Tones of Taiwanese: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Created page with " '''tones of Middle Chinese''' *yin level (high) *rising (high falling, siofngsviaf) *yin departing (low) *yin entering (low stopped) *yang level (rising) *yang departing (m...") |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''tones of Middle Chinese''' | '''tones of Middle Chinese''' | ||
Line 17: | Line 16: | ||
*[[Hoesoaan-Ym]] (Curving Tone) | *[[Hoesoaan-Ym]] (Curving Tone) | ||
*[[Chiog-Ym]] (Short Tone) | *[[Chiog-Ym]] (Short Tone) | ||
*[[Zoafntiau]] ([[Tone | *[[Zoafntiau]] ([[Tone sandhi]]) | ||
*[[Tea-Ym]] (short tone) | *[[Tea-Ym]] (short tone) |
Revision as of 08:18, 1 November 2012
tones of Middle Chinese
- yin level (high)
- rising (high falling, siofngsviaf)
- yin departing (low)
- yin entering (low stopped)
- yang level (rising)
- yang departing (mid)
- yang entering (high stopped)
Tones in Taiwanese
- Kitiau-Ym (Basic Tone)
- KQtiau-Ym (High Tone)
- Extut-Ym (Low Falling Tone)
- Sioxngtut-Ym (Shouting-Out Tone)
- Hoesoaan-Ym (Curving Tone)
- Chiog-Ym (Short Tone)
- Zoafntiau (Tone sandhi)
- Tea-Ym (short tone)