Taiwanese Hokkien: Difference between revisions

463 bytes added ,  11:03, 7 February 2019
no edit summary
(Redirected page to Taioan'oe)
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
#REDIRECT [[Taioan'oe]]
'''{{w|Taiwanese Hokkien}}''' (''[[Taioan'oe]]''), a variety of {{w|Hokkien}}
 
* During the [[Taioaan Jidpurn sitai|Japanese era]], Taiwan began to hold Amoy Hokkien as its standard pronunciation. The Japanese called this mixture '''Taiwanese''' ({{jid|臺灣語|Taiwango}})
* Prior to this development, Hokkien was referred to as [[Høxlør-oe|Hoklo]] or simply ''Chinese'', as in [[James W. Davidson]]'s 1903 ''The Island of Formosa'' and the works of [[Kafm Uiliim|William Campbell]]
45,221

edits