Yale romanization of Cantonese

Romanization scheme for Cantonese Chinese From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Yale romanization of Cantonese was developed by Yale scholar Gerard P. Kok for his and Parker Po-fei Huang's textbook Speak Cantonese initially circulated in looseleaf form in 1952[1] but later published in 1958.[2] Unlike the Yale romanization of Mandarin, it is still widely used in books and dictionaries, especially for foreign learners of Cantonese. It shares some similarities with Hanyu Pinyin in that unvoiced, unaspirated consonants are represented by letters traditionally used in English and most other European languages to represent voiced sounds. For example, [p] is represented as b in Yale, whereas its aspirated counterpart, [pʰ] is represented as p.[3] Students attending The Chinese University of Hong Kong's New-Asia Yale-in-China Chinese Language Center are taught using Yale romanization.[4]

Quick Facts Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese ...
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Some enthusiasts employ Yale romanisation to explore writing Cantonese as an alphabetic language.[citation needed]

Initials

b
[p]
p
[]
m
[m]
f
[f]
d
[t]
t
[]
n
[n]
l
[l]
g
[k]
k
[]
ng
[ŋ]
h
[h]
gw
[kʷ]
kw
[kʷʰ]
w
[w]
j
[ts]
ch
[tsʰ]
s
[s]
y
[j]

Finals

a
[]
aai
[aːi̯]
aau
[aːu̯]
aam
[aːm]
aan
[aːn]
aang
[aːŋ]
aap
[aːp̚]
aat
[aːt̚]
aak
[aːk̚]
  ai
[ɐi̯]
西
au
[ɐu̯]
am
[ɐm]
an
[ɐn]
ang
[ɐŋ]
ap
[ɐp̚]
at
[ɐt̚]
ak
[ɐk̚]
e
[ɛː]
ei
[ei̯]
      eng
[ɛːŋ]
    ek
[ɛːk̚]
i
[]
  iu
[iːu̯]
im
[iːm]
in
[iːn]
ing
[ɪŋ]
ip
[iːp̚]
it
[iːt̚]
ik
[ɪk̚]
o
[ɔː]
oi
[ɔːy̯]
ou
[ou̯]
  on
[ɔːn]
ong
[ɔːŋ]
  ot
[ɔːt̚]
ok
[ɔːk̚]
u
[]
ui
[uːy̯]
    un
[uːn]
ung
[ʊŋ]
  ut
[uːt̚]
uk
[ʊk̚]
eu
[œː]
eui
[ɵy̯]
    eun
[ɵn]
eung
[œːŋ]
  eut
[ɵt̚]
euk
[œːk̚]
yu
[]
      yun
[yːn]
    yut
[yːt̚]
 
      m
[]
  ng
[ŋ̩]
     

Tones

Thumb
Graphical representation of the tones of six-tone Cantonese.

Modern Cantonese has up to seven phonemic tones. Cantonese Yale represents these tones using a combination of diacritics and the letter h.[5][6] Traditional Chinese linguistics treats the tones in syllables ending with a stop consonant as separate "entering tones". Cantonese Yale follows modern linguistic conventions in treating these the same as the high-flat, mid-flat and low-flat tones, respectively.

More information No., Description ...
No. Description IPA & Chao
tone numbers
Yale representation
1 high-flat ˥ 55 sīn sīk
high-falling ˥˨ 52 sìn
2 mid-rising ˧˥ 35 sín
3 mid-flat ˧ 33 si sin sik
4 low-falling ˨˩ 21 sìh sìhn
5 low-rising ˨˧ 23 síh síhn
6 low-flat ˨ 22 sih sihn sihk
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Examples

More information Traditional, Simplified ...
Traditional Simplified Romanization
廣州話 广州话 gwóng jàu wá
粵語 粤语 yuht yúh
你好 néih hóu
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Sample transcription of one of the 300 Tang Poems by Meng Haoran:

More information 春曉 孟浩然, chèun híu maahng houh yìhn ...
春曉
孟浩然
chèun híu
maahng houh yìhn
春眠不覺曉,chèun mìhn bāt gok híu,
處處聞啼鳥。chyu chyu màhn tàih níuh.
夜來風雨聲,yeh lòih fùng yúh sìng,
花落知多少?fà lohk jì dò síu?
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Note concerning the jì in the last line of the poem that it is pronounced as high flat here because immediately followed by a tone that begins high and yet that this Romanization's conventions mark it nonetheless as high falling, and the user then needs to remember this rule of tone-sandhi. (Interested readers can confirm this convention by looking at for instance the dictionary by Kwan Choi Wah among the works in the list at bottom below.)

See also

References

Further reading

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