Bungieen kab peqoe

Buun-peh-i-thak (文白異讀; lit. literary-colloquial different reading)

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.

Unlike other spoken Chinese varieties, characters used to read Zoanciw 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, 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

Template:HokkienLiteraryColloquial

Sorji (數字; Numbers)

1 2 3 / 4 / 5 / 6 / 7 / 8 / 9 / 10 /
Peh cit () nng () svaf six go lak chid pøeq kao zap
Buun id () ji () safm sux gvor liok pad kiuo sip

for more detail, see Tiexn'oe