A Beginner's Guide to Taiwanese: Difference between revisions

→‎Syllabic structure: "generally have only one nasal part"
(→‎Syllabic structure: "generally have only one nasal part")
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=== Syllabic structure ===
=== Syllabic structure ===
A complete syllable in Taiwanese requires only a vowel at the bare minimum. A syllable follows one of these two patterns:
A complete syllable in Taiwanese requires only a vowel at the bare minimum. In MTL, syllables follow one of these two patterns, where items in brackets are optional:
* [consonant] + [nasal] '''vowel'''  
* [consonant] + [nasal] '''vowel'''  
* [consonant] + '''vowel''' + [nasal final consonant]
* [consonant] + '''vowel''' + [nasal final consonant]


The items in the [[koat'hoo|brackets]] are optional. The main takeaway is that a syllable won't have a nasal vowel and a nasal final consonant (''m'', ''n'', ''ng'') at the same time. The few syllables with more than one nasal part have ''[[ng]]'' as the vowel.
Syllables generally have only one nasal part, and never the nasal indicator (''v'') and a nasal final consonant (''m'', ''n'', ''ng'') at the same time. See ''[[ng]]'' for the few syllables with more than one nasal part.


A word can be formed with one or more syllables, but two syllables is most typical. We will explain below how every syllable has a distinct tone.
A word can be formed with one or more syllables, but two syllables is most typical. We will explain below how every syllable has a distinct tone.
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