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Pronunciation Guide

How to pronounce j, q, and x in Mandarin

Mandarin j, q, and x are palatal initials. The tongue body rises toward the hard palate, and the lips usually stay more spread than rounded.

Short answer

Mandarin j, q, and x are made by lifting the front of the tongue toward the hard palate with a lighter, spread mouth shape.

Why learners miss it

English speakers often turn q into ch or x into sh because those familiar sounds feel close but use the wrong tongue shape.

Self-test

Record 请问 and 今天星期几, then check whether q and x stay light instead of becoming ch or sh.

How to shape the sound

  • Lift the front of the tongue toward the hard palate instead of curling the tip back.
  • Keep the vowel clean after the consonant so q and x do not drift toward ch or sh.
  • For q, release with a clear burst of aspiration.

Common mistakes

  • Turning q into ch in words like 请问.
  • Rounding the lips too much in jué or xué.
  • Letting x sound like English sh instead of a lighter hiss.

Practice with example words

Practice with example sentences

FAQ

Why do j, q, and x feel tight in the mouth?

Because the tongue body lifts high toward the palate, leaving a smaller space for the airflow.

Can I learn j, q, and x without IPA first?

Yes. Start with consistent tongue placement and compare your recording with native examples.

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