The Pinyin final "o4" 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 "o4" can appear in.
Think of the vowel in “thought” / “law” said briefly, then glide into a quick “w” (as in “woah”), while your voice falls sharply (4th tone).
English doesn’t match this sound perfectly, but you can get very close.
How to modify English to match Chinese: - Keep the vowel more “aw” (as in thought) and less “oh” (as in go). - If your English has strong “r” coloring (as in “wore”), remove the “r” feeling: don’t pull the tongue back; keep it relaxed and low.
These English words are approximations to help you aim your mouth shape and glide.
| Pinyin (4th tone) | Approx. English cue | What to copy |
|---|---|---|
| o4 | “awe!” (said sharply) | The aw vowel + decisive falling feel |
| wo4 | “woah” (short) | The wo- glide (rounded lips) |
| duo4 | “dwarf” (start only) | The dw- / wo style rounding after d |
| tuo4 | “two” + “awe” (blend) | Start like t, then rounded wo, not “toe” |
| luo4 | “law” + quick “w” | aw color, then w rounding |
| guo4 | “Gwen” (start only) | The gw- rounded glide (not “go”) |
| huo4 | “whoa” (breathy start) | A light h then wo |
| shuo4 | “sure” (without the “r”) | sh + wo; avoid English “r” coloring |
| zuo4 | “zoo” + “awe” (blend) | z then rounded wo/aw quality |
| cuo4 | “ts” (cats end) + “woah” | A clean ts then wo |
In many Mandarin syllables, what is written as -o is pronounced with a noticeable “w” glide (lip rounding + quick glide), as in: - wo4, duo4, tuo4, luo4, guo4, kuo4, huo4, chuo4, shuo4, ruo4, zuo4, cuo4, nuo4, mo4, po4
If you say a plain English “oh,” you’ll miss that rounded glide and the syllable won’t sound native-like.
Keep them distinct: o4 is not automatically wo4.
Even though there’s a glide, it’s still one syllable: duo4 is one smooth unit, not “doo-oh.”
All examples here are 4th tone: keep the vowel quality stable while your pitch drops quickly and decisively. A correct mouth shape with the wrong tone will still sound “off.”