Taiwanese Mandarin
中華民國國語, Zhōnghuá Mínguó Guóyǔ
臺灣國語, Táiwān Guóyǔ
臺灣華語, Táiwān Huáyǔ
Native toTaiwan
SpeakersL1: 4.6 million (2017)[1]
L2: 15 million[1]
Traditional Chinese characters
Official status
Official language in
 Republic of China (Taiwan)
Regulated byMinistry of Education (Taiwan)
Language codes
ISO 639-3
ISO 639-6goyu (Guoyu)
Glottologtaib1240
IETFcmn-TW
Percentage of Taiwanese aged 6 and above who spoke Mandarin at home in 2010; darker blue corresponds to a greater density of Mandarin speakers
Taiwanese Mandarin
Traditional Chinese臺灣國語
Simplified Chinese台湾国语
National language of the Republic of China
Traditional Chinese中華民國國語
Simplified Chinese中华民国国语

Taiwanese Mandarin, Guoyu (Chinese: 國語; pinyin: Guóyǔ; lit. 'National Language'), known colloquially as Huayu (華語; Huáyǔ; 'Mandarin Language'), is the variety of Mandarin Chinese spoken in Taiwan. A large majority of the Taiwanese population is fluent in Mandarin, though many also speak a variety of Min Chinese known as Taiwanese Hokkien, commonly called Minnanyu (Chinese: 閩南語; pinyin: Mǐnnányǔ; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Bân-lâm-gú), Southern Min, or Hokkien.[note 1] This language has had a significant influence on Mandarin as spoken on the island.

Mandarin was not a prevalent spoken language in Taiwan before the mid-20th century. Early Chinese immigrants who settled in Taiwan before Japanese rule mainly spoke other varieties of Chinese languages, primarily Hakka and Hokkien. By contrast, Taiwanese indigenous peoples speak unrelated Austronesian languages. Japan annexed Taiwan in 1895 and governed the island as a colony for the next 50 years, during the duration, Japanese was introduced as an official and educational language. With the defeat of Imperial Japan in World War II, Taiwan was handed to the Republic of China ruled by the Kuomintang (KMT), which by 1950 had been expelled by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) out of the Chinese mainland. The KMT promulgated Standard Mandarin as the national language while suppressing non-Mandarin languages in the public sphere in Taiwan. At the same time, in the People's Republic of China on the mainland, Putonghua (simplified Chinese: 普通话; traditional Chinese: 普通話; pinyin: Pǔtōnghuà; lit. 'common speech') was likewise promoted as the national language.[note 2]

Putonghua in mainland China and Guoyu in Taiwan are highly similar and derive from the same standard based on the phonology of the Beijing dialect of Mandarin Chinese and the grammar of written vernacular Chinese in the early 20th century.[3] Standard Guoyu pronunciations tend to be based on prescribed dictionaries of the period, whereas Standard Putonghua integrated colloquial Northern Mandarin pronunciations for some words. Notable characteristics of Guoyu as is commonly spoken in Taiwan, include its somewhat different tonal qualities compared to Putonghua, the lack of the erhua phenomenon, and the lack of retroflex consonants (with zh-, ch-, sh- being pronounced like z-, c-, and s-). Guoyu also incorporates vocabulary from Minnanyu and Japanese. Written Chinese (both Guoyu and Chinese languages like Hakka and Minnanyu) in Taiwan generally uses traditional characters, in contrast to mainland China, excluding Hong Kong and Macau, where simplified Chinese characters were adopted beginning in the 1950s. Some grammatical differences also exist, often due to the influence of Minnanyu. The two forms of Mandarin evolved additional differences over the decades of political separation between the Republic of China in Taiwan and the People's Republic of China in the mainland, though both remain mutually intelligible.

Guoyu spoken in Taiwan exists on a spectrum, from the most formal, standardized variety to the least formal, with the heaviest influence of non-Mandarin Chinese languages, primarily Minnanyu. On one end of the spectrum, there is Standard Guoyu (標準國語; Biāozhǔn Guóyǔ), the official national language of the Republic of China (Taiwan). This variety is taught as the standard in the education system and is employed in official communications and most news media. The core of this standard variety is described in the Ministry of Education Mandarin Chinese Dictionary. Very few people speak purely standard Guoyu, however. Mandarin, as colloquially spoken in Taiwan, can be broadly called "Taiwan Guoyu" (台灣國語; Táiwān Guóyǔ). Taiwan Guoyu diverges in varying degrees from Standard Guoyu, with some speakers being closer to Standard Guoyu than others. These divergences are often the result of Taiwan Guoyu incorporating influences from other languages used in Taiwan, primarily Minnanyu, but also Japanese. Taiwan Guoyu is also mutually intelligible with Putonghua, but when compared with Standard Guoyu, Taiwan Guoyu exhibits greater differences in pronunciation, vocabulary, and grammar.

This article uses Taiwan Guoyu to refer to the colloquial varieties of Mandarin in Taiwan, Standard Guoyu for the prescribed standard form, Putonghua to refer to Standard mainland Chinese Mandarin, and simply Guoyu or Taiwanese Mandarin when a distinction is unnecessary.

Terms and definition

Chinese is not a single language but a group of languages in the Sinitic branch of the Sino-Tibetan family, which includes varieties such as Mandarin, Cantonese, and Hakka. They share a common ancestry and script, Chinese characters, and among Chinese speakers, they are popularly considered dialects (方言 fāngyán) of the same, overarching language. These dialects are often extremely divergent in the spoken form, however, and not mutually intelligible. Accordingly, Western linguists tend to treat them as separate languages rather than dialects of the same language;[4] citing Yuen Ren Chao, John DeFrancis likened the differences among some dialects as like those between English and Dutch, for example.[5]

Mandarin Chinese is a grouping of Chinese languages that includes at least eight subgroups, often also called dialects. In English, "Mandarin" can refer to any of these Mandarin dialects, which are not necessarily mutually intelligible.[6] However, the term is most commonly used to refer to Standard Chinese,[7][8] the prestige dialect.

Standard Chinese in mainland China is called Putonghua (普通話; Pǔtōnghuà; 'common speech') and in the Republic of China (Taiwan) Guoyu (國語; Guóyǔ; 'national language'). Both of these, as Mandarin languages, are based on the Beijing dialect of Mandarin and are mutually intelligible, but also feature various lexical, phonological, and grammatical differences.[9] There exists significant variation within Putonghua and Guoyu as well.[10] Some scholars have argued that Putonghua and Guoyu are artificial standards that, strictly speaking, do not represent the natively spoken language of a significant number of, or even any, people.[11][12][13]

Guoyu exists on a continuum from the most standard, formal version of the language to the form most heavily influenced by Taiwanese Minnanyu.[14][15] The former variety can be called Standard Guoyu (標準國語; Biāozhǔn Guóyǔ) in contrast to the less standard Taiwan Guoyu (臺灣國語; Táiwān Guóyǔ).[note 3] More formal settings—such as television news broadcasts—tend to feature speakers using Standard Guoyu, which closely resembles mainland Putonghua, but is not generally used as a day-to-day language.[19] Language falling on the less standard side of the Guoyu spectrum may be stigmatized as uneducated.[20][21]

This article focuses on the features of both Standard Guoyu, particularly its relationship to Putonghua, as well as non-standard but widespread features of Mandarin in Taiwan, grouped under Taiwan Guoyu.

History and usage

Large-scale Han Chinese settlement of Taiwan began in the 17th century by Hoklo immigrants from Fujian province who spoke Southern Min languages (predominantly Hokkien), and to a lesser extent, Hakka immigrants who spoke their respective language.[22] Taiwanese indigenous peoples already inhabited the island, speaking a variety of Austronesian languages unrelated to Chinese. In the centuries following Chinese settlement, the number of indigenous languages dropped significantly, with several going extinct, in part due to the process of sinicization.[23]

Official communications among the Han were done in Mandarin (官話; Guānhuà; 'official language'), but the primary languages of everyday life were Minnanyu or Hakka.[24] After its defeat in the First Sino-Japanese War, the Qing dynasty ceded Taiwan to the Empire of Japan, which governed the island as an Imperial colony from 1895 to 1945. By the end of the colonial period, Japanese had become the high dialect of the island as the result of decades of Japanization policy.[24]

Under KMT rule

After the Republic of China under the Kuomintang (KMT) gained control of Taiwan in 1945, Mandarin was introduced as the official language and made compulsory in schools, although the local population rarely spoke it at the time.[25] Many who had fled the mainland after the defeat of the KMT by the Communists also spoke non-standard varieties of Mandarin, which may have influenced later colloquial pronunciations.[26] Wu Chinese dialects were also influential due to the relative power of KMT refugees from Wu-speaking Zhejiang, Chiang Kai-shek's home province.[27]

The Mandarin Promotion Council (now called National Languages Committee) was established in 1946 by Chief Executive Chen Yi to standardize and popularize the usage of Mandarin in Taiwan. The Kuomintang heavily discouraged the use of Southern Min and other non-Mandarin languages, portraying them as inferior,[28][29] and school children were punished for speaking their non-Mandarin native languages.[25] Guoyu was thus established as a lingua franca among the various groups in Taiwan at the expense of existing languages.[29][30]

Post-martial law

Following the end of martial law in 1987, language policy in the country underwent liberalization, but Guoyu remained the dominant language. Local languages were no longer proscribed in public discourse, mass media, and schools.[31] English and "mother tongue education" (母語教育; mǔyǔ jiàoyù) — Minnanyu and Hakka — were introduced as elective subjects in primary school in 2001.[32] Greater time and resources are devoted to both Mandarin and English, which are compulsory subjects, compared to mother tongue instruction.[33]

Mandarin is spoken fluently by the vast majority of the Taiwanese population, with the exception of some of the elderly population, who were educated under Japanese rule. In the capital of Taipei, where there is a high concentration of Mainlander descendants who do not natively speak Minnanyu, Mandarin is used in greater frequency and fluency than in other parts of Taiwan. The 2010 Taiwanese census found that in addition to Mandarin, Minnanyu was natively spoken by around 70% of the population, and Hakka by 15%.[34] A 2004 study found that Mandarin was spoken more fluently by Hakka and Taiwanese aboriginals than their respective mother tongues; Hoklo groups, on average, spoke better Minnanyu, but Hoklo under 50 years old still spoke significantly better Mandarin (with comparable levels of fluency to their usage of Minnanyu) than the elderly.[35][note 4] Overall, while both national and local levels of government have taken some measures to promote the use of non-Mandarin Chinese languages, younger generations generally prefer using Mandarin.[36]

Government statistics from 2020 found that 66% of Taiwanese residents use Guoyu as their primary language, and another 31% use it as a secondary language (32% used Minnanyu as their primary language, and 54% used it as a secondary language).[37] Guoyu is the primary language for over 80% of people in the northern areas of Taipei, Taoyuan, and Hsinchu.[37] Youth is correlated with use of Guoyu: in 2020, over two-thirds of Taiwanese over 65 used Minnanyu or Hakka as their primary language, compared with just 11% of 15–24-year-olds.[38]

Script

Guoyu employs traditional Chinese characters (which are also used in the two special administrative regions of China, Hong Kong and Macau), rather than the simplified Chinese characters used in mainland China. Literate Taiwanese can generally understand a text in simplified characters.[39]

Shorthand characters

In practice, Taiwanese Mandarin users may write informal, shorthand characters (俗字; súzì; 'customary/conventional characters'; also 俗體字 sútǐzì) in place of the full traditional forms. These variant Chinese characters are generally easier to write by hand and consist of fewer strokes. Shorthand characters are often identical to their simplified counterparts, but they may also take after Japanese kanji, or differ from both, as shown in the table below. A few shorthand characters are used as frequently as standard traditional characters, even in formal contexts, such as the tai in Taiwan, which is often written as , as opposed to the standard traditional form, .[40]

ShorthandTraditional Notes
[41] Identical to simplified (huì)
[41] Identical to simplified ()
[41] Identical to Japanese, cf. simplified ()
[41] Differs from both simplified Chinese and Japanese , although is also a Japanese ryakuji shorthand variant (diǎn)
[42] Identical to Japanese, cf. simplified (zhuàn, zhuǎn)
[42] Differs from both simplified Chinese () and Japanese or katakana
[42] Identical to Japanese, cf. simplified (duì)
[43] is standard simplified as well. is formally a variant of the unrelated dǎi but is identical to the short-lived second-round simplification version of .[44] (cān)
[42] Unlike simplified , retains the radical for 'ear' () (tīng).

In informal writing, Guoyu speakers may replace possessive particles de or zhī with the Japanese particle no in hiragana (usually read as de), which serves a nearly identical grammatical role.[45] No is often used in advertising, where it evokes a sense of playfulness and fashionability,[46] and handwriting, as it is easier to write.[47]

Braille

Taiwanese braille is similar to Mainland Chinese braille, though several sounds are represented by different patterns. Both systems represent the sounds of the language (as do Pinyin and Zhuyin), not Chinese characters themselves.[48]

Transliteration

Zhuyin Fuhao

While pinyin is used in applications such as in signage, most Guoyu users learn phonetics through the Zhuyin Fuhao (國語注音符號; Guóyǔ Zhùyīn Fúhào; 'Guoyu Phonetic Symbols') system, popularly called Zhuyin or Bopomofo, after its first four glyphs. Taiwan is the only Chinese-speaking polity to use the system, which is taught in schools (often used as ruby characters to aid young learners) and represents the dominant digital input method on electronic devices.[49] (Before the introduction of Hanyu pinyin starting in 1958, it was also used in mainland China,[50] whereas today in the mainland it is used primarily in language education and in some dictionaries.[51]) It has accordingly become a symbol of Taiwanese identity as well.[52]

Romanization

A green street sign for 軍校路, romanized as Jyunsiao Rd.
Road sign in Nanzih District, Kaohsiung, showing Tongyong pinyin without tone marks (Jyunsiao in Hanyu pinyin is Junxiao)

Chinese language romanization in Taiwan somewhat differs from on the mainland, where Hanyu Pinyin is the official standard.[50] A competing system, Tongyong Pinyin, was formally revealed in 1998 with the support of the mayor of Taipei Chen Shuibian.[53] In 1999, however, the Legislative Yuan endorsed a slightly modified version of Hanyu Pinyin, creating parallel romanization schemes along largely partisan lines, with Kuomintang-supporting areas using Hanyu Pinyin, and Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) areas using Tongyong Pinyin.[53] In 2002, the Taiwanese government led by the DPP promulgated the use of Tongyong Pinyin as the country's preferred system, but this was formally abandoned in 2009 in favor of Hanyu Pinyin.[54]

In addition, various other historical romanization systems also exist across the island, with multiple systems sometimes existing in the same locality. Following the defeat of the Kuomintang in the Chinese Civil War and their subsequent retreat to Taiwan in 1945, little emphasis was placed on the romanization of Chinese characters, with the Wade-Giles system used as the default. It is still widely used for transcribing people's legal names today.[50] The Gwoyeu Romatzyh method, invented in 1928, also was in use in Taiwan during this time period, albeit to a lesser extent.[55] In 1984, Taiwan's Ministry of Education began revising the Gwoyeu Romatzyh method out of concern that Hanyu Pinyin was gaining prominence internationally. Ultimately, a revised version of Gwoyeu Romatzyh was released in 1986,[50] which was called Mandarin Phonetic Symbols II. However, this system was not widely adopted.[56]

Phonology

Standard Guoyu

Like Putonghua, both Standard and Taiwan Guoyu are tonal. Pronunciation of many individual characters differs in the standards prescribed by language authorities in Taipei and Beijing. Mainland authorities tended to adopt pronunciations popular in Northern Mandarin areas, whereas Taiwanese authorities prefer traditional pronunciations recorded in dictionaries from the 1930s and 1940s.[57] Some examples of differences are given later in this section.

These character-level differences notwithstanding, Standard Guoyu pronunciation is largely identical to Putonghua, but with two major systematic differences (also true of Taiwan Guoyu):

  • Erhua, the rhotacization of certain morphemes with the suffix - -er, is very rare in Guoyu[26] (and very common in Beijing Putonghua[58]).
  • The "neutral tone" (輕聲 qīngshēng) does not occur as often, so final syllables generally retain their tone (e.g., 但是 dànshì, 先生 xiānshēng).[59]
    • This tendency to retain original tone is not present in words ending noun suffixes such as - -zi or - -tou; Guoyu speakers would not pronounce 孩子 as *háizǐ.

In addition, two other phenomena, while nonstandard, are extremely common across all Mandarin speakers in Taiwan, even the highly educated:[26]

  • The retroflex sounds zh- [ʈ͡ʂ], ch- [ʈ͡ʂʰ], and sh- [ʂ] merge into the alveolar consonants (z- [t͡s], c- [t͡sʰ], s- [s], respectively).
  • The finals -ing [iŋ] and -eng [əŋ] have largely merged into -in [in] and -en [ən], respectively.

Taiwan Guoyu

Taiwan Guoyu pronunciation is strongly influenced by Minnanyu. This is especially prominent in areas where Minnanyu is common, namely, in Central and Southern Taiwan. Many, though not all, of the phonological differences between Taiwan Guoyu and Putonghua can be attributed to the influence of Minnanyu.

Notable phonological features of Taiwan Guoyu include:[note 5]

  • In addition to the merger of retroflex sounds into the alveolar consonants mentioned above, utterances in Taiwan Guoyu may feature retroflexes (in pinyin, zh-, ch-, sh-, and r-) realized as postalveolar consonants: [ʈʂ] to [], [ʈʂʰ] to [ʃ], [ʂ] to [ɹ̠̊˔],[60] and [ʐ] to [ɹ]. This phenomenon is not unique to Taiwan and can be found in Mandarin dialects across southern China as well as parts of northern China.[61]
    • The ability to produce retroflex sounds is considered a hallmark of "good" Mandarin (i.e. Standard Guoyu); some speakers may hypercorrect to pronounce alveolar consonants as their retroflex counterparts when attempting to speak "proper" Guoyu.[62][63]
  • The initial f- becomes a voiceless bilabial fricative [ɸ], closer to a light 'h' in standard English (for example, fǎn huǎn).[64]
  • The syllable written as eng ([əŋ]) after labials (in pinyin, b-, f-, m-, p- and w-) is pronounced ong ([o̞ŋ]).[65] Thus, fēng may be pronounced as fōng.
  • The semivowel /w/ may change, rendering e.g. the surname Wēng as [ʋəŋ] rather than [wəŋ]. The deletion of /w/ also happens in colloquial Putonghua, but less frequently.[66]
  • The initials n- and l- are sometimes interchangeable, particularly preceding nasal finals (i.e. -n, -ng).[10] Thus, nán may be pronounced lán.
  • The nasal finals -n and -ng tend to merge,[67] so words like zhēng and zhēn may become homophones.
  • The endings -uo, -ou, and -e (when it represents a close-mid back unrounded vowel [ɤ] like in ) shift to a mid central vowel [ə] or merge into the mid back rounded vowel -o [o̞].[68]
  • The close front rounded vowel in words such as become unrounded, transforming into .[69]
  • The diphthong -ei [ei] and the triphthong -ui [uei] are monophthongized into [e].[68]

Reduction

The non-standard Taiwanese Guoyu tends to exhibit frequent, informal elision and cluster reduction when spoken.[70] For example, 這樣子 zhè yàngzi 'this way, like so' can be pronounced similar to 醬子 jiàngzi 'paste, sauce'; wherein the "theoretical" retroflex (so called because it is a feature of Standard Guoyu but rarely realized in everyday speech, as zh- is usually pronounced z-; see above section) is assimilated into the palatal glide [j].[71]

Often the reduction involves the removal of initials in compound words, such as dropping the t in 今天 jīntiān 'today' or the ch in 非常 fēicháng 'extremely, very'.[72] These reductions are not necessarily a function of the speed of speech than of register, as it is more commonly used in casual conversations than in formal contexts.[71]

Tone quality

Generalized representation of tone contours of Mandarin speakers from Beijing and Taipei[73][74]

Like all varieties of Mandarin, Guoyu is a tonal language. Putonghua as spoken in the mainland has five tones, including the neutral tone.[75] Tones in Guoyu differ somewhat in pitch and contour.

Research suggests that speakers of Guoyu articulate the second and third tones differently from the standards of Beijing Mandarin.[17] The precise nature of the tonal differences is not well attested, however, as relevant studies often lack a sufficiently large variety of speakers.[76] Tones may vary based on age, gender, and other sociolinguistic factors and may not even be consistent across every utterance by an individual.[77]

In general, for Guoyu speakers, the second tone does not rise as high in its pitch, according to Jeroen Wiedenhof,[78][79] and the third tone does not "dip" back up from the low, creaky voice range.[79] Overall, Guoyu speakers may exhibit a lower and more narrow pitch range than speakers of the Mandarin of Beijing.[80] Acoustic analysis of 33 Mandarin speakers from Taiwan in 2008 also found that for many speakers, the second tone tends to have a dipping contour more akin to that of the prescriptive third tone.[77]

Standard pronunciations compared to Putonghua

In addition to differences in elision and influence from Minnanyu, which are not features that are codified in the standard Guoyu, there are differences in pronunciation that arise from conflicting official standards in Taiwan and the mainland.

Quantification of the extent of pronunciation differences between Guoyu and Putonghua varies. Estimates from graduate-level research include a 2008 study based on the 7,000 characters in the List of Commonly Used Characters in Modern Chinese, which found approximately 18% differed between Guoyu and Putonghua, and 13% for the 3,500 most commonly used characters.[81] A 1992 study, however, found differences in 22.5% of the 3,500 most common characters.[82]

Much of the difference can be traced to the preferences of linguistic authorities on the two sides; the mainland standard prefers popular pronunciations in northern areas, whereas the Taiwanese standard prefers those documented in dictionaries in the 1930s and 1940s.[57] The Taiwanese formal standards may not always reflect actual pronunciations commonly used by actual Taiwanese speakers of Guoyu.[note 6]

The following is a table of relatively common characters pronounced differently in Guoyu and Putonghua in most or all contexts (Guoyu/Putonghua):[84]

  • xí/xī
  • () shì/shí
  • () jí/jī
  • () yǒng/yōng
 
  • xí/xī
  • wéi/wēi
  • qí/qī
  • dié/diē
 
  • () jī/jì
  • jiù/jiū
  • tú/tū
  • yái/yá
 
  • () zhàn/zàn
  • xiě/xuè
  • shóu/shú
  • 垃圾 lèsè/lājī[note 7]

Note that many of the above include tonal differences where a first tone in Putonghua is pronounced second tone in Guoyu. Some pronunciation differences may only appear in certain words. The following is a list of examples of such differences (Guoyu/Putonghua):

  • 'and' — , hàn / . In Guoyu, the character may be read as hàn when used as a conjunction, whereas it is always read in Putonghua. This pronunciation does not apply in contexts outside of as a conjunction, e.g. compound words like 和平 hépíng 'peace'.[85]
  • 暴露 'to expose' — / bào. The pronunciation bào is used in all other contexts in Guoyu.[86]
  • 質量 (质量) 'mass; quality' — zhíliàng / zhìliàng. is pronounced zhí in most contexts in Guoyu, except in select words like 人質 rénzhì 'hostage' or 質押 zhìyā 'to pawn'.[87] Zhíliàng means 'mass' in both Guoyu and Putonghua, but for Guoyu speakers it does not also mean 'quality' (instead preferring 品質 pǐnzhí for this meaning).[88]
  • 從容 (从容) 'unhurried, calm' — cōngróng / cóngróng. cóng is only pronounced cōng in this specific word in Guoyu.[89]
  • 口吃 'stutter' — kǒu / kǒuchī. is only read when it means 'to stammer' (as opposed to 'to eat', the most common meaning).[90]

Vocabulary differences from mainland Putonghua

Guoyu and Putonghua share a large majority of their vocabulary, but significant differences do exist.[note 8] The lexical divergence of Guoyu from Putonghua is the result of several factors, including the prolonged political separation of the mainland and Taiwan, the influence of Imperial Japanese rule on Taiwan until 1945, and the influence of Minnanyu.[91] The Cross Strait Common Usage Dictionary categorizes differences as "same word, different meaning" (同名異實 tóngmíng yìshíhomonyms); "same meaning, different word" (同實異名 tóngshí yìmíng); and "Taiwan terms" (臺灣用語 Táiwān yòngyǔ) and "mainland terms" (大陸用語 dàlù yòngyǔ) for words and phrases specific to a given side.[92]

Same meaning, different word

The political separation of Taiwan and mainland China after the end of the Chinese Civil War in 1949 contributed to many differences in vocabulary. This is especially prominent in words and phrases which refer to things or concepts invented after the split; thus, modern scientific and technological terminology often differs greatly between Putonghua and Guoyu.[93] In both Guoyu and Putonghua, for example, 通過 (通过) tōngguò means 'to pass (a bill or inspection)' or 'to pass through' and 透過 (透过) tòuguò means 'to penetrate,' but 透過 also means 'by means of' or 'via' only in Guoyu, while using 通过 to express such meanings is only present in Putonghua.[94][95]

The differences may be prevalent enough to hinder communication between Guoyu and Putonghua speakers unfamiliar with each other's respective dialects.[93][96] For instance, Zhang (2000) selected four hundred core nouns from computer science and found that while 58% are identical in Standard and Taiwanese Mandarin, 22% were "basically" or "entirely" different.[97]

As cross-strait relations began to improve in the early 21st century, direct interaction between mainland China and Taiwan increased, and some vocabulary began to merge, especially by means of the Internet.[98] For example, the words 瓶頸 (瓶颈) píngjǐng 'bottleneck' and 作秀 zuòxiù 'to grandstand, show off' were originally unique to Guoyu in Taiwan but have since become widely used in mainland China as well.[98] Guoyu has also incorporated mainland phrases and words, such as 渠道 qúdào, meaning 'channel (of communication)', in addition to the traditional Guoyu term, 管道 guǎndào.[99]

Examples of vocabulary differences between Guoyu and Putonghua[100]
EnglishTaiwanMainland China
Internet網路wǎnglù网络(wǎngluò)
Briefcase公事包gōngshìbāo公文包(gōngwénbāo)
Bento便當biàndāng盒饭(héfàn)
Software軟體ruǎntǐ软件(ruǎnjiàn)
Introduction, preamble引言Yǐnyán导语(dǎoyǔ)
To print列印lièyìn打印(dǎyìn)

Words may be formed from abbreviations in one form of Mandarin but not the other. For example, in Taiwan, bubble tea, 珍珠奶茶 zhēnzhū nǎichá, is often abbreviated 珍奶 zhēnnǎi, but this is not common on the mainland.[101] Likewise, traffic rules/regulations, 交通規則 (交通规则) jiāotōng guīzé, is abbreviated as 交规 jiāoguī on the mainland, but not in Taiwan.[102]

Same word, different meaning

Some identical terms have different meanings in Guoyu and Putonghua. There may be alternative synonyms which can be used unambiguously by speakers on both sides.

Examples of identical terms with different meanings in Guoyu and Putonghua
TermGuoyu meaningPutonghua meaning
油品 yóupǐn[103]oils, oil-based products in generalpetroleum products
影集 yǐngjí[104]TV seriesphoto album
土豆 tǔdòu[105]peanut[note 9]potato[note 10]
公車 (公车) gōngchē[note 11][106]busgovernment or official vehicle
愛人 (爱人) àirén[107]loverspouse

The same word carry different connotations or usage patterns in Guoyu and Putonghua, and may be polysemous in one form of Mandarin but not the other. For example, 誇張 (夸张) kuāzhāng means 'to exaggerate,' but in Taiwan, it can also be used to express exclamation at something absurd or overdone, a meaning absent in Putonghua.[108] 籠絡 (笼络) lǒngluò in Guoyu means 'to convince, win over', but in Putonghua, it carries a negative connotation[109] (cf. 'beguile, coax'). Another example is 小姐 xiǎojiě, meaning 'miss' or 'young lady', regularly used to address young women in Guoyu. On the mainland, however, the word is also a euphemism for a prostitute and is therefore not used as a polite term of address.[110]

Differing usage or preference

Guoyu and Putonghua speakers may also display strong preference for one of a set of synonyms. For example, both 禮拜 lǐbài (礼拜) and 星期 xīngqí (xīngqī in Putonghua) are acceptable words for 'week' in Guoyu and Putonghua, but 禮拜 is more common in Taiwan.[111]

Guoyu tends to preserve older lexical items that are less used in the mainland. In Taiwan, speakers may use a more traditional 早安 zǎo'ān to say 'good morning', whereas mainland speakers generally default to 早上好 zǎoshang hǎo, for instance.[110] Both words are acceptable in either dialect.

Likewise, words with the same literal meaning in either dialect may differ in register. 而已 éryǐ 'that's all, only' is common both in spoken and written Guoyu, influenced by speech patterns in Minnanyu, but in Putonghua the word is largely confined to formal, written contexts.[112]

Preference for the expression of modality often differs among northern Mandarin speakers and Taiwanese, as evidenced by the selection of modal verbs. For example, Taiwanese Mandarin users strongly prefer yào and 不要 búyào over děi and bié, respectively, to express 'must' and 'must not', compared to native speakers from Beijing. However, yào and 不要 búyào are also predominantly used among Mandarin speakers from the south of the mainland. Both pairs are grammatically correct in either dialect.[113]

Words specific to Guoyu

Some words in Putonghua may not exist in Guoyu and vice versa. Authors of the Dictionary of Words Which Differ Across the Taiwan Strait (《两岸差异词词典》) estimate there are about 2,000 words unique to Guoyu, around 10% of which come from Minnanyu.[98] Additionally, many terms unique to Guoyu were adopted from Japanese as a result of Taiwan's status as a Japanese colony during the first half of the 20th century.[91]

Some of the vocabulary differences stem from different social and political conditions, which gave rise to concepts that were not shared between the mainland and Taiwan, e.g. 福彩 fúcǎi, a common abbreviation for the China Welfare Lottery of the People's Republic of China, or 十八趴 shíbāpā, which refers to the 18% preferential interest rate on civil servants' pension funds in Taiwan.[109] ( as "percent" originates from Japanese パーセント pāsento. This usage is also unique to Guoyu.)[114]

Particles

A street in Taipei with several signs in Chinese. One sign reads 二哥の店, lit. 'Second Brother's Shop', using の instead of 的.
The protruding green sign, for a bento shop in Taipei, uses a stylistic Japanese の

Modal particles convey modality, which can be understood as a speaker's attitude towards a given utterance (e.g. of necessity, possibility, or likelihood that the utterance is true).[115] Modal particles are common in Chinese languages and generally occur at the end of sentences, and so are commonly called sentence-final particles or utterance-final particles.[116]

Guoyu employs some modal particles that are rare in Putonghua. Some are entirely unique to spoken, colloquial Taiwan Guoyu, and identical particles may also have different meanings in Putonghua and Guoyu.[117] Conversely, particles that are common in Putonghua — particularly northern Putonghua, such as that spoken in Beijing — are very rare in Guoyu. Examples include () bei, me, and 罷了 (罢了) bàle.[118]

is a very common modal particle in Guoyu, which also appears in Putonghua with less frequency and always as a contraction of le and a. In Guoyu, it has additional functions, which Lin (2014) broadly defines as "to mark an explicit or implicit adjustment" by the speaker to a given claim or assessment.[119] In more specific terms, this use includes expression of impatience or displeasure (a, below); an imperative, such as a suggestion or order, especially a persistent one (b), and rejection or refutation (c).[120]

Wu (2006) argues is influenced by a similar la particle in Minnanyu.[121] (Unlike in Putonghua, Guoyu speakers will use immediately following le,[122] as seen in (a).)

(a) Impatience or displeasure
睡覺了啦Shuìjiāo le lā明天還要上課耶Míngtiān hái yào shàng kè yē
Go to sleep already! [You] have to go to class tomorrow!
(b) Suggestion or order
A: 我真的Wǒ zhēnde吃飽chī bǎole! I'm so full!
B: 不要客氣Búyào kèqì再吃一碗zài chī yī wǎn! Don't be so polite, have another bowl!
(c) Rejection or refutation
A: 他那麼早結婚Tā nàme zǎo jiéhūn一定是懷孕了yīdìng shì huáiyùn le。 He married so early, it has to be [because of] a pregnancy.
B: 不可能啦Bù kěnéng lā。 There's no way.

Taiwan Guoyu has functionally adopted some particles from Minnanyu. For example, the particle hoⁿh[note 12] [hɔ̃ʔ] functions in Minnanyu as a particle indicating a question to which the speaker expects an affirmative answer (c.f. English "..., all right?" or "..., aren't you?").[124] Among other meanings, when used in Taiwan Guoyu utterances, it can indicate that the speaker wishes for an affirmative response,[124] or may mark an imperative.[125]

Loan words and transliteration

Loan words may differ between Putonghua and Guoyu. Different characters or methods may also be chosen for transliteration (phonetic or semantic), and the number of characters may differ. In some cases, words may be loaned as transliterations in one dialect but not the other. Generally, Guoyu tends to imitate the form of Han Chinese names when transliterating foreign persons' names.[126][note 13]

Examples of differing transliterations
EnglishGuoyu, traditional charactersPutonghua, simplified
Punk music[127]龐克pángkè朋克(péngkè)
Reagan[126]雷根Léigēn里根(Lǐgēn)
Obama[126]歐巴馬Ōubāmǎ奥巴马(Àobāmǎ)
Blog[100]部落格bùluògé博客(bókè)
Gundam[127]鋼彈Gāngdàn高达(Gāodá)
Mercedes-Benz[127]梅賽德斯-賓士Méisàidésī-Bīnshì梅赛德斯-奔驰(Méisàidésī-Bēnchí)

From Minnanyu

Guoyu has borrowed words from Minnanyu, such as 蕃薯 fānshǔ 'sweet potato' and 拜拜 bàibài 'to worship'.[128] In Minnanyu, the prefix a (Guoyu: ā)[129] carries an affection or intimate tone when referring to people, and this has been adopted into Guoyu. Thus, words like 阿妹 āmèi 'younger sister' may be used instead of the standard 妹妹 mèimèi, and public figures like Tsai Ing-wen may be referred to as 阿英 Āyīng.[130]

Whether these loans are pronounced with their Minnanyu or Guoyu reading varies. In general, as a loan becomes more commonly recognized, it is more likely to be read as Guoyu.[131] This may involve the transformation of characters into their Guoyu counterparts. For example, the Minnanyu 烏白講 oo‑pe̍h kóng 'to talk nonsense' now exists in Guoyu as 黑白講 hēibáijiǎng (both literally translate as 'to talk black and white'; is 'black' in Minnanyu, corresponding to in Guoyu).[132][133][134] Some words may not be represented by well known characters and are instead written with English letters, such as Q, from the Minnanyu word 𩚨 khiū, referring to a soft, chewy texture in foods.[135][136] Some compound words or phrases may combine characters representing Minnanyu and Guoyu words.[note 14]

From Japanese

Japanese in the early 20th century had a significant influence on modern Chinese vocabulary. The Japanese language saw the proliferation of neologisms to describe concepts, and terms learned through contact with the West in the Meiji and Taishō eras.[138] Thus, the creation of words like 民主 minshu 'democracy', 革命 kakumei 'revolution' and 催眠 saimin 'hypnotize', which were then borrowed into Chinese and pronounced as Chinese words.[139] Both Guoyu and Putonghua retain these words today.

Guoyu was also further influenced by Japanese. As a result of Imperial Japan's 50-year rule over Taiwan until 1945, Minnanyu (and Hakka) borrowed extensively from Japanese,[140] and Guoyu in turn borrowed some of these words from Minnanyu, such that Japanese influence can be said to have come via Minnanyu.[9][141] For example, the Minnanyu word 摃龜 (Peh-oe-ji: kòngku; [kɔŋ˥˩ku˥˥]) 'to lose completely', which has been borrowed into Guoyu, originates from Japanese sukonku (スコンク, 'skunk'), with the same meaning.[142] Other examples of Guoyu loans from Japanese via Minnanyu include 運將 yùnjiàng, 'driver, chauffeur', from 運ちゃん unchan and 歐巴桑 ōubāsāng, 'elderly woman', from おばあさん obāsan.[143]

In general, Japanese loanwords are more widespread in Guoyu than Putonghua.[144] Guoyu continues to borrow words from Japanese in the 21st century, especially among youth, for whom Japanese culture is particularly attractive.[145]

Grammar

The grammar of Guoyu is largely identical to Putonghua. As is the case with lexicon and phonology described above, salient grammatical differences from Putonghua often stem from the influence of Minnanyu.

Perfective 有 yǒu

To mark the perfect verbal aspect, Guoyu employs (yǒu) where (le) would be used in the strictly standard form of the language.[146] For instance, a Guoyu speaker may ask "你有看醫生嗎?" ("Have you seen a doctor?") whereas a Putonghua speaker would prefer "你看医生了吗?". This is due to the influence of Minnanyu grammar, which uses (ū) in a similar fashion.[147]

In both Guoyu and Putonghua, 有没有 yǒuméiyǒu can precede a verb phrase to mark a perfective question, as in (1), and in Guoyu, this can be split (2):[148]

(1) 有沒有申請簽證?Nǐ yǒuméiyǒu shēnqǐng qiānzhèng ("Did you apply for a visa?")
(2) 申請簽證沒有Nǐ yǒu shēnqǐng qiānzhèng méiyǒu (Guoyu only)

Auxiliary verbs

Another example of the influence of Minnanyu grammar on Guoyu is the use of huì as "to be" (a copula) before adjectives, in addition to the usual meanings "would" or "will". Compare typical ways to render "Are you hot?" and "I am (not) hot" in Putonghua, Guoyu, and Minnanyu:[149]

"Are you hot?" "I am (not) hot"
Putonghua

(熱)?

(rè)?

你 熱 不 (熱)?

Nǐ rè bù (rè)?

熱。

rè.

我 不 熱。

Wǒ bù rè.

Guoyu

hùi

hùi

熱?

rè?

你 會 不 會 熱?

Nǐ hùi bù hùi rè?

hùi

熱。

rè.

我 不 會 熱。

Wǒ bù hùi rè.

Minnanyu

ē

joa̍h

嘸?

bô?

你 會 熱 嘸?

Lí ē joa̍h bô?

Guá

熱。[note 15]

joa̍h.

我 袂 熱。[note 16]

Guá bē joa̍h.

The use of to express "will" — as in 他會來嗎? Tā huì lái ma? 'Will he come?' — is also a notable feature of Guoyu. It is not necessarily considered ungrammatical in Putonghua, but is very rare. Sanders (1992), analyzing speech by groups of Mandarin speakers from Taipei and Beijing, found that the latter group never used to mean 'will' in this manner spontaneously (preferring instead 他来吗? Tā lái ma?).[152] For them, speakers of Mandarin from Taiwan may be perceived as overusing .[153]

Compound (separable) verbs

Speakers of Guoyu may frequently avoid splitting separable verbs, a category of verb + object compound words that are split in certain grammatical contexts in standard usage.[154] For example, the verb 幫忙 bāngmáng 'to help; to do a favor', is composed of bāng 'to help, assist' plus máng 'to be busy; a favor'. The word in Guoyu can take on a direct object without separation, which is ungrammatical in Putonghua:[108] 我幫忙他 (我帮忙他) 'I help him', acceptable in Guoyu, must be rendered as 我帮他个忙. This is not true of every separable verb in Guoyu, and prescriptive texts still opt to treat these verbs as separable.[155]

Notes

  1. Minnanyu can ambiguously refer to Southern Min in general, a branch of Min Chinese of which Taiwanese Hokkien is a part. Ministry of Education sources generally refer to it as 臺灣閩南語 Táiwān Mǐnnányǔ, lit.'Taiwan Southern Min' (see, e.g., the Ministry's Dictionary of Frequently-Used Taiwan Minnan). This is often just shortened to 閩南語 Mǐnnányǔ or 閩南話 Mǐnnánhuà. It is also called 臺語 Táiyǔ, 'Taiwanese language' (Pronounced Tâi-gí or Tâi-gú in the language itself).
  2. People in the mainland who speak non-Mandarin Chinese languages may still refer to Putonghua as Guoyu.[2]
  3. The specific terms vary greatly among authors. Some authors use Taiwan Guoyu to refer to the general form of the language spoken in Taiwan, incorporating influence from mutually unintelligible Minnanyu but not necessarily representing the most non-standard form.[16] For example, Fon, Chiang & Cheung (2004) distinguish between everyday Taiwan Guoyu and the form heavily influenced by Minnanyu, which they call Taiwanese Guoyu.[17] English writers may refer to the least standard, most Minnanyu-influenced form as Taiwanese-accented Mandarin.[18]
  4. A standardized 5.00-scaled test of Mandarin ability was administered to participants. Among Minnanren (Hoklo) the mean was 4.81 for young (under 31 years old) participants, 4.61 for middle aged participants (31–50), and 3.24 for the elderly (>50). The mean score for mainland descendants as a whole was 4.90.
  5. Note that not all of these features may be present in all speakers at all times.
  6. For example, the Ministry of Education standards dictate that some words (e.g. 熱鬧 rènào, 認識 rènshì, 衣服 yīfú, 力量 lìliàng) be pronounced with the second character in a neutral tone, in contrast to how most Taiwanese speakers of Mandarin actually say them.[83]
  7. This word means 'garbage'. Neither character generally appears independent of the other outside the context of this word.
  8. Chinese Wikipedia maintains a more extensive table of vocabulary differences between Taiwan, Macau, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore and mainland China.
  9. 花生 huāshēng, the Putonghua word for peanut, is an acceptable synonym in Guoyu.
  10. 馬鈴薯 (马铃薯) mǎlíngshǔ , another synonym for potato, is also used in both dialects.
  11. 公共汽車 (公共汽车; gōnggòng qìchē; 'public vehicle') is an unambiguous term or bus in both dialects.
  12. The Ministry of Education gives the original character for hoⁿh as ,[123] a Classical Chinese particle.
  13. Barack Obama is thus referred to as Ōubāmǎ 歐巴馬 as opposed to Àobāmǎ 奥巴马 in the mainland. Ōu is a common Han surname, while Ào is not (see list of common Chinese surnames).
  14. Wu and Su (2014) give the example of "逗熱鬧" 'to join in the fun' in a 2014 Liberty Times headline. The Guoyu phrase is 凑熱鬧 còu rènào; the headline substituted the verb còu for the Minnanyu verb (dòu, read tàu in Minnanyu).[136] The native Minnanyu word is 逗鬧熱 (Pe̍h-ōe-jī: tàu‑lāu‑jia̍t) (also written 鬥鬧熱)[137]
  15. is alternatively written with the nonstandard ,[150] which provides a clearer image of its grammatical function: it is a combination of a negator (勿) and 會.
  16. is alternatively written with the nonstandard ,[151] which provides a clearer image of its grammatical function: it is a combination of a negator (勿) and 會.

Citations

  1. 1 2 Chinese, Mandarin at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022) Closed access icon
  2. Wiedenhof 2015, p. 5. "But even inside China, the term Guóyǔ remains in use among speakers of non-Mandarin Sinitic languages when they refer to Mandarin."
  3. Chen 1999, pp. 22–24.
  4. See Mair for an overview of the terminology and debate: Mair, Victor H. (September 1991). "What Is a Chinese "Dialect/Topolect"? Reflections on Some Key Sino-English Linguistic Terms". Sino-Platonic Papers (29). Archived from the original on 25 April 2022. Retrieved 13 March 2022.
  5. DeFrancis 1984, p. 56. "To call Chinese a single language composed of dialects with varying degrees of difference is to mislead by minimizing disparities that, according to Chao, are as great as those between English and Dutch."
  6. Szeto, Ansaldo & Matthews 2018, pp. 241–42. "
  7. Weng 2018, p. 613. "... without prior exposure, speakers of different Mandarin dialects often have considerable difficulty understanding each other's local vernacular... In some cases, mutual intelligibility is not guaranteed even if the Mandarin dialects concerned belong to the same group and are spoken within the same province."
  8. Szeto 2019. "In common usage, 'Mandarin' or 'Mandarin Chinese' usually refers to China's standard spoken language. In fact, I would argue that this is the predominant meaning of the word."
  9. 1 2 Bradley 1991, p. 314.
  10. 1 2 Chen 1999, p. 48.
  11. Her 2009, p. 377. 「國語:教育部依據北京話所頒定的標準語,英文是Standard Mandarin,其內涵與北京話相似。但只是死的人為標準,並非活的語言。」 ["Guoyu: The standard language determined by the Ministry of Education based on the Beijing dialect, with which it is similar. It is called Standard Mandarin in English. It is a dead, artificial standard, and not a living language."]
  12. Sanders 1987, p. 2. "The first type of "Mandarin" to be recognized is what is called putonghua - --- on the Chinese mainland, guoyu in Taiwan, and huayu in Singapore. Outside of China, this (so-called) standard, official Mandarin corresponds to the language found in textbooks. What characterizes this language is grammatical underspecification, a lack of any native speakers, and very few truly fluent speakers."
  13. Chung 2006b, p. 198. In the context of Taiwan specifically: "Beyond broadcasters and a minority of people who have rather idiosyncratically adopted textbook pronunciations in their own everyday speech, plus a few natives of Beijing and other mainlanders, however, textbook Mandarin [i.e. "the Beijing-based Mandarin taught in Taiwan schools"] exists mainly as an idealized language that is studied and exists in one's consciousness, but is seldom consistently practiced."
  14. Fon, Chiang & Cheung 2004, p. 250; Khoo 2019, p. 221. 「"若將華語口音的標準與否視為一個連續體(continuum),標準國語就是在這個連續體的標準端;另一個端點,也就是不標準端,就是台灣國語了。」["If we view a Mandarin accent and its standard quality as a continuum, Standard Guoyu is at the standard end, and the other end, that is, the nonstandard end, is Taiwan Guoyu."]
  15. Teng 2002, p. 230.
  16. Shi & Deng 2006, p. 376. 「標準國語"指用於正規的書面語言以及電視廣播中的通用語,……和大陸的普通話基本一致。"台灣國語"指在台灣三十歲以下至少受過高中教育的台灣籍和大陸籍人士所說的通用語,也就是因受閩南話影響而聲、韻、調以及詞彙、句法方面與標準普通話產生某些差異的語言。」 ["'Standard Guoyu' refers to the language used in formal writing and television broadcasts, which in essence is Northern Mandarin absent more extreme dialect elements and features ... largely identical to Putonghua. 'Taiwan Guoyu' is the common language spoken by Taiwanese people and Chinese mainland descendants in Taiwan under thirty who have received at least a high school education. The influence of Taiwanese has produced differences from standard Putonghua in onsets and rimes, tone, vocabulary, and syntax."]
  17. 1 2 Fon, Chiang & Cheung 2004, p. 250.
  18. Cheng 1985.
  19. Shi & Deng 2006, p. 372–373.
  20. Khoo 2019, p. 222.「國語運動的主要目標之一就是推行標準國語,台灣國語也成為國語運動積極消除的口音…… 並且也因此被貼上負面的標籤。……這種帶有台語口音的華語,依然經常是各種演出中搞笑或醜化角色的素材,「台灣國語」根深蒂固的負面印象可見一斑。」 ["One of the primary goals of the Guoyu Movement [Chinese Wikipedia: 國語運動] was the promotion of Standard Guoyu. The Taiwan Guoyu accent was actively eliminated by the Movement... and moreover acquired a negative label. ... This Mandarin with a Taiyu [Minnanyu] accent is frequently performed as the stuff of comedic or ugly roles, and from this we can see one aspect of the deep-seated negative image of Taiwan Guoyu."]
  21. Su 2006. "Taiwanese-accented Mandarin shares with Taiwanese the sociolinguistic meanings of backwardness and congeniality [and] is a highly stigmatized variety among Taiwanese speakers."
  22. Scott & Tiun 2007, p. 54.
  23. Zeitoun 1998, p. 51.
  24. 1 2 Scott & Tiun 2007, p. 55.
  25. 1 2 Scott & Tiun 2007, p. 57.
  26. 1 2 3 Chen 1999, p. 47.
  27. Cheng 1985, p. 354; Her 2009.
  28. Su 2014, p. 61. "Until the 1980s, the Kuomintang administration heavily promoted the use of “Guoyu” and discouraged the use of other dialects, such as Min dialect and Kejia [Hakka] dialect, at times even considering them inferior."
  29. 1 2 Yeh, Chan & Cheng 2004, p. 76.
  30. Teng 2002, p. 232.
  31. Scott & Tiun 2007, p. 58.
  32. Scott & Tiun 2007, p. 60.
  33. Scott & Tiun 2007, p. 64.
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  78. Wiedenhof 2015, p. 55. "The second tone is rising as well as high. ... The feature 'high' appears to be on the wane in Taiwan, where a rise starting at a low pitch level is recognized as a second tone."
  79. 1 2 Fon, Chiang & Cheung 2004, pp. 250–51.
  80. Fon & Chiang 1999, pp. 29–30.
  81. Nan 2008, p. 65. “在《現代漢語常用字表》3500 字中,讀音差異的有 444 處,佔 12.7%。 在《現代漢語通用字表》7000 字中,讀音差異的有 1284 處,佔 18.3%。” ["Among the 7000 characters in List of Commonly Used Characters in Modern Chinese, 1284, or 18.3%, had different readings. Among the 3500 characters in the List of Frequently Used Characters in Modern Chinese, 444, or 12.7%, had different readings."]
  82. Chen 1999, pp. 46–47; Li 1992.
  83. 熱「ㄋㄠˋ」改「ㄋㄠ˙」 教育部字典被網罵:演古裝劇? ["'Rènào' to 'rènao'—Ministry of Education Dictionary criticized online: Are they pretending to be in some period piece?"]. ETtoday (in Chinese). 27 February 2018. Archived from the original on 8 May 2021. Retrieved 28 March 2021.
  84. Per the respective Cross-Strait Common Vocabulary Dictionary entries in the Taiwanese Ministry of Education's dictionary website Archived 2017-09-24 at the Wayback Machine. Each character is present on the List of Most Frequently Used Characters in Modern Chinese (现代汉语常用字表), also available on Wikisource in translation here.
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  92. Lists for each of the four categories can be found on the dictionary website here, accessed 24 December 2022, and archived here.
  93. 1 2 Yao 2014, p. 1650.
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  96. Zhang 2000, p. 38. ”随着大陆与台湾、香港、澳门 ... 的科技交流、商贸活动的日益频繁,人们越来越感到海峡两岸计算机名词(以下简称两岸名词)的差异,已成为一个不小的障碍,影响着正常的业务工作。” ["With the growing frequency of scientific and technological exchange and commerce among the mainland and Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Macau ... people increasingly feel that the differences in computer terminology (hereafter referred to as cross-strait terms) on both sides of the Taiwan Strait have become a sizable hindrance affecting normal work."]
  97. Zhang 2000, p. 40. “通过分析,得出了各类名词的数量及其比例关系:完全相同名词占总数58.25%,基本相同名词占总数20%,基本不同名词占总数10.25%,完全不同名词占总数11.5%。” ["Through analysis [I] drew out the number and proportion of various nouns: identical nouns account for 58.25% of the total, basically identical nouns for 20% of the total, basically different nouns for 10.25% of the total, and entirely different nouns for 11.5% of the total."]
  98. 1 2 3 Li 2015, p. 344.
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  102. Zhou & Zhou 2019, p. 213.
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  109. 1 2 Li 2015, p. 342.
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  117. Lin 2014, pp. 3–5.
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  119. Lin 2014, p. 122.
  120. Wu 2006, pp. 24–26.
  121. Wu 2006, p. 16.
  122. Wu 2006, pp. 33.
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  125. Wu 2006, pp. 62–63.
  126. 1 2 3 Wang, Yinquan (25 December 2012). 两岸四地外国专名翻译异同趣谈 [An Interesting Look at Foreign Proper Noun Transliteration in China, Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan]. China Daily. Archived from the original on 25 April 2022. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
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  128. Chen 1999, p. 107.
  129. Wu & Su 2014, pp. 240–241.
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  131. Wu & Su 2014, pp. 243.
  132. Wu & Su 2014, pp. 243–244.
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  135. Cook 2018, p. 14.
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  139. Zhao 2006, p. 312.
  140. Yao 1992, pp. 335–37.
  141. Hsieh & Hsu 2006, p. 53.
  142. Yao 1992, pp. 337, 358–59.
  143. Hsieh & Hsu 2006, p. 57.
  144. Hsieh & Hsu 2006, p. 62.
  145. Hsieh & Hsu 2006, pp. 63–66.
  146. Tan 2012, p. 2.
  147. Tan 2012, pp. 5–6.
  148. Wiedenhof 2015, p. 214.
  149. Yang 2007, pp. 117–119; Sanders 1992.
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  153. Sanders 1992, p. 303.
  154. Diao 2016.
  155. Teng 2021, p. 22. 「離合詞的基本屬性是不及物動詞... 當然,在臺灣已經有些離合詞,如:「幫忙」,傾向於及物用法。因為仍不穩定,教材中仍以不及物表現為規範。 "A fundamental attribute of separable verbs is their intransivity ... of course, in Taiwan there are some separable verbs, such as bangmang, that tend to be transitive. As this [usage] is still unstable, the teaching materials still use the intransitive as the standard."

References

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