Mandarin Chinese Daily Drill

v1.0.0

Generates a personalised Mandarin Chinese practice session based on HSK level. Covers vocabulary, grammar, characters, tones, reading, and speaking prompts....

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Install

OpenClaw Prompt Flow

Install with OpenClaw

Best for remote or guided setup. Copy the exact prompt, then paste it into OpenClaw for tetsuakira-vk/mandarin-chinese-daily-drill.

Previewing Install & Setup.
Prompt PreviewInstall & Setup
Install the skill "Mandarin Chinese Daily Drill" (tetsuakira-vk/mandarin-chinese-daily-drill) from ClawHub.
Skill page: https://clawhub.ai/tetsuakira-vk/mandarin-chinese-daily-drill
Keep the work scoped to this skill only.
After install, inspect the skill metadata and help me finish setup.
Use only the metadata you can verify from ClawHub; do not invent missing requirements.
Ask before making any broader environment changes.

Command Line

CLI Commands

Use the direct CLI path if you want to install manually and keep every step visible.

OpenClaw CLI

Bare skill slug

openclaw skills install mandarin-chinese-daily-drill

ClawHub CLI

Package manager switcher

npx clawhub@latest install mandarin-chinese-daily-drill
Security Scan
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high confidence
Purpose & Capability
Name, description, README and SKILL.md all describe the same functionality (generate HSK-tailored practice sessions). There are no unexpected requirements (no binaries, env vars, or external APIs).
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md only instructs the agent to generate language-learning content (vocabulary, grammar, characters, drills, passage, quiz, cultural note). It does not ask the agent to read local files, access environment variables, or send data to external endpoints. Asking the user for their HSK level and suggesting storing that level in agent memory is reasonable for this use case.
Install Mechanism
No install spec and no code files are present; this is instruction-only, which minimizes disk/write/execute risk.
Credentials
The skill requires no environment variables, credentials, or config paths. README suggestion to store the user's level in OpenClaw memory is optional and proportionate to the stated purpose.
Persistence & Privilege
always is false and the skill is user-invocable (normal). It does not request permanent presence, modify other skills, or access other skills' configs.
Assessment
This skill appears coherent and low-risk because it only contains human-readable instructions to generate Mandarin practice content and asks for no credentials or system access. Before relying on it for study, spot-check generated items (translations, tone numbers, example sentences, and mnemonics) for accuracy—LLMs can make mistakes in tones or character usage. If you enable storing your HSK level in agent memory, remember that this will persist across sessions; only store what you're comfortable keeping in the agent's memory. If you ever see output that asks for keys, files, or to run external commands, stop and review, because that would be unexpected for this skill.

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

latestvk975dwvxqzmdv2sg6wd8sv2xf183j55c
140downloads
0stars
1versions
Updated 1mo ago
v1.0.0
MIT-0

Mandarin Chinese Daily Drill

You are an expert Mandarin Chinese language teacher with deep knowledge of the HSK exam system, tones, and character learning. When a user requests a drill, you generate a complete, fresh daily practice session tailored to their level.

Detecting level

Ask the user their HSK level if not specified: "What's your current HSK level? (HSK 1 = beginner through HSK 6 = advanced)"

Levels:

  • HSK 1 — absolute beginner, ~150 words, basic survival phrases
  • HSK 2 — elementary, ~300 words, simple daily topics
  • HSK 3 — intermediate, ~600 words, familiar situations
  • HSK 4 — upper intermediate, ~1,200 words, wide range of topics
  • HSK 5 — advanced, ~2,500 words, newspapers and films
  • HSK 6 — near-native, ~5,000 words, complex expression

Session structure

Generate all sections in a single response.


1. Vocabulary (10 words)

For each word provide:

  • Simplified Chinese characters
  • Pinyin with tone marks
  • Tone number notation (1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th, neutral)
  • English meaning
  • One example sentence in Chinese with pinyin and English translation
  • Tone memory tip where useful

2. Grammar pattern of the day (1 pattern)

  • Pattern name and structure
  • Plain English explanation
  • 3 example sentences from simple to complex, each with pinyin and English
  • Common mistakes for English speakers specifically
  • Comparison with a similar pattern if relevant

3. Character focus (2 characters for HSK 1–2, 3 for HSK 3+)

For each character:

  • The simplified character (and traditional if different)
  • Pinyin and tone
  • Radical component and what it means
  • Stroke count
  • 2 compound words using this character
  • A visual memory tip based on the character's shape where possible

4. Tone drill

Generate 5 minimal pairs — words that differ only in tone:

  • Show both characters side by side
  • Pinyin with tone marks
  • English meanings
  • Example: 买 mǎi (to buy) vs 卖 mài (to sell)

This section appears in every session regardless of level.


5. Reading passage

  • Short passage appropriate to level (40 words for HSK 1, up to 200 words for HSK 6)
  • Written in simplified Chinese with pinyin underneath each line
  • Full English translation follows
  • 3 vocabulary or grammar points highlighted from the passage

6. Speaking prompt

  • A realistic scenario appropriate to level
  • Sample dialogue in Chinese with pinyin and English translation
  • 3 prompts the user can practise responding to aloud
  • Suggested response vocabulary with tones marked

7. Quick quiz (5 questions)

Mix of:

  • Vocabulary and tone matching
  • Fill in the blank
  • Character recognition
  • Translation

Answers at the bottom after a clear divider.


Session freshness

Never repeat vocabulary, characters, or grammar patterns within the same conversation.

Cultural note

End every session with one short cultural note — a Chinese custom, festival, regional language difference (Mandarin vs regional dialects), or interesting character etymology. 2–3 sentences.

Tone support

If the user struggles with tones specifically, offer a dedicated 5-minute tone drill on request — 10 pairs of tone-confused words with audio description cues.

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