A. Chinese has strict morphological changes. Of course, there is no strict morphological change in Chinese. Chinese uses function words to achieve certain external morphological changes, but it lacks the internal twists and turns of a word.
B. Chinese is a monosyllabic language, which is obviously wrong. Modern Chinese disyllabic words are dominant, and Chinese has a disyllabic process since ancient times.
C modifiers in Chinese sentences are used in front of the head language, as are attributive phrases and adverbial phrases.
D. Chinese belongs to a language without tones, which is obviously wrong.
2. Among the following initials, (b) belongs to the affricate sound.
This group is all fricative.
China Daily
C.z.c.j.q.k "g.k" is one stop.
D.b.p.d.t.ɡ k stations are everywhere.
3. The following group is (b), which belongs to compound vowels.
A.aiei ao ou uo is a front ring except "ou".
B.ia ie ua uo üe
C.ia ie ua uo ou has a front ring except "ou".
Before the sound of "ao" and "ai".
4. The following group of words with the same sound and rhyme is (c)
A. junjin
B. Stunned-Ya-Ya
C. weaving-juicing zh: and -zh:.
D. Lu 'an-Lanluan-Lan
5. In Mandarin, the initial consonant that can't be put together with closed vowels is (c).
The so-called combined vowel is "U", and only the tongue sound "j q x" cannot be spelled with it.
A. double lip sound
B. sounds of lips and teeth
C. tongue sound
D. behind the tip of the tongue
6. The word "ah" in "This medicine is bitter" and "What do you want me to say". Should be understood as (a) respectively.
This cannot be explained. That's how ah is pronounced.
Awa a.wa
B.ya na
Chala
Diva ra