Bungieen kab peqoe: Difference between revisions

From Taioaan Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(78 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Buun-peh-i-thak''' (文白異讀; lit. literary-colloquial different reading; {{w|Literary and colloquial readings of Chinese characters}})
'''{{x|Bungieen kab peqoe}}''', {{gsw|buun-pek i-thok|文白異讀|Literary and colloquial readings of Chinese characters}}


Reading pronunciations ([[thag'ym]] 讀音) differ from spoken pronunciations/explications ([[gwym]] 語音/[[kayseq]] 解說). [[Banlaam]] dictionaries in Taiwan often differentiate between such character readings with the prefixes 文 ([[buun]]) for the literary readings, and 白 (pek/[[peh]]) for colloquial readings.
[[Category:Gwgieen-hak]]
 
Unlike other spoken Chinese varieties, characters used to read [[Zoanciw]] [[Hokkiexn|Hokkien]] have three different kinds of readings: ''literary'' (文 ''buun''), ''colloquial'' (白 ''pek''), and ''vulgar'' (俗 ''siok''). For example, the readings for 肉 (meat) are: literary ''liak'', colloquial ''hiak'' and vulgar ''[[baq]]''; ''baq'' is the most commonly used reading.
 
== Examples ==
 
The following examples<ref>Victor H. Mair, [http://pinyin.info/readings/mair/taiwanese.html How to Forget Your Mother Tongue and Remember Your National Language], University of Pennsylvania</ref> show differences in literary and colloquial readings in [[Taiwanese Hokkien]].
 
=== Harnji Readings ===
{{HokkienLiteraryColloquial}}
 
=== Sorji (數字; Numbers) ===
{{HokkienLiteraryColloquial-Num}}
*[[Thag'ym]]/[[buun]]: {{linktts|0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9.}}
*[[Gwym]]/[[peh]]: {{linktts|cit,nng,svaf,six,go,lak,chid,peq,kao}}
For more detail, see [[Sorji]] and [[Tiexn'oe]]
 
[[Category: Gwgienhak]]

Latest revision as of 14:12, 25 January 2024