The Pinyin initial "zhu" is used in the first half of Pinyin syllables. In MandarinBanana's mnemonic system, "zhu" 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 "zhu" can appear in.
Think of “j” in “judge”, but make it farther back in the mouth with the tongue curled slightly up, then add the “oo” sound.
What you should feel: the sound is deeper/backer than English “j,” with a slight tongue curl and steady voice (your throat should be “on,” not whispery).
English does not have this sound exactly in the same place in the mouth, but these are useful approximations:
How to modify English to get closer:
- Start from “j” (as in “judge”), but move it back and keep the tongue slightly curled.
- Make sure it’s voiced (buzzing), not breathy.
| Pinyin syllable (target) | English anchor (approx.) | What to copy from the English word |
|---|---|---|
| zhu- (as in zhu1 / zhu3 / zhu4) | “judge” | Copy the j quality, then shift it back + add oo |
| zhua- | “dwarf” | Copy the “dw” → “wa” glide feeling (rounded lips), but start with zh- |
| zhuo- | “dwar-” (start of “dwarf”) | Copy rounded “wo” feeling; begin with zh- |
| zhui- | “Dwayne” | Copy the “dw(ey)” glide; begin with zh-, not “d” |
| zhuan- | “dwann” (like saying “Dwan” as a name) | Copy “wa” + n ending; begin with zh- |
| zhun- | “one” (said with rounded lips) | Copy the neutral vowel + n feel; keep lips slightly rounded; begin with zh- |
| zhong- | “wrong” | Copy the “-ong” nasal ending feel; begin with zh- |
| zhuang- | “dwong” (approx.) | Copy “wa” + “ng” feel; begin with zh- |
Note: These English anchors are helpers, not perfect matches. The goal is to keep zh- as a back, slightly curled, voiced sound, then land cleanly on the vowel/nasal.
If your zhu starts sounding like ju, you are probably placing the tongue too forward.
If it sounds like “shoo”, add voicing and keep the tongue slightly curled.
If your sound feels “explosive” and airy (like English “ch”), reduce the air burst and keep voicing on.
If zhu starts sounding like “dzoo,” you are too far forward and too “z-like.”
In syllables like zhu, zhuo, zhuan, zhun, zhong, zhuang, the written u often behaves like a rounded glide into the main vowel (you can feel the lips round early). Keep the rounded lips ready, but make sure the initial zh- stays back and voiced before you glide into the vowel.
Julian Giant Squid is a friendly anthropomorphic squid. He has big bushy eyebrows and expressive eyes.