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Vowels

The vowel inventories and phonological patterns of Spanish, English and Chinese.

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Spanish has a small, regular vowel system with five pure vowels. English has a large, complex vowel inventory with tense-lax pairs and diphthongs. Chinese (Mandarin) has a relatively simple vowel system but with critical tonal distinctions superimposed on each vowel quality.

Examples

Pure vowel count

5 (/a, e, i, o, u/)

Diphthongs

Yes (ai, ei, oi, au, eu, ia, ie, io, iu, ua, ue, ui, uo)

Vowel length contrast

No (all vowels short)

Tense vs lax

No distinction

Schwa /ə/

No (except reduced a in fast speech)

Nasalized vowels

No

R-colored vowels

No

Examples

Pure vowel count

12+ (plus schwa and r-colored vowels)

Diphthongs

Many (ai, ei, au, ou, iə, eə, uə, etc.)

Vowel length contrast

Yes (beet vs bit, boot vs put)

Tense vs lax

Yes (tense: beat, boot; lax: bit, put)

Schwa /ə/

Yes — the most common English vowel (about, sofa)

Nasalized vowels

No (but vowels before nasal consonants are nasalized)

R-colored vowels

Yes (nurse, car, north, near, square, force)

Examples

Pure vowel count

6 main finals (/a, o, e, i, u, ü/)

Diphthongs

Yes (ai, ei, ao, ou, ia, ie, ua, uo, üe)

Vowel length contrast

No

Tense vs lax

No

Schwa /ə/

No

Nasalized vowels

No

R-colored vowels

No

Comparison at a glance

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
Pure vowel count 5 (/a, e, i, o, u/)12+ (plus schwa and r-colored vowels)6 main finals (/a, o, e, i, u, ü/)
Diphthongs Yes (ai, ei, oi, au, eu, ia, ie, io, iu, ua, ue, ui, uo)Many (ai, ei, au, ou, iə, eə, uə, etc.)Yes (ai, ei, ao, ou, ia, ie, ua, uo, üe)
Vowel length contrast No (all vowels short)Yes (beet vs bit, boot vs put)No
Tense vs lax No distinctionYes (tense: beat, boot; lax: bit, put)No
Schwa /ə/ No (except reduced a in fast speech)Yes — the most common English vowel (about, sofa)No
Nasalized vowels NoNo (but vowels before nasal consonants are nasalized)No
R-colored vowels NoYes (nurse, car, north, near, square, force)No

Side-by-side comparison

Grammar concepts Spanish English Chinese
Pure vowel count 5 (/a, e, i, o, u/)12+ (plus schwa and r-colored vowels)6 main finals (/a, o, e, i, u, ü/)
Diphthongs Yes (ai, ei, oi, au, eu, ia, ie, io, iu, ua, ue, ui, uo)Many (ai, ei, au, ou, iə, eə, uə, etc.)Yes (ai, ei, ao, ou, ia, ie, ua, uo, üe)
Vowel length contrast No (all vowels short)Yes (beet vs bit, boot vs put)No
Tense vs lax No distinctionYes (tense: beat, boot; lax: bit, put)No
Schwa /ə/ No (except reduced a in fast speech)Yes — the most common English vowel (about, sofa)No
Nasalized vowels NoNo (but vowels before nasal consonants are nasalized)No
R-colored vowels NoYes (nurse, car, north, near, square, force)No

Examples in context

Pure vowel count

Spanish

5 (/a, e, i, o, u/)

English

12+ (plus schwa and r-colored vowels)

Chinese

6 main finals (/a, o, e, i, u, ü/)

Diphthongs

Spanish

Yes (ai, ei, oi, au, eu, ia, ie, io, iu, ua, ue, ui, uo)

English

Many (ai, ei, au, ou, iə, eə, uə, etc.)

Chinese

Yes (ai, ei, ao, ou, ia, ie, ua, uo, üe)

Vowel length contrast

Spanish

No (all vowels short)

English

Yes (beet vs bit, boot vs put)

Chinese

No

Tense vs lax

Spanish

No distinction

English

Yes (tense: beat, boot; lax: bit, put)

Chinese

No

Schwa /ə/

Spanish

No (except reduced a in fast speech)

English

Yes — the most common English vowel (about, sofa)

Chinese

No

Nasalized vowels

Spanish

No

English

No (but vowels before nasal consonants are nasalized)

Chinese

No

R-colored vowels

Spanish

No

English

Yes (nurse, car, north, near, square, force)

Chinese

No

Key Takeaways

Spanish: Five pure vowels with consistent quality. Each letter represents one sound. No reduction to schwa.

English: A notoriously complex vowel system with length, quality, and rhoticity distinctions. Many allophonic variations.

Key concepts compared: Pure vowel count, Diphthongs, Vowel length contrast.

Last updated: June 4, 2026