Middle Chinese: Difference between revisions
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{{lead|Tiongkor Harnguo|中古漢語|Middle Chinese|spoken during {{w|Southern | {{lead|Tiongkor Harnguo|中古漢語|Middle Chinese|spoken during {{w|Northern and Southern Dynasties}} and the Sui, Tang, and Song dynasties (6th century - 10th century)}} | ||
* Literary layer of Hokkien can be related to Middle Chinese | * Literary layer of Hokkien can be related to Middle Chinese |
Revision as of 15:13, 21 August 2023
Tiongkor Harnguo (中古漢語 Middle Chinese; spoken during Northern and Southern Dynasties and the Sui, Tang, and Song dynasties (6th century - 10th century))
- Literary layer of Hokkien can be related to Middle Chinese
- Literary form of Hokkien, used at one time for formal writing, is now largely extinct
- Literary readings are more similar to Middle Chinese than their colloquial equivalents
- The bulk of literary readings of Harnji are based on Tang dynasty pronunciations, mainly used in formal phrases and written language
- Most scholars now believe MC represents the Northern and Southern dynasties
- Min dialects (including Hokkien), show independent developments from Old Chinese