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Wiktionary:About Chinese/Cantonese/Yulin

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Yulin Yue (Chinese: 玉林話 or 鬱林話)[1][2] is a language of the Yue branch of Chinese, currently called Category:Cantonese language on Wiktionary.

Its representative locality is Yuzhou District (玉州區).

Romanization

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For the romanization, Jyutping++ is adopted as below. (The official Jyutping++ does not include Yulin of Yuzhou District.)

Initials

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Under the current analysis, Yangjiang Yue has 22 initials, including the zero-initial. Note that in [1], they had two extra initials /b/ and /d/ which have been merged into /p/ and /t/ respectively in the current dialect. They did not form any minimal pair, as /b/ (resp. /d/) came from Middle Chinese *p- (resp. *t-) and so was paired with light tones, and /p/ (resp. /t/) came from Middle Chinese *b- (resp. *d-) and so was paired with dark tones.

Jyutping++ IPA Examples
b /p/
p /pʰ/
m /m/
f /f/
d /t/
t /tʰ/
n /n/
sl /ɬ/
l /l/
z /t͡ʃ/
c /t͡ʃʰ/
nj /ɲ/
s /ʃ/
g /k/
k /kʰ/
ng /ŋ/
h /h/
gw /kʷ/
kw /kʰʷ/
j /j/
w /w/

Finals

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Under the current analysis, Yulin Yue has 48 finals, including two syllabic finals /m̩/ and /ŋ̍/. This mostly follows [2], so there are some minor differences with [1], documented below.

-i -u -m -n -ng -p -t -k
a a
/a/
ai
/ai/
au
/au/
am
/am/
an
/an/
ang
/aŋ/
ap
/ap̚/
at
/at̚/
ak
/ak̚/
e e
/ɛ/
eu
/ɛu/
em
/ɛm/
en
/ɛn/
eng
/ɛŋ/
ep
/ɛp̚/
et
/ɛt̚/
ek
/ɛk̚/
oe oe
/œ/
oeu
/əu/
oeng
/œŋ/
oet
/œt̚/
oek
/œk̚/
o o
/ɔ/
oi
/ɔi/
ou
/ɔu/
om
/ɔm/
on
/ɔn/
ong
/ɔŋ/
op
/ɔp̚/
ot
/ɔt̚/
ok
/ɔk̚/
oo oo
/o/
i i
/i/
iu
/iu/
im
/im/
in
/in/
ip
/ip̚/
it
/it̚/
u u
/u/
ui
/ui/
un
/un/
ung
/ʊŋ/
ut
/ut̚/
uk
/ʊk̚/
yu yu
/y/
yun
/yn/
yut
/yt̚/
m m
/m̩/
ng ng
/ŋ̍/

Differences between Sources

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The finals in the two sources mostly correspond with each other. (Note that /œn/ is a rare final.)

[1] [2]
/-ɒ-/ /-ɔ-/
/ɤ/ /o/
/ɤu/ /əu/
/iau/ /ɛu/
/iɛm/ /ɛm/
/iɛn/ /ɛn/
/iɛp̚/ /ɛp̚/
/iɛt̚/ /ɛt̚/
/œn/
/eŋ/ /ɛŋ/
/ek̚/ /ɛk̚/
/uɔŋ/ /ɔŋ/
/uɔk̚/ /ɔk̚/
/yɛt̚/ /œt̚/
/œt̚/ /œt̚/

Tones

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Yulin Yue has 10 tones, which are represented by 6 symbols.

Jyutping++ Tone numerals Traditional category Examples
[1] [2]
1 54 dark level (陰平)
44 5 upper dark entering (上陰入)
2 33 dark rising (陰上)
33 3 lower dark entering (下陰入)
3 51 42 dark departing (陰去)
4 32 light level (陽平)
12 2 upper light entering (上陽入)
5 24 light rising (陽上)
6 21 light departing (陽去)
11 1 lower light entering (下陽入)

Note that the final /a/ comes from historic *-Vng (unchecked) and *-Vk (checked); in case of the latter, they are still assigned to Unchecked Tones 2 and 6. For example, and are both /ta³³/; and are both /la²¹/.

Sandhi

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In a compound with two characters, the tone of the first character undergoes sandhi according to the tone of the second character.

Resulting tone of 1st syllable [2]
Tone of 1st syllable Tone of 2nd syllable
Dark (1, 2, 3) Light (4, 5, 6)
1 unchecked 2 3
1 checked 1
2 2
3 2 3
4 6
5 5
6 6

For example, fung<sup>1</sup>-ce<sup>1</sup> becomes phonetically *fung<sup>2</sup> ce<sup>1</sup>.

The other source has another similar but different sandhi system, which we do not follow:

Tone of 1st syllable Resulting tone of 1st syllable[1]
1,2,3 2
4,5,6 6

Input format

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In the pronunciation section of each entry, under the {{zh-pron}} template, use the |c-yl= parameter to indicate the pronunciation of the entry in Jyutping++ as described above. Use commas , without spaces to separate alternate readings.

Use - to indicate tone sandhi, and use * to indicate diminutive.

|c-yl=fung1-ce1


|c-yl=da4-bek1*


References

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  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 广西通志·汉语方言志 [Gwangxi Chorography: Chinese Dialectology] (in Chinese), Nanning: 广西人民出版社, 1998
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 梁忠东 (2010) 玉林话研究 [A Study of Yulin Yue] (in Chinese), Chengdu: 西南交通大学出版社

See also

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