Hi, everyone,
I'm an "alternative learner" of Chinese. I have no textbook, no teacher/tutor, no classroom experiences. I have Skritter and memrise and a couple more good apps, tons of good web sites, listen to podcasts to hear real-world prosody, and a couple good grammar books.
I haven't been able to find an answer to this question: How important is changing a syllable in a compound from its normal tone to fifth tone? For example, 还是 is in Skritter as hai2shi5. If they were separate, hai2 shi4. If in the "real world," I mistakenly pronounced 还是 as hai2shi4, how bad is that mistake? Will I be misunderstood? Will I be understood but sound like a beginner? Or is it a minor variation that would go unnoticed? (I see variation in drop/keep of final tone in varying references: maybe it's not even standardized?) There are many examples on both sides, 高兴 keeps xing4, but 小姐 drops jie3 to jie5. 电影 keeps ying3, but 地方 drops fang1 to fang5. Etc., etc.
I have extreme difficulty remembering whether the second character of a two-character word drops its tone to neutral or keeps it. Any tips, tricks, hints out there? (Same problem with 2nd and/or 3rd character of a 3-char word/phrase.) Is it meaningful enough that I should be marking it "Forgot" (as I have been doing) if I get the change/no-change in tone wrong? Or is this a "So-so" because it doesn't make that big a difference or there are differences in usage anyway? Or does it really not matter that much or is not standardized in the real world and I should just count it correct and move on?
Thanks!!!
-DG
P.S. I am not, btw, asking about tone sandhi, the fixed rules of tones changing based on their phonological environment, e.g. ni3hao3 -> ni2hao3 or bu4shi4 -> bu2shi4. Those are clearly important, but are also regular and relatively easy to remember.