CBC 101 Notes
CBC 101 Notes
Season 1, Lesson 1
Lesson notes
Introduction
Huānyíng láidào Coffee Break Chinese - welcome to Coffee Break Chinese! In these
lesson notes we’ll be listing all the words and phrases covered in each lesson. The
Coffee Break Chinese will introduce you to Mandarin Chinese and you’ll learn to use the
language in many situations. The aim of this course is to help you speak and understand
Mandarin is normally written in Chinese characters, but there is also an official written
version using the Roman alphabet. This romanisation system is called Pinyin, or Hànyǔ
Pīnyīn, and is used throughout mainland China, Malaysia, Singapore and Taiwan. Pīnyīn
(拼音) literally means “spelled sounds”. Pīnyīn uses four special marks to indicate the
tone of a syllable. We’ll be explaining more about tones later in this lesson.
We will be using Pīnyīn throughout the Coffee Break Chinese course to help you to learn
how the words are pronounced in the audio episodes: some letters in Pīnyīn are quite
different to their pronunciation in English. It’s best to use the written version as an aid to
Chinese word.
In addition to the Pīnyīn in the main lesson notes, we’ll also include an appendix for each
lesson with the key words and phrases of the lessons written in Chinese characters.
K Lesson notes
dàjià hǎo
hello everyone
hǎo
good
kāishǐ ba
Saying “hello”
nǐ hǎo
hello
Crystal will say the word or phrase first, then leave some time for you to repeat. Mark will
then repeat, and Crystal will say the word or phrase once more.
Literally, nǐ hǎo means “you good”. It’s useful to know this as we move on to the next
section!
If nǐ hǎo literally means “you good”, we can add one word to this to make it into a
question. To ask “how are you?” you ask “are you good?”:
nǐ hǎo ma?
Note the pronunciation of ma in this expression: it’s very short and light!
wǒ hěn hǎo
I’m well
wǒ fēicháng hǎo
Note that Crystal uses both hěn hǎo (well / good) and fēicháng hǎo (very well / very
good) as words of encouragement during the lesson. Another word she uses regularly is
wǒ hái hǎo
wǒ bú tài hǎo
One further answer to the question nǐ hǎo ma? is introduced. The origin of this
mǎmǎhūhū
so-so
In addition to the pronunciation of the words and phrases you learn in Mandarin
Chinese, you also need to be aware that the language uses different “tones” which
change the meaning of a word. There are a total of five1 tones. The best way to learn
1Some text books do not consider the 5th tone as a tone as it is neutral and there is no change in pitch. For the sake
of simplicity we have chosen to refer to five tones.
In Pīnyīn, the tones are indicated by diacritic marks, similar to accents in other
languages. You’ll already have seen that many words are written in Pīnyīn using these
diacritic marks. See the table below for more details on the tones and their
pronunciation:
Note that even though they do sound similar, each of the words above mean something
different: while mā can mean “mother”, má means “linen”, mǎ is “a horse” and mà can
mean “to scold”. We’ve already seen the word ma (neutral tone) as the question particle
Mark: We are talking about “Coffee Break Chinese” here, but I suppose we should
really be talking about “Coffee Break Mandarin Chinese”. Can you tell us a bit
refer to as “Mandarin”?
Crystal: Yes, Mark. We are teaching Mandarin here. Mandarin is the standard, official,
(Guangzhou) and Hong Kong, but Mandarin is the standard spoken language
all over mainland China. It’s also spoken in other Chinese communities, for
Mark: What would your own, “personal” dialect be? Which kind of Chinese would
Crystal: I come from the southwest of China, Guìzhōu province, so we have our own
dialect called Guìzhōuhuà. But within Guìzhōu province you have “sub-
Mark: I guess this is just really like English: I speak English but I speak with my
Scottish accent, and when I’m with my family in Ayrshire, in the south west of
Scotland, then I will speak in a more Ayrshire way than I would when I’m
learning here on Coffee Break Chinese is Mandarin, it’s the official “version”, if
zàijiàn
goodbye
xièxie
thank you
In the bonus lesson we review the words and phrases we learned in the main lesson and
wǒ lèi le
I’m tired
wǒ hěn lèi
wǒ hǎo jí le
jīntiān
today
3. Wǒ bú tài hǎo.
4. Xièxie. Zàijiàn.
9. I am feeling great.
10.Today I am tired.
3. I’m not feeling great / I’m not well / I’m feeling bad.
6. Nǐ hǎo ma?
8. Wǒ bú tài hǎo.
你好
nǐ hǎo
hello
你好吗?
nǐ hǎo ma?
how are you?
我很好
wǒ hěn hǎo
I’m well
我非常好
wǒ fēicháng hǎo
I’m very well
我还好
wǒ hái hǎo
I’m quite well
我不太好
wǒ bú tài hǎo
I’m not feeling so well / I’m feeling bad
马马虎虎
mǎmǎhūhū
so-so
再见
zàijiàn
goodbye
我累了
wǒ lèi le
I’m tired
我很累
wǒ hěn lèi
I’m very tired
我好 了
wǒ hǎo jí le
I’m extremely good/well
今天
jīntiān
today
Head over to http://coffeebreakchinese.com to find out how you can join in and practise
http://coffeebreakchinese.com
Coffee Break Chinese audio, video and lesson notes ©Copyright Radio Lingua Ltd 2017