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User:Taiwantaffy/Taiwanese comparison

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There are a number of systems in existence for writing Southern Min languages of the Xiamen/Taiwan/Hokkien variety. By 1999 there were some 64 such systems for Taiwanese.[1] Most are romanizations, but there are also other systems based on Zhuyin Fuhao or katakana, or inspired by Hangul.

Initials

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Note that most of the romanizations do not distinguish between [ts] and [tɕ], or between [tsʰ] and [tɕʰ]. However, because these are allophones of each other in Taiwanese, no confusion arises as to what sound is meant in a particular syllable. Note also that Pumindian does not distinguish [l], [n], and [ʑ], rendering all three as <l>. This is not a problem in the Xiamen version of Southern Min where these three phonemes have merged into [l], but for Taiwanese Southern Min, either all three are distinct, or only [l] and [ʑ] have merged into [l], depending on the particular dialect.

IPA Pe̍h-ōe-jī Tai-lo[2] Revised TLPA Daighi tongiong pingim Pumindian[3][4] MLT TPS
b b b b bh bb b
p p p p b b p
ph ph ph p p ph
m m m m m m m
t t t t d d t
th th th t t th
n n n n n l n
l l l l l l l
g g g g gh gg g
k k k k g g k
kh kh kh k k kh
ŋ ng ng ng ng gg ng
h h h h h h h
ts ch ts c z z z
ch ts c z z z
tsʰ chh tsh ch c c zh
tɕʰ chh tsh ch c c zh
s s s s s s s
ʑ j j j r l j

Finals

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For Modern Literal Taiwanese, the base form of the final is given, in the seventh tone (fourth tone for syllables ending with a stop).

IPA Pe̍h-ōe-jī Tai-lo Revised TLPA Daighi tongiong pingim Pumindian MLT TPS
a a a a a a a
ah ah ah ah ah aq/ah ㄚㆷ
ai ai ai ai ai ai ai
aiʔ aih aih aih aih aih aih ㄞㆷ
ak ak ak ak ak ak ak ㄚㆶ
am am am am am am am
an an an an an an an
ang ang ang ang ang ang
ap ap ap ap ap ap ap ㄚㆴ
at at at at at at at ㄚㆵ
au au au au
auʔ auh ㄠㆷ
aⁿ
ahⁿ ㆩㆷ
aiⁿ
aihⁿ ㆮㆷ
auⁿ

auhⁿ e eh ek eng eⁿ ehⁿ i ia iah iak iam ian iang iap iat iau iauh ih

in io ioh iok iong

it iu iuh iⁿ iaⁿ iahⁿ iauⁿ iauhⁿ ihⁿ io͘ⁿ iuⁿ m mh ng ngh o oa oah oai

oan oang oat oe oeh oh ok

ong

oaⁿ oaiⁿ oaihⁿ oeⁿ oehⁿ o͘ o͘ⁿ o͘h o͘hⁿ u uh ui uih un ut uⁿ uiⁿ

Tones and nasalization

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Tone number IPA Pe̍h-ōe-jī Tai-lo Revised TLPA Daighi tongiong pingim Pumindian MLT TPS
1 a a a1 a ā af
2 a˥˧ á á a2 à ǎ ar ㄚˋ
3 ˨˩ à à a3 â à ax ㄚᒻ
4 aʔ˩ ah ah ah4 āh āh aq ㄚㆷ
5 a˧˥ â â a5 ǎ á aa ㄚˊ
7 ā ā a7 ā â a ㄚ˫
8 aʔ˥ a̍h a̍h ah8 ah áh ah ㄚㆷ̇

References

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Notes
  1. ^ Iûⁿ & Tiuⁿ, Non-Character Transcription Systems.
  2. ^ Li, Tâi-uân-lô-má-jī phing-im tôo-kái, pp. 24–25.
  3. ^ Putonghua-Minnanyu Da Cidian, pp.
  4. ^ Lin, Minnanhua Jiaocheng, pp. 3–6.
Bibliography
  • Iûⁿ Ún-giân; Tiuⁿ Ha̍k-khiam (1999). "台灣福佬話非漢字拼音符號的回顧與分析 (Comparison and Analysis of non-Character Transcription Systems for Taiwanese Holo)" (in Chinese). Tainan: National Cheng Kung University. Retrieved 2009-12-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Lin Baoqing. Minnanhua Jiaocheng (Southern Min Textbook). Xiamen, Fujian: Xiamen University Press. ISBN 7-5615-0531-0.
  • Tseng Rui-cheng (2009). Taiwan Minnanyu Luomazi Pinyin Fang'an Shiyong Shouce (Practical Manual for the Taiwan Southern Min Romanization System) (PDF) (in Chinese). ROC Ministry of Education. ISBN 978-986-01-6637-8.