Talk:Pinyin table
This article is rated Start-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||||||
|
Hi,
I just put up this table. Right now it is quite naked. IPA would be a great addition to this article. Additionally, I thought it would be great to add a link on each entry to a Wikicommons sound file that reads out the corresponding syllable in all Mandarin tones. Maybe you're a native speaker that has an hour or two too much time to record these sounds?
Treatment of zero initial
editThe syllables ya, ye, yao, you etc. and wa, wo, wai, wei etc. are usually phonologically treated as syllables without a zero initial. According to this analysis, y- and w- are not initials, but part of finals.
The table should be changed accordingly. (This table is based on phonology, not on spellings, which is demonstrated by the treatment of the finals with ü.)
Any objections? —Babelfisch 01:28, 22 December 2005 (UTC)
- Hi Babelfisch, the table is based on a book published by the Beijing Language and Culture University. Still, your comment makes sense to me. I would prefer to create two tables - one that lists initials and finals phonologically (thus putting ya, ye, yao, wa, wo, wai, etc.... to the finals). The other table goes by logical combinations of initials and finals (changing the finals ü, üe, üan, ün to u, ue, uan, un).
- What would you say? --Abdull 20:33, 22 December 2005 (UTC)
- I just saw there already is a pinyin table at http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Chinese/Pinyin_Pronunciation ... tones were sorted differently, correspondent to what Babelfisch suggested. I will change the table accordingly. --Abdull 22:16, 1 January 2006 (UTC)
Zero Initial Change and grouping of finals
editI updated the table to more directly reflect how "y" and "w" are used for finals with no initial. I also put the finals into phonetic groupings. I tried to provide a bit of info how this works, without going into much explanation. Some points are pointed out in the Pinyin page, but I felt a brief summary was valuable before the table.
I based my update on my comparison with BoPoMoFo/Zhuyin and finding equivalencies between them (using both Pinyin and Zhuyin resources). I hope to add a Zhuyin table page that will show the similarities in pronounciation between Pinyin and Zhuyin quite clearly, using the same format in this table. --Murdocke 10:42, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
- The Zhuyin table is now added --Murdocke 23:29, 7 January 2006 (UTC)
Sounds represented by i
editQuote When initials stand alone in a syllable, they may be written with an additional letter "i". However, in these cases, the "i" is not pronounced. For example, "zhi" is pronounced just like the "zh" part of "zhua" without the "ua". This can be compared against syllables ending in "i" that are a combination of an initial and final "i", where the "i" is pronounced (i.e."bi" is pronounced like "b" + "i"). end quote.
In pinyin i is used to represent three different sounds:
- the "ee" sound in bi, ji, mi etc
- the vowel sound in ci, si, and zi
- the vowel sound in chi, ri, shi, and zhi
The "i" in "zhi" is certainly pronounced, compare chi and zhi. LDHan 12:17, 10 March 2006 (UTC)
Please see:
- Yin Binyong 尹斌庸 and Mary Felley (1990). Chinese Romanization. Pronunciation and Orthography (Hanyu pinyin he zhengcifa 汉语拼音和正词法), Beijing: Sinolingua
- http://www.pinyin.info/rules/initials_finals.html
for further details. LDHan 14:05, 14 March 2006 (UTC)
- It's still likely best to explain the zhi, ci, si, syllables as initial-only syllables. You are correct that the i is pronounced, but it is more of a "manifestation" of the pronunciation of the initial itself, and not an added final.
- In the end, the intent of the article is only to show how initials and finals can be combined within Pinyin, and it's likely best to avoid getting into pronunciation within this article. This is best summarized in the initial and final pronunications in the main Pinyin article. Getting into pronunciation of individual letters, the article would also need to include other information, such as:
- i is also used differently in the context of other finals (as part of a digraph?): ai, ei, etc.
- on its own, u also represents different sounds:
- the u "oo" sound (wu, bu, etc)
- the ü German ü/French eu sound (yu, ju, etc)
- the ou "oh" sound as part of the iu final (iu= i+ou)
- on its own, e also represents different sounds:
- the e "uh" sound (de, te, etc)
- the ê "ehh" sound as part of the ie and üe finals (ie=i+ê, üe=ü+ê)
- Murdocke 06:59, 5 April 2006 (UTC)
- Please can you provide the source(s) from which you base your edits on, I would be very interested to find out who would say that zhi, ci, si, are initial-only syllables and is more of a "manifestation" of the pronunciation of the initial itself, and not an added final. As "ch" in chi is voiceless, in what way is the voiced "i" a "manifestation" of the pronunciation of "ch"?
- I apologize if my terms are confusing. "Manifestation" may not be the best way to explain it. I'm just saying zhi, for example, is just the sound by made by "zh" with no other final. I think the finals pronunciation in the main pinyin article says it best: When preceded by "c", "ch", "r", "s", "sh", "z" or "zh", "i" should be pronounced as a natural extension of those sounds in the same position, but slightly more open to allow for a clear-sounding vowel to pass through (although I feel it should not really be listed as final under group "i"). The "i" in this type of context does not exist as it's own stand-alone final nor as a stand-alone grouping with other "basic" finals – so is it a final at all? ("ê" does not exist as a stand-alone final, but does exist as a final along with "i" and "ü" as "ie" and "üe", respectively.)
- As my source, I am using a comparison between Zhuyin and Pinyin in various conversion tools and electronic dictionaries. One online conversion tool can be found at http://www.mandarintools.com/pyconverter.html. Although zhuyin isn't as easy to grasp at first, because it uses specific phonetic symbols rather than romanization it produces a much cleaner representation of the same sounds without needing special "rules" for how letters are used (kind of like if IPA was instead of roman characters, but more simplified). In doing a direct comparison, all instances of zhi, chi, shi, ri, zi, ci, si, etc are just one initial Zhuyin symbol- the initial (ㄓ,ㄔ,ㄕ,ㄖ,ㄗ,ㄘ,ㄙ, respectively). This is different from ni, ji, xi, etc which are combinations of the initial and i final (ㄐ+一, ㄑ+一, ㄒ+一, respectively) (stand-alone pinyin yi= zhuyin 一). As well, zh, ch, sh, etc initials with other pinyin finals, are represented by their equivalent respective initial and final zhuyin combinations (zha=ㄓ+ㄚ,zhu=ㄓ+ㄨ, chu=ㄔ+ㄨ, chuai=ㄔ+ㄨ+ㄞ, etc)
- I've seen a number of different ways to introduce the different uses of roman characters in pinyin and initial and final pronunciations. Some use the "English" arrangement: those "like English", and those "different from English" in an alphabetical order, sometimes (misleadingly) referring to "y" and "w" as initials. Others use the "Grouping" arrangement (as the main pinyin article does now, as well as the source you mentioned) where the initials and finals are ordered in the more logical conventional groups.
- The groupings seem to make it more straightforward how sounds are produced rather than trying to learn the initials and finals from an alphabetical "English" perspective. The extension of this is that in the combination of initials and finals, instead of trying to explain the use of "i" from an "English perspective" – using special notations in the same "i" row and detailed explanations below, it instead better falls under its own row outside of the "i" group. Instead of "no final" it may be better phrased as "-i" which I've seen in some sources- but still listed in the same position.
- I'll adjust it accordingly and remove the "no final" phrases above the table as you had done previously. This should better reflect how other sources address it, while keeping it in a logical grouped arrangement.
- Murdocke 07:54, 6 April 2006 (UTC)
- Zh, ch, etc are digraphs, but ai, ei, ou, etc are diphthongs, the "i" in ai, ei, etc are not used differently. U and ü are two different sounds but the umlaut is left out when there is no confusion which sound is represented, eg lu and lü but yu is written without the umlaut because it is always yü ("y" is not a sound but a spelling convention). I don't have my reference books right now, but I think you are right about "e".
- If a letter is used to represent more than one sound or two letters for one sound, I think it is useful to mention it in the article but without going into detail on actual pronunciation. LDHan 14:46, 5 April 2006 (UTC)
- Without a reference to the list of finals and pronunciations, this could be misleading. The phrase "In pinyin most letters are used to represent one sound (zh, sh, and zh are digraphs), and exception is i, it is used to represent three different sounds" seemed to be a connotation that individual letters make distinct sounds even within combinations like ai, ei, ou, ao, etc. It also seemed to be a connotation that "i" was the only one that represented different sounds, where "e" and "u" do as well following the examples we both mention.
- Now that the "unpronounced i" phrase is gone (and rightly so), this article only mentions how the characters of initials and finals can be combined, with no other mention of sounds and pronunciation (except for the reference to it in the main pinyin article). To avoid confusion with not enough info or instead having to include a lot, it's likely best just to link to pronunciations in the main pinyin article, which addresses this quite adequately.
- Murdocke 07:54, 6 April 2006 (UTC)
Spelling conventions, "w" and "y"
editThere seems to be some confusion about "w" and "y", they don't represent sounds, they are just spelling conventions. Pinyin mentions this but it would be useful here, "w" and "y" are used purely to avoid ambiguity when writing words in pinyin, eg “wenyan” for “uenian”, is it “uen-ian”, “uen-i-an” or “u-en-i-an”? The same is also for writing eg “liou” as “liu”. LDHan 13:53, 5 April 2006 (UTC)
- I added a bit based on your suggestion Murdocke 08:18, 6 April 2006 (UTC)
Not really a topic
editThis article is not about any specified encyclopedic topic. It can be very useful in, for example, various wiktionaries or the wikibook on Mandarin. Howver, I can't see how it merits its own wikipedia article since it's really just a guide to pinyin and Standard Mandarin pronunciation, and both these topics already have their own articles. Keep in mind that Wikipedia is not a usage guide.
Peter Isotalo 01:19, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
- The table only shows how initials and finals can be combined. This adds to the understanding of Pinyin itself as much as the descriptions of the initial and final pronunciations do in the main Pinyin article. It could be combined into the main Pinyin article, but for clarity and ease of reading, I believe it is best kept as a separate article. A person gains more understanding of how Pinyin works though this article, but would still not be able to make use of it as a "Chinese pronunciation guide". To do this, tone variations and meanings of words would also need to be reflected, and this is not the case.
- Having the table separate also allows for more direct comparision between other methods of capturing Mandarin pronunciation. Right now, this is only done against Zhuyin in the Zhuyin table article, but could also be done for other methods of romanization and cyrillization.
For those who have never heard of a pinyin table, or those who are interested in the basic construction of a pinyin table, this is an ideal place to start. It should not be integrated into the already involved main pinyin article. Preroll (talk) 22:37, 26 October 2010 (UTC)
Questions about final rs
editThis page suggests that only the initial+final+er combinations listed actually occur. Pinyin#Pronunciation_of_finals makes no such suggestion. Could someone who knows clarify? Jrohrs 02:57, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
- I think it is shown as in the final table just before the Orthography section of the article (except it only addresses the finals themselves, not in combination with the initials, and says +r final not +er final). Murdocke 05:57, 29 June 2006 (UTC)
I've done a bit of research, I believe that this case is some sort of mistake. The standard Windows IME knows nothing of these forms, and several rather reliable sources elsewhere on the web that give complete list of pinyin syllables don't list any of them at all. Unless someone can justify, I think that it should be removed. Bmargulies 03:09, 12 December 2006 (UTC)
- Get off the computer and have a look at one of these books:
- Yin Binyong 尹斌庸 and Mary Felley. Chinese Romanization. Pronunciation and Orthography / Hanyu pinyin he zhengcifa 汉语拼音和正词法. Beijing: Sinolingua 1990. ISBN 7800521486 / ISBN 0835119300.
- Charles N. Li, Sandra A. Thompson: Mandarin Chinese. A Functional Reference Grammar. University of California Press, Berkeley 1981, ISBN 0520042867.
- Jerry Norman: Chinese. Cambridge University Press, 1988, ISBN 0521296536.
- You'll find the information. Neither Micro$loth IME nor "several rather reliable sources elsewhere on the web" seem to be really good sources. —Babelfisch 06:39, 12 December 2006 (UTC)
My point is to post useful information for people who use computers. Sure, there are all these purely academic sources that use these forms. But there are no electronic dictionaries that deliver them as readings, and no IMEs that accept them. I don't see any point to slamming Microsoft. I referenced their IME because many, many, many, people use it.
Would you accept modified language under a heading like 'how pinyin is used on computers'? 199.88.205.1 14:11, 12 December 2006 (UTC)
I would also point out that i sit in an office with several native speakers of Chinese who work with Chinese and pinyin for a living, every day, in a business context, and who have none of them ever seen anyone use any of those 'composed-er' pinyins, ever. Again, I'm not trying to argue at this point that they go away, clearly you have sources I don't for the academic side of things. I'm only arguing for some content about the common, computerized, use cases. Bmargulies 14:44, 12 December 2006 (UTC)
Not that I consider myself a reference of any kind, but I would like to point out that in the one year university course of Mandarin that I took we had to learn, and use, these -r suffixed forms. 81.244.194.155 13:36, 16 March 2007 (UTC)
I hope that this entry is not off-topic for this section. I am by no means an expert. In the "initial+final+er combinations" table at the end of the article are the entries "zher" and "shir." There is no final shown for these two entries. It seems that zher is zhe er / zhei er (這兒 / 这儿) and that shir is shi er (事兒 / 事儿). Should their initials e/ei and i be shown, respectively? 90.134.235.123 12:17, 2 November 2007 (UTC)
Pronunciation
editThere is not really any information in the cells of the table except whether the combination is valid. It would be much more useful if the IPA pronunciation would be given in each cell. −Woodstone 14:21, 26 November 2006 (UTC)
- I think adding to IPA to this table would reduce its clarity, and adding IPA without context of tones may lead people to think that the combinations are valid without a proper tone attached. As mentioned under the "Not really a topic" discussion, the purpose of this article is to show how valid pinyin syllables are combined from initials and finals, as well as offer easier comparison between other forms of capturing Mandarin pronunciation. It does not address tones or specific pronunciation. IPA pronunciations are discussed in the main Pinyin article. Murdocke 04:46, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
I'm not proposing to add IPA, but replace the current cell contents (except row and column headers) with the IPA pronunciation. That a syllable starting with "b" and ending with "a" spells "ba" adds no information. (The few exceptions can be easily dealt with in a footnote). That such a syllable would be pronounced /pa/ (if that is the correct one) is real information. Indeed without this information I agree with the remark "Not really a topic". The Pinyin article does not give this information either, because the row and columnn headers are not Pinyin spelling but vague sound indicators (quasi IPA). It is the combination of spelling with pronunciation that carries the real information. −Woodstone 20:30, 29 November 2006 (UTC)
- In addition to allowing a clearer comparison to other systems, I believe showing the valid combinations of initials and finals as well as showing ones that are not valid helps to add to the understanding of Pinyin itself ,and is information in its own right. That is the purpose of this article: show valid initial-final combinations, and allow for easier comparison between other systems. If this table, along with it's supporting information, fit well into the main Pinyin article, that would be great, but I don't think it does. It is not meant to be a pronunciation guide. Adding or replacing cell information with IPA would require to then address tones in order to represent the true pronunciation. This would move things closer a usage guide. Such a usage guide would be interesting to see (with perhaps a table with valid combinations for each tone, along with IPA), but it probably doesn't belong here, as mentioned in "Not really a topic". Murdocke 08:27, 11 December 2006 (UTC)
Grid Lines
editWhat are the meaning of the thick borders inside the table? Especially the vertical one that splits the table into two? Preroll (talk) 22:41, 26 October 2010 (UTC)
Sounds represented by "i", continued
editThere needs to be SOME explanation in the introductory text about why the syllables "zhi" and others in the top "-i" row are placed there rather than in the main "i" row. As it is, the separation of the "-i" and "i" rows and the inclusion of the former in the "a" group comes across as arbitrary. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.100.178.193 (talk) 22:27, 31 December 2010 (UTC)
- Indented line
- There are two i-rows because if you take away the "i" from zhi, chi, shi, ri, zi, ci, si and pronounce zh, ch, sh, r, z, c, s a bit longer, it's the same like zhi, chi, shi, ri, zi, ci, si. So there is no real "i"-sound in these cases. However, the grouping is nonetheless rubbish! Read my talk "u+eng=ong, ü+eng=iong".--89.14.118.189 (talk) 00:38, 9 September 2012 (UTC)
u+eng=ong, ü+eng=iong
editThat's rubbish! I can understand that a English speaker made this mistake because English vowels have different pronounciations. Chinese vowels are rather similar to those of Romance languages. "ong" is an own sound and differs from "eng". "w" is the equivalent of "u". That means u+eng=weng, which exists. But you will never find "ong" alone in a dictionary. Moreover, ü is not i nor y! English speakers probably hear somehow a "ee"-sound when it's a ü. However, German (ü) and French (u) people would hear a huge difference between ü and i! ü+eng doesn't exist at all. iong belongs to "group i". ong does not belong to "group u" because the first letter is not u! Why would it be called "group u"? Because the first letter of the sound is u. Besides, there is no "group a". I don't know how US Chinese dictionaries are, but every Chinese dictionary from China contains a table of vowels. There are four columns, each presenting a group: group no-name (empty cell, no heading), group i, group u and group ü. Group no-name consists of a, o, e, ai, ei, ao, ou, an, en, ang, eng, ong. Groups i, u and ü indicate if there's a combination with group no-name, e.g. next to "an" you find "ian" in column i, "uan" in column u and "üan" in column ü. This is the correct grouping.--89.14.118.189 (talk) 00:31, 9 September 2012 (UTC)
- Actually, u+eng=ong, ü+eng=iong matches how it's written in Zhuyin. :) Double sharp (talk) 06:18, 12 April 2022 (UTC)
孪 (孿)
editLikewise the variant sound 孿 (lüán; ㄌㄩㄢˊ) is not recognized in putonghua, or it is folded into (luán; ㄌㄨㄢˊ).
Maybe English logic is different, but as a Chinese born and living in Germany, the "or" sounds to me that 孪 is rarely used in putonghua and more common in guoyu. However, 孪 is neither common in putonghua nor is 孿 common in guoyu. This is a really rare character and mostly used in written language. There are more common characters pronounced luan, which I recommend, if the tone doesn't matter in this case.--89.14.118.189 (talk) 01:03, 9 September 2012 (UTC)
Divide the intials
editYou nicely group the finals, but the initials are all lumped together and not broken down into bpmf, dtnl, etc. Jidanni (talk) 11:58, 13 November 2012 (UTC)
syllables that don't exist
editI have spotted the following syllables in the chart which simply DO NOT EXIST:
- yai
- diang
- lo
- nia
- fiao
- nun
- shong
- lün
Do we have any references for these? If not, we should remove them. They certainly don't exist in everyday standard Mandarin. Tooironic (talk) 08:22, 16 January 2016 (UTC)
- If it counts for anything, my IME gives me 咯 and 囖 for "lo", 覅 for "fiao", and 黁 for "nun". _dk (talk) 14:12, 16 January 2016 (UTC)
- Thanks. Lo seems to be supported by many IMEs but is not a standard pinyin syllable AFAIK. Baidu and Moedict confirms the existence of 黁 (here) and 覅 (here), but these are highly obscure. The latter is not even standard Chinese. Tooironic (talk) 05:11, 17 January 2016 (UTC)
Yai exists in standard Guoyu and is not particularly obscure. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 31.19.107.33 (talk) 16:26, 22 October 2017 (UTC)
I can't find any "biang" either.146.255.183.71 (talk) 20:24, 18 February 2016 (UTC)
- We have Biang biang noodles. _dk (talk) 02:15, 19 February 2016 (UTC)
i + en = in
editIsn't this just wrong? --Backinstadiums (talk) 11:38, 19 November 2017 (UTC)
- Not according to the rules of Hanyu Pinyin! Victionarier (talk) 12:42, 5 May 2020 (UTC)
Do the following exist?
edit- diang
- lün
- sei
- shong
I can't think of a single character for them. Yes, there are other italic Pinyin:
- biang (Biangbiang noodles)
- fiao (覅)
- kei (剋)
- lüan (孿; not in any of my dictionaries but it's already explained in the article)
- nia (㖸, according to earlier editions of the 新华字典, but not Wiktionary; 〈方 dial.〉 aux. used at the end of a sentence, expressing anticipation: 来㖸)
...but I know these exist, and can name specific characters for them. If I could have ones for the first list then that would be great. Thanks. Victionarier (talk) 12:41, 5 May 2020 (UTC)
- Sēi is recognized in CNS, e.g. for 塞, and Wiktionary has shōng in shōngxū wikt:蚣蝑. But having sinogram of it is a secondary problem. The footnote here for the syllables you listed points to Chih-Hao Tsai's cross-reference table which in turn says these were “listed in Wang (1998) but not listed in ISO 7098:1991” where Wang (1998) stands for Wang H.-M. "Statistical analysis of Mandarin acoustic units and automatic extraction of phonetically rich sentences based upon a very large Chinese text corpus" (PDF). Computational Linguistics & Chinese Language Processing. 3: 93–114. I'm not familiar with Simplified Phonetic Alphabet used in that work, so I might be getting something wrong, but what I see is that the table on page 98 contains sei (sEi, 64) and shong (SuoN, 377), but I can't find diang (should be diaN at 15/25?) or lün (lUN at 18/39?); and in any case they don't explain where their table comes from. From what I guess diang and lün might be attempts to transcribe non-Mandarin words used in Mandarin, but if anyone knows better I would love to know too. I previously removed ㄌㄩㄣ (lün) from zhuyin table after verifying it didn't exist in official sources and no one addressed the citation needed request for a long time. (For the record neither do ㄙㄟ sei and ㄕㄨㄥ shong exist in zhuyin table or its only reference.) –MwGamera (talk) 17:11, 6 May 2020 (UTC)
- Just to add to this: diāng is a variant reading of 噹, seen in terms like 噹噹兒車 (diāngdiangrchē), and is localised to Beijing and Taiwan. I haven't found anything for lün so far - the table gives 淋, but I can't find any evidence for it. Theknightwho (talk) 15:17, 28 June 2022 (UTC)
- Found it - lün is localised to Beijing, and found in 淋雨 (lǘnyǔ). Theknightwho (talk) 16:24, 28 June 2022 (UTC)
Just to conclude:
diang
editOccurs as a Beijing and Taiwan variant reading of 噹 / 当 (diāng).
lün
editOccurs as a Beijing variant reading of 淋 (lǘn).
sei
editOccurs as:
- a Beijing and Taiwan variant reading of 塞 (sēi).
- a reading of the Latin letter C (sēi) in various borrowings and neologisms, e.g. CD (sēidì), C++ or C加加 (sēijiājiā) etc.
shong
editProbably does not occur. I queried its use on Wiktionary as a variant reading of 蚣, and the source turned out to be a typo in Hanyu Da Cidian (漢語大詞典): the second entry for 蚣 gives the reading shōnɡ, but the index lists it under zhōnɡ, and Hanyu Da Zidian (漢語大字典) also gives zhōnɡ.
On a separate note, there is a small chance that it is a variant reading of a character such as 舂, as the Kangxi Dictionary gives the fanqie of 書容 (shū / róng). Its Middle Chinese pronunciation of /ɕɨoŋ/ therefore gives an expected modern reading of shōng, in the same way 升 (/ɕɨŋ/) became shēng, 傷 / 伤 (/ɕɨɐŋ/) became shāng and 蹱 (/t͡ɕɨoŋ/) became zhōng. For whatever reason, though, its orthodox modern reading is actually chōng.
Other characters which underwent a similar shift are 憃, 摏, 樁 蹖, 𧐍, 𩥫, 𪄻, 𪅖 and 𪆊 (all chōng), though several are totally obsolete, and they all contain 舂 as a component.
I also found three more unusual syllables in use:
cei
editOccurs as the Beijing colloquialism 𤭢 (cèi). 𤭢 is usually treated as a variant of 碎 (suì), but its variant reading has now taken on an extended meaning in Beijing Mandarin.
pia
editOccurs as a slang reading of 啪 (piā), frequently in repetition (e.g. piāpiāpiā).
kiu
editOccurs as a reading of the Latin letter Q (kiū or kiù) in various borrowings and neologisms, e.g. Q彈 / Q弹 (kiūtán) ("Q texture"), Q熱 / Q热 (kiūrè) ("Q fever"), Q棍 (kiùgùn) ("snooker cue") etc.
Theknightwho (talk) 18:14, 29 June 2022 (UTC)
- I have also found "nui" in the Moedict Variant Dictionary and CNS site under nuí for one character 捼 as one of the readings. shinkas (talk) 04:57, 14 August 2022 (UTC)
bo po mo fo and lo currently under -o
edit"bo", "po" , "mo" and "fo" are contractions of "buo" , "puo" , "muo" , "fuo" respectively, as copied from Zhuyin - should these be shown as -uo finals as a modified combination, as opposed to the current display as -o finals? Is there a need to match the Zhuyin table for this, when those syllables have the "u" glide in Standard Mandarin?
Similarly, "lo" is included under -o, but the computed IPA pronunciation shown for "lo" in the Wiktionary entry for 咯 is equivalent to luo. Others in above discussion mention 囖 as "lo" but the Wiktionary entry for 囖 shows the syllable as "luo". Zywxn | 06:20, 3 September 2021 (UTC)
Do the following exist?
edit- din
- den
- len
- bou
- chei
- cei
- rua
- nun
- me
- diang
- duang
- biang
- shong
- fiao
- kiang
- gin
1.165.167.222 (talk) 13:58, 1 May 2023 (UTC)
- See the notes for each of them. Theknightwho (talk) 12:52, 9 July 2024 (UTC)