Short tones: Difference between revisions
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== Gwsuu == | == Gwsuu == | ||
* | * {{gs|chiok'ym|促音|checked/short tone}} | ||
*{{ | * {{g|koaan-chiok'ym||high-short, #8}} | ||
*{{ | * {{g|ke-chiok'ym||low-short, #4}} | ||
== See also == | == See also == |
Revision as of 02:24, 29 August 2019
Short tones (checked tone) in Taiwanese end with h, p, t, or k sounds. In MTL, the high-short tones end with h, p, t, or k, and the low-short tones end with q, b, d, or g.
Word-final stops
Stop consonants and examples:
- h/q (Glottal stop, 開放促音): ciah, phaq (eat, hit)
- p/b (Bilabial stop, 唇上促音): zap, kab (ten, with)
- t/d (Alveolar stop, 舌前促音): zhat, pad (thief, eight)
- k/g (Velar stop, 喉頂促音): pak, pag (to lease, north)
- Note: The glottal "q" often sandhi's into shouting tone: bahzaxng
Almost all non-v-nasalized vowels have a short version, leading to about 30 short finals. About half of v-nasalized vowels can end with h, adding 6 more. See: Table of all finals in MTL
Gwsuu
- chiok'ym (促音 checked/short tone)
- koaan-chiok'ym (high-short, #8)
- ke-chiok'ym (low-short, #4)