The four tone classes of Chinese
 ꜂上 shǎng   去꜄ 
 ꜀平  píng  入꜆  ru(ʔ) 
An old illustration of the four tone classes, in their traditional representation on a hand. In modern use, the diacritics all face the character, as in the table above.

The four tones of Chinese poetry and dialectology (simplified Chinese: 四声; traditional Chinese: 四聲; pinyin: sìshēng) are four traditional tone classes[1] of Chinese words. They play an important role in Chinese poetry and in comparative studies of tonal development in the modern varieties of Chinese, both in traditional Chinese and in Western linguistics. They correspond to the phonology of Middle Chinese, and are named even or level ( píng), rising ( shǎng), departing or going ( ), and entering or checked ( ).[2] (The last three are collectively referred to as oblique (), an important concept in poetic tone patterns.) They are reconstructed as mid (˧ or 33), mid rising (˧˥ or 35), high falling (˥˩ or 51), and mid (˧ or 33) with a final stop consonant respectively.[3] Due to historic splits and mergers, none of the modern varieties of Chinese have the exact four tones of Middle Chinese, but they are noted in rhyming dictionaries.

Background

According to the usual modern analysis, Early Middle Chinese had three phonemic tones in most syllables, but no tonal distinctions in checked syllables ending in the stop consonants /p/, /t/, /k/. In most circumstances, every syllable had its own tone; hence a multisyllabic word typically had a tone assigned to each syllable. (In modern varieties, the situation is sometimes more complicated. Although each syllable typically still has its own underlying tone in most dialects, some syllables in the speech of some varieties may have their tone modified into other tones or neutralized entirely, by a process known as tone sandhi. Furthermore, many varieties of Chinese deleted Middle Chinese final consonants, but these contrasts may have been preserved, helping lead to tonogenesis of contemporary multitonal systems.)

Traditional Chinese dialectology reckons syllables ending in a stop consonant as possessing a fourth tone, known technically as a checked tone. This tone is known in traditional Chinese linguistics as the entering ( ) tone, a term commonly used in English as well. The other three tones were termed the level (or even) tone ( píng), the rising ( shǎng) tone, and the departing (or going) tone ( ).[2] The practice of setting up the entering tone as a separate class reflects the fact that the actual pitch contour of checked syllables was quite distinct from the pitch contour of any of the sonorant-final syllables. Indeed, implicit in the organisation of the classical rime tables is a different, but structurally equally valid, phonemic analysis, which takes all four tones as phonemic and demotes the difference between stop finals [p t k] and nasal finals [m n ŋ] to allophonic, with stops occurring in entering syllables and nasals elsewhere.[4]

From the perspective of modern historical linguistics, there is often value in treating the entering tone as a tone regardless of its phonemic status, because syllables possessing this tone typically develop differently from syllables possessing any of the other three tones. For clarity, these four tones are often referred to as tone classes, with each word belonging to one of the four tone classes. This reflects the fact that the lexical division of words into tone classes is based on tone, but not all tone classes necessarily have a distinct phonemic tone associated with them. Some contemporary fāngyán such as Taiwanese Hokkien, Jin and Penang are said to preserve the entering tone, which is used as a marker to differentiate them from other varieties and also genetically classify them via the comparative method.

The four Early Middle Chinese (EMC) tones are nearly always presented in the order level ( píng), rising ( shǎng), departing ( ), entering ( ), and correspondingly numbered 1 2 3 4 in modern discussions. In Late Middle Chinese (LMC), each of the EMC tone classes split in two, depending on the nature of the initial consonant of the syllable in question. Discussions of LMC and the various modern varieties will often number these split tone classes from 1 through 8, keeping the same ordering as before. For example, LMC/modern tone classes 1 and 2 derive from EMC tone class 1; LMC/modern tone classes 3 and 4 derive from EMC tone class 2; etc. The odd-numbered tone classes 1 3 5 7 are termed dark ( yīn), whereas the even-numbered tone classes 2 4 6 8 are termed light ( yáng). Hence, for example, LMC/modern tone class 5 is known in Chinese as the yīn qù (dark departing) tone, indicating that it is the yīn variant of the EMC tone (EMC tone 3). In order to clarify the relationship between the EMC and LMC tone classes, some authors notate the LMC tone classes as 1a 1b 2a 2b 3a 3b 4a 4b in place of 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8, where a and b correspond directly to Chinese yīn and yáng, respectively.

Baxter's transcription, an alphabetic notation for representing Middle Chinese, represents the rising ( shǎng) tone with a trailing X, the departing ( ) tone with a trailing H, and it leaves the level and entering tones unmarked.

Names

In Middle Chinese, each of the tone names carries the tone it identifies: level ꜁biajŋ, rising ꜃dʑɨaŋ, departing kʰɨə꜄, and entering ȵip꜇.[5] However, in some modern Chinese varieties, this is no longer true. This loss of correspondence is most notable in the case of the entering tone, syllables checked in a stop consonant [p̚], [t̚], or [k̚] in Middle Chinese, which has been lost from most dialects of Mandarin and redistributed among the other tones.

In modern Chinese varieties, tones that derive from the four Middle Chinese tone classes may be split into two registers, dark ( yīn) and light ( yáng) depending on whether the Middle Chinese onset was voiceless or voiced, respectively. When all four tone classes split, eight tones result: dark level (陰平), light level (陽平), dark rising (陰上), light rising (陽上), dark departing (陰去), light departing (陽去), dark entering (陰入), and light entering (陽入). Sometimes these have been termed upper and lower registers respectively, but that may be a misnomer, as in some dialects the dark registers may have the lower tone, and the light register the higher tone.

Chinese dictionaries mark the tones with diacritical marks at the four corners of a character:[6] ꜀平 level, ꜂上 rising, 去꜄ departing, and 入꜆ entering. When yin and yang tones are distinguished, these are the diacritics for the yin (dark) tones; the yang (light) tones are indicated by underscoring the diacritic: ꜁平 light level, ꜃上 light rising, 去꜅ light departing, 入꜇ light entering. These diacritics are also sometimes used when the phonetic realization is unknown, as in the reconstructions of Middle Chinese at the beginning of this section. However, in this article, the circled numbers ①②③④⑤⑥⑦⑧ will be used, as in the table below, with the odd numbers ①③⑤⑦ indicating either 'dark' tones or tones that have not split, and even numbers ②④⑥⑧ indicating 'light' tones. Thus, level tones are numbered ①②, the rising tones ③④, the departing tones ⑤⑥, and the entering (checked) tones ⑦⑧.

In Yue (incl. Cantonese) the dark entering tone further splits into high (高陰入) and low (低陰入) registers, depending on the length of the nucleus, for a total of nine tone classes. Some dialects have a complex tone splittings, and the terms dark and light are insufficient to cover the possibilities.

The number of tone classes is based on Chinese tradition, and is as much register as it is actual tone. The entering 'tones', for example, are distinct only because they are checked by a final stop consonant, not because they have a tone contour that contrasts with non-entering tones. In dialects such as Shanghainese, tone classes are numbered even if they are not phonemically distinct.

Origin

The tonal aspect of Chinese dialects that is so important today is believed by some linguists to have been absent from Old Chinese, but rather came about in Early Middle Chinese after the loss of various finals.[7] The four tones of Middle Chinese, píng level, shǎng rising, departing, and entering, all evolved from different final losses from Old Chinese. The , or rising tone, arose from the loss of glottal stops at the end of words. Support for this can be seen in Buddhist transcriptions of the Han period, where the rising tone was often used to note Sanskrit short vowels, and also in loans of words with final [q] in the source language, which were borrowed into Chinese as shǎng tone. The glottal stop even survives in some Min and Hakka dialects, either as a phonetic glottal stop, a short creaky vowel, or denasalization, which for example the final -ng of Old Chinese has changed to modern [ɡ] in shang-tone words.[8] This evolution of final glottal stop into a rising tone is similar to what happened in Vietnamese, another tonal language.[9] The , or departing tone, arose from the loss of [-s] at the end of words. Support for this theory is found when examining Chinese loans into neighbouring East Asian languages. For example, in Korean, the word for comb, pis, is a loan of the Chinese word , which means that when the word comb was borrowed into Korean, there was still an [-s] sound at the end of the word that later disappeared from Chinese and gave rise to a departing tone. The , or entering tone consisted of words ending in voiceless stops, [-p], [-t], and [-k]. Finally, the , or level tone, arose from the lack of sound at the ends of words, where there was neither [-s], a glottal stop, nor [-p], [-t], or [-k].[7]

Distribution in modern Chinese and Sino-Vietnamese

Sample dialects and their realization of tone are given below.

Different authors typically have different opinions as to the shapes of Chinese tones. Tones typically have a slight purely phonetic drop at the end in citation form. It is therefore likely that a tone with a drop of one unit (54, say, or 21) is not distinct from a level tone (a 55 or 22); on the other hand, what one author hears as a significant drop (53 or 31) may be perceived by another as a smaller drop so it is often ambiguous whether a transcription like 54 or 21 is a level or contour tone. Similarly, a slight drop before a rise, such as a 214, may be from the speaker approaching the target tone and so may also not be distinctive (from 14).[10]

Distribution of the four tone classes in modern Chinese
Each tone class is numbered to , depending on its reflex of Late Middle Chinese, followed by its actual pronunciation, using a tone letter to illustrate its contour and then a numerical equivalent.
major groupsubgrouplocal varietyEarly Middle Chinese tone classnumber of
tone classes
(number of
phonemic tones)
Level ꜀①꜁② Rising ꜂③꜃④ Departing ⑤꜄⑥꜅ Entering ⑦꜆⑧꜇
Syllable onset
voicelessvoicedvoicelessvoicedvoicelessvoicedvoicelessvoiced
sonobssonobstenuisaspsonobs(short)(long)sonobs
Sample characters: 加坡 岛考 北七
MandarinBeijingBeijing˥ 55[lower-alpha 1] ˧˥ 35˨˩˦ 21(4)[lower-alpha 2]˥˩ 51[lower-alpha 3](any)[lower-alpha 4]4
Taipei[12]˦ 44[lower-alpha 1] ˧˨˧ 323˧˩˨ 31(2)[lower-alpha 2]˥˨ 52(any)[lower-alpha 4]4
NortheasternHarbin˦ 44[lower-alpha 1] ˨˧ 23˨˩˧ 213˥˧ 53(any)4
Shenyang˧ 33[lower-alpha 1] ˧˥ 35˨˩˧ 213˥˧ 53(any)4
JiaoLiaoDalian˦˨ 42① or ②[lower-alpha 1] ˧˥ 35˨˩˧ 213˥˧ 534
JiLuTianjin˨˩ 21[lower-alpha 1] ˧˥ 35˩˩˧ 113˥˧ 534
Jinan˨˩˧ 213[lower-alpha 1] ˦˨ 42˥ 55˨˩ 214
Zhongyuan
(Central Plain)
Xi'an˧˩ 31[lower-alpha 1] ˨˦ 24˦˨ 42˥ 554
Dungan˨˦ 24˥˩ 51˦ 443
LanYin
Lanzhou˧˩ 31[lower-alpha 1] ˥˧ 53˦˦˨ 442˩˧ 134
Yinchuan3
Southwestern Wuhan ˥ 5 [lower-alpha 1] ˨˩˧ 213 ˦˨ 42 ˧˥ 35 4
Chengdu˥ 5[lower-alpha 1] ˨˩ 21˦˨ 42˨˩˧ 2134
Luzhou˥ 5[lower-alpha 1] ˨˩ 21˦˨ 42˩˧ 13[lower-alpha 5] ˧ 35
Kunming ˦ 4 [lower-alpha 1] ˧˩ 31 ③ ˥˧ 53 ˨˩˨ 212 4
JiangHuaiNanjing˧˩ 31[lower-alpha 1] ˩˧ 13˨˩˨ 212˦ 44[lower-alpha 5] ˥ 55 (4)
Nantong① 35[lower-alpha 1] 21③ 55⑤ 213⑥ 42[lower-alpha 5] 55ʔ[lower-alpha 5] 42ʔ7 (5)
JinBingzhouTaiyuan˩ 11˥˧ 53˦˥ 45[lower-alpha 5] ˨ 2[lower-alpha 5] ˥˦ 545 (3)
WuTaihuShanghainese˥˨ 52[lower-alpha 6][lower-alpha 6]˧˧˦ 334[lower-alpha 6] ˩˩˧ 113[lower-alpha 5] ˥ 5[lower-alpha 5][lower-alpha 6] ˨˧ 235 (2)[lower-alpha 6]
Suzhou˦ 44[lower-alpha 6] ˨˦ 24˥˨ 52[lower-alpha 6]˦˩˨ 412[lower-alpha 6] ˧˩ 31[lower-alpha 5] ˦ 4[lower-alpha 5][lower-alpha 6] ˨˧ 237 (3)[lower-alpha 6]
Yixing[13]˥ 55[lower-alpha 6] ˩˥ 15˥˩ 51[lower-alpha 6] ˧˥ 35④/⑥˥˩˧ 513[lower-alpha 6] ˨˩ 21[lower-alpha 5] ˥ 5/⑧[lower-alpha 5][lower-alpha 6] ˩˧ 138 (3)[lower-alpha 6]
OujiangWenzhounese˦ 44[lower-alpha 6] ˧˩ 31③ʔ/④ʔ[lower-alpha 6] ˧˥ 35˥˨ 52[lower-alpha 6] ˨ 22⑦/⑧[lower-alpha 6] ˧˨˧ 3238 (4–6)[lower-alpha 6]
Huizhou Ji-She Jixi ˧˩ 31 ˦ 44 ˨˩˧ 213 ˧˥ 35 ˨ 22 [lower-alpha 5] ˧˨ 32 6 (5)
XiangNewChangsha˧ 33˩˧ 13˦˩ 41˥ 55˨˩ 21[lower-alpha 5] ˨˦ 246 (5)
GanChangjingNanchang˦˨ 42˨˦ 24˨˩˧ 213˥ 55˨˩ 21[lower-alpha 5] ˥ 5[lower-alpha 5] ˨˩ 217 (5)
HakkaMeizhouMeixian˦ 44˩ 11˧˩ 31˥˨ 52[lower-alpha 5] ˨˩ 21[lower-alpha 5] ˦ 46 (4)
YueYuehaiGuangzhou,
Hong Kong
①a ˥ 55 ~ ①b ˥˧ 53 [lower-alpha 7][lower-alpha 1] ˨˩ 21~11[lower-alpha 8] ˨˥ 25[lower-alpha 8] ˨˧ 23④/⑥[lower-alpha 9]˧ 33˨ 22⑦a[lower-alpha 5] ˥ 5⑦b[lower-alpha 5] ˧ 3[lower-alpha 5] ˨ 29~10 (6~7)
Shiqi ˥ 55 ② ˥˩ 51 ③ ˩˧ 13 ⑤ ˨ 22 ⑦a[lower-alpha 5] ˥ 5 [lower-alpha 5] ˨ 2 6 (4)
SiyiTaishanese˧ 33[lower-alpha 1]? ˩ 11˥ 55[lower-alpha 1]? ˨˩ 21˧˨ 32⑦a[lower-alpha 5] ˥ 5⑦b[lower-alpha 5] ˧ 3[lower-alpha 5] ˨˩ 218 (5)
Gou-LouBobai˦ 44[lower-alpha 1]? ˨˧ 23˧ 33[lower-alpha 1]? ˦˥ 45˧˨ 32˨˩ 21⑦a[lower-alpha 5] ˥˦ 54⑦b[lower-alpha 5] ˩ 1⑧a[lower-alpha 5] ˦ 4
(long)
⑧b[lower-alpha 5] ˧˨ 32
(short)
10 (6)
PinghuaSouthernNanning˥˨ 52[lower-alpha 1]? ˨˩ 21˦ 44[lower-alpha 1]? ˨˦ 24˥ 55˨ 22[lower-alpha 5] ˦ 4⑧a[lower-alpha 5] ˨˦ 24⑧b[lower-alpha 5] ˨ 29 (6)
MinNorthernJian'ou˥˦ 54˨˩ 21˨ 22˦ 44[lower-alpha 5] ˨˦ 24[lower-alpha 5] ˦˨ 426 (4)
EasternFuzhou˥ 55˥˧ 53˧ 33③/⑥[lower-alpha 10]˨˩˧ 213˨˦˨ 242[lower-alpha 5] ˨˦ 24[lower-alpha 5] ˥ 57 (5)
CentralYong'an˦˨ 42˧ 33˨˩ 21˥˦ 54˨˦ 24[lower-alpha 5] ˩˨ 126
SouthernAmoy˥ 55˧˥ 35˥˧ 53③/⑥[lower-alpha 11]˨˩ 21˧ 33[lower-alpha 5] ˩ 1[lower-alpha 5] ˥ 57 (5)
Quanzhou˧ 33˨˦ 24˥ 55③/④ [lower-alpha 12]˨ 22[lower-alpha 13] ˦˩ 41[lower-alpha 13] ˦˩ 41[lower-alpha 5] ˥ 5[lower-alpha 5] ˨˦ 248 (6)
Teochew˧ 33˥ 55˥˨ 52˧˥ 35˨˩˧ 213˩ 11 ④/⑥[lower-alpha 14][lower-alpha 5] ˨ 2[lower-alpha 5] ˦ 48 (6)
Sino-Vietnamese[20][21] Northern Hanoi[22] ˦ 44 ˧˨ 32 ˧˩˨ 312 ˧˨˥ 325 ④/⑥ ˧˦ 34 ˨ 22 ˦˥ 45 ˨˩ 21 8 (6)
Central Hue[23] ˥˦˥ 545 ˦˩ 41 ˧˨ 32 ③/⑥ ˨˩˦ 214 ˧˩ 31 ˦˧˥ 435 ˧˩ 31 7 (5)
Southern Saigon[24] ˦ 44 ˧˩ 31 ˨˩˦ 214 ③/⑥ ˧˥ 35 ˨˩˨ 212 ˦˥ 45 ˨˩ 21 7 (5)
major groupsubgrouplocal varietyvoicelesssonobsvoicelesssonobstenuisaspsonobs(short)(long)sonobsnumber of
tone classes
(number of
phonemic tones)
voicedvoicedvoicelessvoicedvoicelessvoiced
Syllable onset
Level ꜀①꜁② Rising ꜂③꜃④ Departing ⑤꜄⑥꜅ Entering ⑦꜆⑧꜇
Early Middle Chinese tone class
  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 A muddy consonant becomes aspirated here rather than tenuis. (Note a historical entering tone will not be aspirated.)
  2. 1 2 In the citation form, Beijing tone may end with a rising segment.
  3. Mandarin 4th tone.
  4. 1 2 Irregular development, due to dialect mixing in the capital. However, colloquial readings tend to display tones and , whereas literary readings tend to display and . The preservation of the literary readings is chiefly due to 協韻 xiéyùn, artificial preservation of rhyming pronunciations for words that rhyme in classical poetry.[11]
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 The entering tone(s) are distinct because they are checked by a final stop. (Wenzhounese is an exception: Entering tone is distinct without a final stop.)
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 In Wu and Old Xiang, the 'light' tones are always dependent on voiced initials, and so are not phonemically distinct. In Wenzhounese, rising tone is likewise marked with a final glottal stop.
  7. A lexical tone change for some speakers in Guangzhou, mostly obsolete in Hong Kong. High Level becomes High Falling when the character isn't used as a concrete noun. For other speakers, both realizations are interchangeable, and High Level seems to be the dominant.
  8. 1 2 Some studies show that in Hong Kong Cantonese the two rising tones are used interchangeably by some younger speakers indicating an ongoing merger,[14][15] but this is in fact extremely uncommon.
  9. A muddy consonant becomes aspirated here and the syllable acquires tone ④ in colloquial readings, but in literary pronunciations it is tenuis and the syllable becomes tone ⑥.
  10. In the Fuzhou dialect and the Fuqing dialect, the traditional rising tone with voiced sonorant onsets have undergone a split, where in literary readings they are in tone ③ with their unvoiced counterparts, but in colloquial readings they are merged into ⑥.[16]
  11. In Zhangzhou and Amoy Hokkien variants of Southern Min, the traditional rising tone with former voiced obstruent onset has become tone in literary reading pronunciations but tone in colloquial pronunciations.[17] In the Quanzhou variant of Southern Min, it is the sonorants that were voiced and in the rising tone in Middle Chinese that have split. In literary pronunciations they have merged into tone , but they have become tone in colloquial pronunciations.[17]
  12. In the Quanzhou variant of Southern Min, it is the Middle Chinese sonorants that have split in the historic rising tone. In literary pronunciations they have merged into tone , but they have become tone in colloquial pronunciations.[18]
  13. 1 2 In the Quanzhou Hokkien variety of Southern Min, the traditional 'light' and 'dark' departing tone categories are only differentiated by their behavior under tone sandhi; they are pronounced the same in isolation.
  14. In Teochew, some Middle Chinese departing tone syllables with voiced obstruent initials develop tone ④ instead of the expected tone ⑥.[19]

See also

References

  1. A "tone class" is a lexical division of words based on tone. The four tones may not directly correspond with phonemic tone. The three tones of open syllables in Middle Chinese contrast with undifferentiated tone in checked syllables, and words are classified according to these four possibilities.
  2. 1 2 Baxter, William H. (1992). A Handbook of Old Chinese Phonology. Berlin, New York: Mouton de Gruyter. p. 33. ISBN 3-11-012324-X.
  3. Wang, William S.-Y.; Sun, Chaofen (2015-02-26). The Oxford Handbook of Chinese Linguistics. Oxford University Press. p. 84. ISBN 978-0-19-026684-4. It is commonly accepted that the pingsheng is with a level contour, the shangsheng a high rising tone, the qusheng a falling tone, and the rusheng a checked tone. Thus their tonal values may be reconstructed as ˧33, ˧˥35, ˥˩51, and ˧3ʔ, respectively.
  4. Chao Yuen-Ren (1934). "The non-uniqueness of phonemic solutions of phonetic systems". Bulletin of the Institute for History and Philology (Academia Sinica). 4: 363–397.
  5. Pulleyblank's reconstructions
  6. Karlgren, Bernhard (1974) [1923]. "Introduction I. Transcription system of the dictionary, Tones". Analytic Dictionary of Chinese and Sino-Japanese (1st ed.). New York: Dover Publications, Inc. pp. 7/8. ISBN 0-486-21887-2. The p'ing (even), ṣang (rising) and k'ü (falling) inflexions are marked by hooks in the usual Chinese style. The ẓu ṣəng is characterized by the abrupt cutting off of the voice and recognized by final -p, -t or -k; there is no need of adding a hook (tat,).
  7. 1 2 Sagart, Laurent. "The origin of Chinese tones" (PDF). Proceedings of the Symposium/Cross-Linguistic Studies of Tonal Phenomena/Tonogenesis, Typology and Related Topics. Institute for the Study of Languages and Cultures of Asia and Africa, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies. Retrieved 1 December 2014.
  8. Branner, David (1999). Problems in Comparative Chinese Dialectology: The Classification of Miin and Hakka. De Gruyter Mouton
  9. Mei, Tsu-Lin (1970). "Tones and Prosody in Middle Chinese and The Origin of The Rising Tone". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. 30: 86–110. doi:10.2307/2718766. JSTOR 2718766.
  10. Matthew Chen, 2000. Tone Sandhi: Patterns across Chinese Dialects. CUP.
  11. David Branner, A Neutral Transcription System for Teaching Medieval Chinese, T ̔ang Studies 17 (1999), pp. 36, 45.
  12. Multiple sources:
  13. Xuhui Hu and J. Joseph Perry, 2018. The syntax and phonology of non-compositional compounds in Yixing Chinese. Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 36:701-42.
  14. Mok, Peggy Pik-Ki; Wong, Peggy Wai-Yi (May 2010). Perception of the merging tones in Hong Kong Cantonese: preliminary data on monosyllables. Speech Prosody 2010. Chicago, IL, USA. S2CID 5953337.
  15. Bauer, Robert S.; Kwan-hin, Cheung; Pak-man, Cheung (2003-07-01). "Variation and merger of the rising tones in Hong Kong Cantonese". Language Variation and Change. 15 (2): 211–225. doi:10.1017/S0954394503152039. hdl:10397/7632. ISSN 1469-8021. S2CID 145563867.
  16. 冯爱珍 Feng, Aizhen (1993). 福清方言研究 Fuqing fangyan yanjiu (1st ed.). Beijing: 社会科学文献出版社 Shehui kexue wenxian chubanshe. p. 125. ISBN 978-7-80050-390-0.
  17. 1 2 闽南语的声调系统, The Tonal System of Min Nan; accessed 24 January 2012.
  18. Lee Hae-woo 이해우 (December 2001). "천주 민남방언의 음운 특징 The phonological characteristics of the Quanzhou Min Nan dialect". 중국언어연구. 13. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
  19. "声调:入声和塞尾韵 | 潮语拼音教程". kahaani.github.io. Retrieved 2019-06-02.
  20. Nguyễn Tài, Cẩn (2000). Nguồn gốc và quá trình hình thành cách đọc Hán Việt [The origin and formation of Sino-Vietnamese pronunciation]. Hà Nội: Đại học Quốc gia Hà Nội. pp. 305–314.
  21. Nguyễn Tài, Cẩn (25 March 2007). "Từ tứ thanh tiếng Hán đến tám thanh Hán–Việt [From the four Middle Chinese tones to the eight Sino-Vietnamese tones]". Ngôn ngữ học và Tiếng Việt. Retrieved April 21, 2020.
  22. Kirby, James P. (2011). "Vietnamese (Hanoi Vietnamese)". Journal of the International Phonetic Association. 41/3.
  23. Nguyễn, Văn Lợi (2013). "Hệ thống thanh điệu Huế [Tone system in Hue dialect]". Phonetics lab (Faculty of Vietnamese Studies). Archived from the original on December 10, 2021. Retrieved April 21, 2020.
  24. Huỳnh Công, Tín (2013). Tiếng Sài Gòn [The Saigon dialect]. Cần Thơ: Chính Trị Quốc Gia - Sự Thật. pp. 70–77.

Further reading

  • Branner, David Prager, ed. (2006). The Chinese Rime Tables: Linguistic Philosophy and Historical-Comparative Phonology. Studies in the Theory and History of Linguistic Science, Series IV: Current Issues in Linguistic Theory; 271. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. ISBN 90-272-4785-4.
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