, nan4, lan4, dan4, tan4, gan4, kan4, han4, shan4, zhan4, chan4, san4, zan4, can4
    These keep the main vowel as a straightforward “ah” before n.
  • “-an” after i / y / ü / u often shifts the vowel quality:
    • yan4 / xian4 / jian4 / qian4 / lian4 / nian4 / mian4 / pian4 / dian4 / tian4 / bian4: the sound is closer to “yeh + n” (you can feel a y glide at the start).
    • yuan4 / juan4 / quan4 / xuan4: the sound is closer to “yweh/üeh + n” (rounded front glide), not plain “ah.”
    • wan4 / duan4 / tuan4 / luan4 / guan4 / huan4 / zhuan4 / chuan4 / shuan4 / zuan4 / cuan4 / suan4: there is a w-like glide into the vowel (more “wah-n”-feeling), not a plain “ah” start.

Tone caveat (4th tone)

Because an4 is falling, English speakers sometimes “clip” it too hard and lose the vowel, or they keep it flat. Keep the vowel full (ah), then drop pitch quickly at the end.

Pinyin with an4

àn
bàn
biàn
càn
chàn
chuàn
cuàn
dàn
diàn
duàn
fàn
gàn
guàn
hàn
huàn
jiàn
juàn
kàn
làn
liàn
luàn
màn
miàn
nàn
niàn
pàn
piàn
qiàn
quàn
sàn
shàn
shuàn
suàn
tàn
tiàn
tuàn
wàn
xiàn
xuàn
yàn
yuàn
zàn
zhàn
zhuàn
zuàn

Mnemonics for an4

In the anthill's bathroom.

Prompt snippets

The background of the scene is a bathroom built inside a large, hollowed-out anthill structure, with organically curved walls made of tiny branches and other natural anthill material. A circular opening in the ceiling lets in natural light, creating a soft glow on the surfaces. In the center stands an oval bathtub with a white interior and an ant bathing in it, resting on small rounded feet made of the same earthy material. To the right, a simple white sink is mounted atop a tapered pedestal that blends seamlessly into the earthen floor.

Add a new mnemonic for an4

Characters with an4

tàn = t + an4
fàn = f + an4
biàn = bi + an4
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xiàn = xi + an4
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jiàn = ji + an4
shàn = sh + an4
to repair / to mend / to rewrite / to transcribe
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yàn = y + an4
yàn = y + an4
Japanese variant of 驗|验
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chàn = ch + an4
(bound form) to feel remorse / (bound form) scripture read to atone for sb's sins (from Sanskrit "ksama")
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chàn = ch + an4
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yuàn = yu + an4
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xuàn = xu + an4
dazzling / brilliant / dazzled / dizzy
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gàn = g + an4
duàn = du + an4
xuàn = xu + an4
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duàn = du + an4
Chinese linden (Tilia chinensis)
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liàn = li + an4
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yàn = y + an4
qiàn = qi + an4
dàn = d + an4
tranquil / placid / quiet
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