Joke Collection Website - Joke collection - What are the inflected vowels?

What are the inflected vowels?

Mandarin vowels can be "Er" except Mi and er. It means you can't pronounce vowels alone. Mi is a single vowel in Mandarin, and it appears as a zero vowel.

When syllables end in A, O, E, Mi and U (including o[u] in ao and iao), tongue sounds are rolled directly, because vowels are always combined with I and ü in Beijing pronunciation to form a compound vowel, which is generally not used alone or spelled directly with initials. There are 13 vowels of this kind. For example:

A-ar: the handle rubs against the ice, and the tree falls on the slag.

Ia-iar: A small box with feet and bean sprouts, a bookshelf and two brothers' wallets.

Ua-uar: New Year pictures, toothbrushes, melons, coats, flowers and jokes.

O-or: A bunch of matchmakers chanting Buddha with sawdust around their necks on the hillside.

Uo-uor: Dimple is angry, work, desk, novel, zipper.

E-er: lunch box, cube, eggshell, fun car, passbook.

Ie-ier: Half a step, little shoes, a small leaf.

üe-üer: clown, dumb mouth, small boots, head hole, leap moon.

Rabbit eye, batter, pawn, jujube pit, toilet

Ao-aor: bean bag, fur robe, light bulb, kitten, pen cap, whistle.

A small watch, a wheat seedling, a bird and a bean.

Ou-our: clown, potato, thief, button, handle, puppy.

IOU: Ball grabs eunuch sleeve, little girl Liu Er.

360 question and answer

Can vowels be changed to children?

Yin Miao 1990 Lu 12

I looked it up in the book of Huang Liao, and it said that vowels Mi and er cannot be inflected. But there is also a lot of information that A, O, E, U and E are added directly after that. What is right after all? Why?

Thank you very much ~

Satisfied answer

Swallow grass and morning sun

Lu 12

20 13- 1 1-25

These two sentences are not contradictory.

Mandarin vowels can be "Er" except Mi and er. It means you can't pronounce vowels alone. Mi is a single vowel in Mandarin, and it appears as a zero vowel.

When syllables end in A, O, E, Mi and U (including o[u] in ao and iao), tongue sounds are rolled directly, because vowels are always combined with I and ü in Beijing pronunciation to form a compound vowel, which is generally not used alone or spelled directly with initials. There are 13 vowels of this kind. For example:

A-ar: the handle rubs against the ice, and the tree falls on the slag.

Ia-iar: A small box with feet and bean sprouts, a bookshelf and two brothers' wallets.

Ua-uar: New Year pictures, toothbrushes, melons, coats, flowers and jokes.

O-or: A bunch of matchmakers chanting Buddha with sawdust around their necks on the hillside.

Uo-uor: Dimple is angry, work, desk, novel, zipper.

E-er: lunch box, cube, eggshell, fun car, passbook.

Ie-ier: Half a step, little shoes, a small leaf.

üe-üer: clown, dumb mouth, small boots, head hole, leap moon.

Rabbit eye, batter, pawn, jujube pit, toilet

Ao-aor: bean bag, fur robe, light bulb, kitten, pen cap, whistle.

A small watch, a wheat seedling, a bird and a bean.

Ou-our: clown, potato, thief, button, handle, puppy.