A Beginner's Guide to Taiwanese: Difference between revisions

→‎Vowel plus nasal final consonant: bullet. rm structure note
(lead: Modern Literal Taiwanese)
(→‎Vowel plus nasal final consonant: bullet. rm structure note)
Line 115: Line 115:
|}
|}


Notes: ''ien'' is often spoken without the ''i''. Also, ''eng'' sounds similar to the first part of "English" (''{{x|Engbuun}}'').
* ''ien'' is often spoken without the ''i''
 
* ''eng'' sounds similar to the first part of "English" (''{{x|Engbuun}}'').
A syllable can only have one of ''m'', ''n'', ''ng'', or ''v'' at the same time. For example, ''man'' and ''mang'' are not valid syllables in Taiwanese. The only exceptions we found are the various tones of ''{{x|mng}}'' and ''[[ng|nng]]''.


==== Nasal vowels ====
==== Nasal vowels ====
45,234

edits