Are there any recommended resources or methodologies to improve your Chinese pronunciation?
Besides having a native speaker at your disposal, are there any tools that can help to correct pronunciation?
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Are there any recommended resources or methodologies to improve your Chinese pronunciation? Besides having a native speaker at your disposal, are there any tools that can help to correct pronunciation? |
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For beginner level: I have some children's textbooks with short stories / poems (around 20 - 50 characters). Chinese children in years 1/2 spend time practicing by reciting these short stories until they get them perfect. Here is an example of the first lesson from the school text book:
Try reciting these until you get fast and clear. Something else that worked for me was listening to music. You can easily get songs with lyrics from the Internet. Aim for pop songs where the singer has clear pronunciation. Then practice singing along. For intermediate level: I suggest regularly practicing reading aloud. This may sound overly simplistic, but if you get a book that has pinyin so that you can read at a reasonable pace without getting too caught up in the meaning. This will help you exercise your mouth and will improve your pronunciation. For advanced level: Try searching the net for some Chinese tongue twisters like:
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Have you tried practicing with tongue twisters (绕口令)? They can help with both listening and pronunciation. Repetition is really the only way to go if you want to master pronunciation. Here are a few to try: (My personal favorite.)
For practicing Cantonese, try this:
Pronunciation (wasn't sure how to format this):
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a good way to improve pronunciation is to listen to natives speak. And when you don't have such a thing at your disposal, you can fall back on TV shows, news, radio, etc. This will get you used to hearing natives speaking so that you will learn to know the difference between what is pronounced right and what isn't. Of course you also need to practice. An easy way is to have some recorded show, audio of a native speaking that you can practice with. Just listen to what they say, pause and recite it. You should also record how you sound like so you can do a full comparison later. As for tools, there probably are some programs out there that does this for you. But it's not that difficult to do it on your own. |
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When I was learning, I spent a lot of time counting to ten. You get a great mix of all 4 Mandarin tones, plus you get good comparison opportunities, as well. It's also relatively mindless, so you can recite on a bus/subway/walk to school, etc. 一,二,三,四,五,六,七,八,九,十 yi1, er4, san1, si4, wu3, liu4, qi1, ba1, jiu3, shi2 The 1-4-1-4 pattern at the beginning is really helpful, as is the 3-4 pattern at 五,六. Much of mastering tones is not only learning the tone, but also learning to transition fluidly between different tones. I found this method really helpful. |
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One thing that helped me was to not focus too much on individual characters and their tones. On learning material they tend to be a little over-pronounced, and when I practiced I would overemphasize things even more. By focusing on phrases instead of syllables I was able to make my speech more natural. Also listened to some native speakers instead of relying too much on learning materials. Repeat any phrases you recognize while listening. Conversely it can be helpful to just go through the bo po mo fo alphabet repeatedly to get the different consonants into your head. Many of them blend together for me. For example, distinguishing between a zh and j, or remembering the difference between zou and zuo, took quite a bit of practice. |
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JIStone and tbaums both have great answers, studying bopo mofo and "parrotting" are both great. I would like to make an addition. Listening to tv and radio are both ok, but will mainly increase your understanding of spoken Chinese, and possibly add some vocabulary. So don't count on it as a way to improve your pronounciation. I did the following a lot:
In this way you get a base of words and sentences you can pronounce very well, and use as fallback context if you want to insert new vocabulary. For tones, I would use head swaying and hand waving a lot. 2nd tone goes all the way up nazi-salute style, 4th slashes down like a samuraj sword etc. All of a sudden I noticed I could do the movements inside my head instead. Thus looking less like a moron in the street. |
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