Chinese Learning Tools

Chinese Pinyin Reader Online

Use Pinyora as an online Chinese pinyin reader: open graded stories, tap words for pinyin and definitions, hear audio, and save vocabulary.

If you want to read Chinese but still need pinyin support, the fastest workflow is not a dictionary tab, a flashcard deck, and a separate audio app. It is a reader where pinyin, definitions, audio, and vocabulary saving all live in the sentence you are reading.

Pinyora is built for that workflow. Open a Chinese story, tap any word, and see pinyin, English, HSK level, and audio without losing your place.

What a good Chinese pinyin reader should do

Need Why it matters How Pinyora handles it
Show pinyin when you need it Beginners need support, but constant pinyin can become a crutch Toggle pinyin on or off while reading
Let you tap words inline Switching apps breaks reading flow Tap any word for pinyin, meaning, and audio
Save vocabulary from context Words stick better when tied to a sentence Save words directly from the story sentence
Support audio Mandarin reading and pronunciation belong together Play individual words or full sentences
Work on any device Reading practice should not depend on one phone app Pinyora runs in the browser on phone, tablet, or laptop

Best for learners who can recognize some characters

Pinyora is most useful when you are past the absolute first week of Chinese and starting to read short sentences. You do not need to know every character. You just need enough curiosity to tap, listen, and keep moving.

Good use cases:

  • Reading HSK 1-3 stories with pinyin support
  • Building confidence before hiding pinyin
  • Checking tones while reading
  • Saving words from stories instead of memorizing isolated lists
  • Practicing short daily reading sessions

How to use Pinyora as a pinyin reader

  1. Open the story library.
  2. Pick a story at your level.
  3. Turn pinyin on if the text feels too hard.
  4. Tap unknown words instead of leaving the page.
  5. Save useful words.
  6. Review those words in the quiz tab later.

That loop is intentionally simple: read, tap, save, review.

Pinyin helps most when it is optional

Always-visible pinyin can make Chinese feel easier, but it can also stop you from recognizing characters. A better pattern is to use pinyin as scaffolding:

  • First read: pinyin on.
  • Second read: pinyin off, tap only when stuck.
  • Review: use pinyin questions to check pronunciation.

Pinyora supports that transition because pinyin is a reading control, not a permanent overlay you cannot escape.

Related workflows

Try it

Open Pinyora free and start with a short story. No install is required.