Tones of Taiwanese: Difference between revisions
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== Tones in Taiwanese == | == Tones in Taiwanese == | ||
*[[Kitiau- | *[[Kitiau-ym]] (Basic Tone) | ||
*[[KQtiau- | *[[KQtiau-ym]] (High Tone) | ||
*[[Extut- | *[[Extut-ym]] (Low Falling Tone) | ||
*[[Sioxngtut- | *[[Sioxngtut-ym]] (Shouting-Out Tone) | ||
*[[Hoesoaan- | *[[Hoesoaan-ym]] (Curving Tone) | ||
*[[Chiog- | *[[Chiog-ym]] (Short Tone) | ||
*[[Zoafntiau]] ([[Tone sandhi]]) | *[[Zoafntiau]] ([[Tone sandhi]]) | ||
*[[Tea- | *[[Tea-ym]] (short tone) |
Revision as of 08:22, 1 January 2013
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)