üān (homophone with Yuan), üán (homophone with Yuan), üm n (homophone with Yuan), and ü an (homophone with Wish). Similar to the whole, there are the spelling of trickling water and trickling water.
Note: quan=q+ü+an Because you meet J, Q, X and Y, you have to remove two points.
Extended data
Pinyin spelling
1, two spellings
If there are only initials and finals, use two spellings. The key point of this method is that "the first sound (referring to initials) is light, the second sound (referring to finals) is heavy, and the two sounds are in violent contact with each other." Such as: b-ao → b-ao, hāng→hāng.
2, three spell link method
For syllables with initials, intermedia and finals, three spellings are used. The key point of this method is "short vowels are fast, and the three-tone continuous reading is very smooth". Such as: x (initial) -i (middle) -an (vowel) →xiàn (now).
Three Pinyin Festival also uses "two spellings" for pinyin. That is to say, the initial consonant and the middle consonant are regarded as a whole, which is directly pinyin with vowels behind it, such as biāo→biāo (standard), hu-á ng → hu-á ng (yellow) and hu-an→huan (Huan).
3. Direct-call syllable method
Direct syllable calling is a method of not spelling syllables. There are generally three ways to call syllables directly:
(1) scaffolding method
The key point is that "the initial consonant is well supported and the sound and rhyme are pronounced at the same time", that is, the mouth shape of the initial consonant is determined first, then the initial consonant is read with its original sound, and the syllable is exhaled in one breath.
(2) methods of secret spelling and hasty reading
It is a method for beginners to transition to the "scaffolding method" when they call directly, that is, when they see a syllable, they first look at its sound, rhyme and tone, but don't pronounce it, but read it quickly and directly after psychological spelling.
(3) holistic reading method
This method is like memorizing "syllables as a whole" and directly recognizing syllables as Chinese characters.