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.
Think “ahn” with a clean, quick N at the end, then say it in 4th tone (a sharp fall): àn = “AHN↓”.
English doesn’t have this sound exactly the same way Mandarin does, but you can get close:
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.”
| 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.
If you feel the closure happening far back, you’re drifting toward -ang.
If your vowel feels too small or central (like “uh”), it’s not an.
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.
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