Zoanciw-oe: Difference between revisions
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(泉州話) |
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==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
*''Zoanciw'' was the source of the northern accents | * ''Zoanciw'' was the source of the northern Taiwan accents. Taipei, Lukang, and Hsinchu accents lean toward it. | ||
** In the early 20th century, Zoanciw-speaking Hoklo people were dominant in the north of the island and along the west coast. | |||
**In the early 20th century, Zoanciw-speaking Hoklo people were dominant in the north of the island and along the west coast. | * A number of pronunciation and lexical differences exist between the Taiwanese variants. | ||
*A number of pronunciation and lexical differences exist between the Taiwanese variants. | * A major feature of Zoanciw-oe is its [[tone sandhi]]: the [[curving-up tone]] changes to [[low-falling tone]], instead of [[basic tone]] as in [[Ciangciw-oe]]. | ||
**Thus Zoanciw-oe speakers would render ''Zoanciw'' as {{x2|Zoaxnciw}}, ''Taioaan'' as {{x2|Taixoaan}} | **Thus Zoanciw-oe speakers would render ''Zoanciw'' as {{x2|Zoaxnciw}}, ''Taioaan'' as {{x2|Taixoaan}} | ||
Revision as of 10:45, 16 August 2018
Zoanciw-oe (泉州話 Quanzhou dialect) si Zoanciw laang ee bwguo, maxsi Banlamguo Høxlør-oe extea ee cidky gwgieen.
Notes
- Zoanciw was the source of the northern Taiwan accents. Taipei, Lukang, and Hsinchu accents lean toward it.
- In the early 20th century, Zoanciw-speaking Hoklo people were dominant in the north of the island and along the west coast.
- A number of pronunciation and lexical differences exist between the Taiwanese variants.
- A major feature of Zoanciw-oe is its tone sandhi: the curving-up tone changes to low-falling tone, instead of basic tone as in Ciangciw-oe.
- Thus Zoanciw-oe speakers would render Zoanciw as Template:X2, Taioaan as Template:X2