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Chapter 11:MANDARIN
SPECIAL NOTE: TONAL LANGUAGES
Mandarin is a tonal language; the written characters are phonetically represented by
both a single syllable and a tonal marker. Mandarin has four distinct tones and one neutral
tone. Tonal markers are produced using intonation contours, the rise and fall of pitch, across
the syllable. It is this combination of phonemes (segmental features) and intonation
(suprasegmental features) that provides meaning to a syllable. If both aspects of the syllable
are not produced correctly, a completely different word meaning can be understood.
Individual characters can be used in either isolation or in combination to form semantic
representations. The same phonological representation is used, whether the written symbol
is a Chinese character or the Pinyin word. Pinyin is a transcription of Chinese characters using
a Roman alphabetical system and is used to represent words in a semi‐phonological manner
with markers to indicate the suprasegmental/tonal features. For example, the word “that” is
represented in standard Chinese by the character 那 in Pinyin, “náh” in Mandarin, and “nà”
in Cantonese.
Syllable Tone Level Tone Description Word Meaning
Mā 1 High‐level Mother
Má 2 Rising Hemp
Mă 3 Falling‐rising Horse
Mà 4 Falling To scold
(Cheng, 1991; Hua & Dodd, 2000)
The influences of the tonal aspect and monosyllabic/bisyllabic nature of Mandarin
can result in difficulty producing intonation patterns when speaking English. The production
of polysyllabic words can result in omission of syllables or inaccurate syllable stress patterns. 62
These difficulties can also be seen across entire sentence level intonation contours, resulting
in what can be described as “sounding monotone to the ears of Standard American English
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