Pinyin initial: "w"

/u/

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

Pronunciation Tips

The “Cheat Code”

Think of English “w” in “we”—a quick lip-rounding glide that immediately goes into the next vowel (never a full “oo” syllable by itself).


Mouth Mechanics (step-by-step)

  1. Start with relaxed jaw and tongue. Your tongue can stay neutral and low; it does not “press” against the roof of your mouth.
  2. Round and push your lips slightly forward as if you’re about to say “oo,” but keep it brief—this is just a glide.
  3. Keep your lips lightly closed or nearly closed at the start, then open smoothly into the following vowel sound.
  4. Voice is on immediately. Your vocal cords should vibrate right from the start (no whispery onset).
  5. Move quickly into the final. The “w” portion is short; the vowel/final is where the syllable “lives.”

English Approximation (what to copy)

These English words contain a similar “w” glide:

  • “we” — the w at the beginning matches the Chinese w start.
  • “way” — the w at the beginning matches; then you glide into the vowel.
  • “won’t” — the w at the beginning matches (ignore the English “n’t”; focus on the initial glide).

Important adjustment for accuracy: In Mandarin, w should feel like a very short lip-rounding move into the vowel, not a separate “wuh/woo” syllable.


Common Mistakes (English-speaker traps)

  • Making “w” too strong or too long: English speakers sometimes “chew on” the w (over-rounding, holding it). In Mandarin it’s fast—glide, then vowel.
  • Accidentally adding an extra vowel: Avoid “wuh-” (like “wuh-a”) before wa, wo, wai, wei, wan, wen, wang, weng. Go straight in: w + vowel as one smooth motion.
  • Overdoing the “oo” quality: Your lips round, but you should not “park” on an “oo” sound unless the final is actually u (as in wu).
  • Turning it into English “v”: Don’t let your top teeth touch your lower lip. Mandarin w uses lip rounding, not lip-teeth friction.

Practice Pairs (visualizing the sound)

These English words are approximations to help you aim your mouth shape and timing.

Pinyin syllable Closest English cue What to copy
wa (e.g., wa1/2/3/4/5) “wa-” in “water The quick w glide into “a”
wo (e.g., wo1/3/4/5) “wo-” in “wonder The w start + rounded vowel feel
wai (e.g., wai1/3/4) “wy” in “why The glide into an “ai” sound
wei (e.g., wei1/2/3/4) “way” The w start + “ei” glide
wan (e.g., wan1/2/3/4) “wan” in “wander The w start + “an”-like ending
wen (e.g., wen1/2/3/4) “wen” in “went The w start + “uh/ə” + n ending
wang (e.g., wang1/2/3/4) “wong” (as in “Wong”) The w start + open “a” + ng ending
weng (e.g., weng1/3/4) “wung” (approx.) The w start + “uh/ə” + ng ending

Reminder: The tone changes the pitch contour, but the w mouth shape stays the same.


Comparisons and caveats (similar sounds to watch)

A) “w” vs. “u” at the start of a syllable

A key Mandarin spelling rule: “w” often appears only because the syllable begins with a “u”-type sound.
- wu is pronounced essentially like u at the beginning (the lip rounding is built in). That’s why wu1/wu2/wu3/wu4 behave like a pure u syllable in sound.
- In other words, w here is not a strong extra consonant; it’s mainly a spelling helper for syllables that start with this rounded glide.

B) “w” vs. “y”

  • w starts with rounded lips (as if beginning “oo”), then moves into the vowel.
  • y starts with a spread/neutral lip shape and a front-of-mouth vowel feeling (like starting toward “ee”).

If your lips are not rounding at the start, you may be drifting toward a y- type start.

C) Don’t confuse “w” with a full English consonant cluster

Mandarin w is smooth and simple: one quick glide into the final. Avoid adding extra tension, extra syllables, or a second glide.

D) Finals after w: what your lips should do

  • With wa / wai / wan / wang, the lips round briefly for w, then open more for the a-type vowel.
  • With wo, keep some rounding into the vowel (it feels more “rounded” than wa).
  • With wei, round briefly, then move toward a “smile” shape for the “ei” glide.
  • With wen / weng, the vowel is more like a quick, relaxed “uh” sound before n/ng—don’t force a heavy “oh” or “oo.”

Pinyin with w

wa
wāi
wǎi
wài
wān
wán
wǎn
wàn
wāng
wáng
wǎng
wàng
wēi
wéi
wěi
wèi
wēn
wén
wěn
wèn
wēng
wěng
wèng
wo

Mnemonics for w

Wu is for Willy Walrus.

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Characters with w

wán = w + an2
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wǎn = w + an3
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wǎng = w + ang3
old variant of 罔[wang3]
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wǎng = w + ang3
wěi = w + ei3
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wěi = w + ei3
wǎn = w + an3
internal cavity of stomach
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wěng = w + (e)ng3
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wēi = w + ei1
winding, curving / swagger
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wén = w + (e)n2
= w + Ø4
(bound form) to rush about / to strive for
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= w + Ø3
numeral 5 in Suzhou numeral system 蘇州碼子|苏州码子[Su1 zhou1 ma3 zi5]
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= w + Ø3
archaic variant of 五[wu3]
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= w + Ø2
used in 逢俉[feng2 wu2]
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= w + Ø2
see 逢俉[feng2 wu2], to come across sth scary / to have a fright
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= w + Ø3
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wán = w + an2
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= w + Ø4
uncomfortable / unsteady
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wěn = w + (e)n3
the corners of the mouth / the lips
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= w + Ø3
obstinate, disobedient, intractable
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