S. L. Wong (romanisation)

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Chinese romanization
Mandarin for Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyin (ISO standard)
EFEO
Gwoyeu Romatzyh
Spelling conventions
Latinxua Sin Wenz
Mandarin Phonetic Symbols II
Chinese Postal Map Romanization
Tongyong Pinyin
Wade–Giles
Yale
Legge romanization
Simplified Wade
Comparison chart
Yue for Standard Cantonese
Guangdong Romanization
Hong Kong Government
Jyutping
Meyer-Wempe
Sidney Lau
S. L. Wong (phonetic symbols)
S. L. Wong (romanisation)
Standard Cantonese Pinyin
Standard Romanization
Yale
Barnett–Chao
Wu
Long-short (romanization)
The Latin phonetic method of Shanghainese
Min Nan
for Taiwanese, Amoy, and related
Pe̍h-oē-jī
Daighi tongiong pingim
Modern Literal Taiwanese
Phofsit Daibuun
Pumindian
for Hainanese
Hainanhua Pinyin Fang'an
for Teochew
Peng'im
Min Dong for Fuzhou dialect
Foochow Romanized
Hakka for Moiyan dialect
Kejiahua Pinyin Fang'an
For Siyen dialect
Phak-fa-s
See also:
General Chinese (Chao Yuenren)
Cyrillization
Xiao'erjing
Bopomofo
Extended Bopomofo for Taiwanese
Taiwanese kana
Romanisation in Singapore
Romanisation in the ROC
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters.

Wong Shik Ling (also known as S. L. Wong) published a romanisation scheme accompanying a set of phonetic symbols for Standard Cantonese based on International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) in the book A Chinese Syllabary Pronounced according to the Dialect of Canton.

Contents

[edit] Phonology

Cantonese like other Chinese languages is monosyllabic. Each syllabus is divided into initial (consonant), final (vowel and following consonant) and tone.

[edit] Finals

Chinese phonology traditionally stresses on finals because it is related to rhymes in the composition of poems, proses and articles. There are 53 finals in Standard Cantonese.

[edit] Vowels

The 10 basic vowel phoneme symbols [a], [ɐ], [ei], [ɛ], [i], [ou], [ɔ], [œ], [u] and [y] in the scheme mean following:
International phonetic alphabet[a][ɐ][eː][ɛ][i][oː][ɔ][œ][u][y]
S. L. Wong (phonetic symbol)[a][ɐ][ei][ɛ][i][ou][ɔ][œ][u][y]
S. L. Wong (romanisation)aaaeieiouoeuuue

For detail explanation of the phonetic system, see S. L. Wong (phonetic symbols)#Vowel.

[edit] Falling diphthong finals

All vowel phonemes except a formed vowel 9 finals themselves.

Some vowel phonemes can followed by vowel phonemes -i, -u or -ue to form 8 falling diphthong finals:
aaaeieiouoeuuue
-aaeieiouooeuue
-iaaiaioiui
-uaauauiu
-ueeue[1]

  1. ^ The combination of eu and ue is euue. The double u is reduced to a single u and the combination becomes eue.

For detail explanation of the phonetic system, see S. L. Wong (phonetic symbols)#Falling diphthong finals.

[edit] Nasal phoneme finals

The nasal consonants [m], [n] and [ŋ] in finals can be written as:
International phonetic alphabet[m][n][ŋ]
S. L. Wong (phonetic symbol)[m][n][ŋ]
S. L. Wong (romanisation)mnng

Some vowel phonemes can followed by nasal consonants -m, -n or -ng to form 17 nasal phoneme finals:
aaaeieiouoeuuue
-maamamim
-naananinoneununuen
-ngaangangengingongeungung

For detail explanation of the phonetic system, see S. L. Wong (phonetic symbols)#Nasal phoneme finals.

[edit] Plosive phoneme finals

The plosive final can be written [p], [t] and [k] as:
International phonetic alphabet[p][t][k]
S. L. Wong (phonetic symbol)[p][t][k]
S. L. Wong (romanisation)ptk

Some vowel phonemes can followed by inaspirated plosive consonants -p, -t or -k to form 17 plosive phoneme finals:
aaaeieiouoeuuue
-paapapip
-taatatitoteututuet
-kaakakekikokeukuk

For detail explanation of the phonetic system, see S. L. Wong (phonetic symbols)#Plosive phoneme finals.

[edit] Nasal consonantoids fully voiced finals

For the nasal consonantoids fully voiced finals

[m] and [ŋ] in voiced form [m̩] and [ŋ̩] are also 2 finals in Cantonese.
International phonetic alphabet[m̩][ŋ̩]
S. L. Wong (phonetic symbol)[m̩][ŋ̩]
S. L. Wong (romanisation)mng

For detail explanation of the phonetic system, see S. L. Wong (phonetic symbols)#Nasal consonantoids fully voiced finals.

[edit] Initials

Initials are made up of consonants. Most of characters are preceding finals with initials while some characters are pronounced without initials. There are 19 initials in total.
International phonetic alphabet[m][n][ŋ̩][p][t][k][kʷ][pʰ][tʰ][kʰ][kʷʰ][ts][tsʰ][f][s][h][j][w][l]
S. L. Wong (phonetic symbol)[m][n][ŋ̩][b][d][g][gw][p][t][k][kw][dz][ts][f][s][h][j][w][l]
S. L. Wong (romanisation)mnngbdggwptkkwdztsfshywl

For detail explanation of the phonetic system, see S. L. Wong (phonetic symbols)#Initials.

[edit] Tones

There are basically 9 tones in Standard Cantonese. Tones play an important role to distinguish meanings in Cantonese. Tones also forms melodies in poem and prose composition.

There are two ways to mark tones in the scheme. One is by number and another by marks.

It is hard to type the tones by typewriters. It therefore simply uses the one in the phonetic symbols for reference.
levelrisinggoingentering
upperˈx (1)ˈx (7)upper
ˊx (2)ˉx (3)ˉx (8)middle
lowerˏx (5)ˍx (6ˍx (9)lower
ˌx (4)

For detail explanation of the phonetic system, see S. L. Wong (phonetic symbols)#Tones.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. Wong, S. L. (1941). A CHINESE SYLLABARY PRONOUNCED ACCORDING TO THE DIALECT OF CANTON. Hong Kong: Chung Hwa Book Co.,(H.K.) Ltd..
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