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#1 |
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Best Cantonese pronunciation system
My preference is for something non-roman like Zhuyin Fuhao, because they retain a Chineseness about them. I have seen a Zhuyin version for Cantonese in an old Chinese dictionary before, but it is not commonly used. However, using romanisation system in schools (in China) will let students learn European-based languages quicker, as they will have learnt the basic roman letter background. Btw, how do students in HK learn the pronunciation of characters in Cantonese? |
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#2 |
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Not sure about the others but according to personal experience, I used the romanisation system. It wasn't easy but I got there in the end...
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#3 |
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Well, Cantonese, if it wasn't for Hong Kong and Macau, isn't suppose to have a romanisation system nor a standard Cantonese since it isn't even suppose to be taught. Around the 1930's 白话运动Baihua Yundong -Movement towards a Vernacular Standard" made the aim to "eradicate" all "dialects" within 100 years (by 2030) and only Guan(Mandarin) was supposed to be used then(this is only for Chinese, excluding other ethnicities living in China).
The extended Zhuyin Fuhao for dialects places little pigtails/flourish at the end of a stroke. The (ㄅ,ㄉ,ㄎ) p, t, k endings are smaller versions of ㄅb, ㄉd, ㄎk. (why not use smaller versions of ㄆp, ㄊt, ㄎk?) It is still very Guan (Mandarin)-based. The native speakers of Yue (Cantonese) should invent a system themselves such as Hong Kong's Jyutping. In the mainland, Beijing devised a Yue (Cantonese) version of the Hanyu Pinyin called Honyeu Penkyamp. As for me, I think the best way is using the International Phonetic Alphabet. -Shibo |
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#4 |
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The Yale system isn't too bad. The tones are nicely incorporated (they avoided the numbers. Numbers and letters do not blend well together). Zhuyin Fuhao was designed specifically for Standard Mandarin (not even many Mandarin dialects); modifications for other dialects were made as an afterthought.
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#5 |
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Why do native speaking kids need certain kind of pronunciation system to study the language that they have spoken all along?
I always scratch my head why fellow posters think there is such dire need. I do know that the Education Department in HK is now adding Cantonese syllabus for South Asian kids in school which definitely includes certain kinds of pronunciation system. |
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#6 |
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乡民一个
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Quote:
Well, Cantonese, if it wasn't for Hong Kong and Macau, isn't suppose to have a romanisation system nor a standard Cantonese since it isn't even suppose to be taught.
Quote:
how do students in HK learn the pronunciation of characters in Cantonese?
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#7 |
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Shibo77:
What is wrong with students in HK learning Cantonese at school? The Baihua Yundong in '30s was adopted by KM T, then is China ruled by KMT now? Although Cantonese is a dialect, it is a language spoken by 70 million people (which exceeds the popularity of many major national languages). Moreover, Cantonese is more popular worldwide than Mandarin. Since it is quite useful, why don't you start to learn it too? |
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#8 |
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ian_Lee
Why do native speaking kids need certain kind of pronunciation system to study the language that they have spoken all along?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Quest
In GZ, we never learned any cantonese pronunciation, but we just happened to know the corresponding Cantonese readings of the characters, maybe from parents or other daily contacts.
But for less regular dialects like Minnan and Wu (some characters in Wu have 4 or 5 readings, while some with only one), I think a pronunciation system would be very helpful. Pronunciation systems also help non-native speakers. Besides learning, these systems are helpful for inputting characters into the computer (unless you opt for something like Cangjie). |
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#9 |
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乡民一个
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yes a pronunciation system is helpful, but I don't think any is being taught at cantonese schools, so there is no standard... maybe the governments of guangdong, hk, and macau can develop a standard, but then only couple towns/cities speak that kind of cantonese in guangdong.
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#10 |
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Guest
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A highly accurate pinyin system for cantonese is developed and adjusted by a few scholars. My friend came to Hong Kong from Hokkien at her eleven. Her father, a teacher in a mainland china, forced her to learn this uncommon system, and now she pronunces Cantonese perfectly.
Check here: |
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#11 |
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Cantonese has a lot of rhymes!
Are all still preserved by the speaking population in Guangzhou and HK? |
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#12 |
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I have a bunch of Cantonese books and each of them seem to have a different romanization system, so I've gotten used to reading all of them. However, I personally like the Yale system because the sound transcription is the closest to the English pronounciations out of all the different systems that I've seen (i.e. the j is pronounced like the English j rather than a y). Also, as ala said, it incorporates the tone marks into words extremely well... I find it very intuitive.
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#13 |
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To address your question about how pronounciation is taught in HK... My dad told me that when he was young, schools used 《三字經》 to teach proper pronounciation (I'm not sure if they still use it now though). Apparently up until recent history, it was used for centuries to teach proper pronounciation of characters (in addition to Confucianism and a bit of history), not just for Cantonese but for all other dialects as well. The rhymes are still the best preserved in Cantonese though.
This site has parts of it with accompanying audio pronouncing each of the words in Cantonese (click on the links on the right starting with 三字經之一). This site has the translation of the entire thing. |
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#14 |
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As far as I know, only my mom studied 三字經 in 卜卜齋 in Guangzhou in 1920s.
When I attended primary school in HK in 1950s, nobody had heard of 三字經. Maybe your dad attended school in HK in pre-WWII period. |
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#15 |
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Guest
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Quote:
Cantonese has a lot of rhymes!
Are all still preserved by the speaking population in Guangzhou and HK? Quote:
As far as I know, only my mom studied 三字經 in 卜卜齋 in Guangzhou in 1920s.
When I attended primary school in HK in 1950s, nobody had heard of 三字經. Maybe your dad attended school in HK in pre-WWII period. Thousand Character Ancient Classic (千字古文) was also learnt when i was a form 1 student. The teacher took it as a practice for the art of calligraphy. (天地玄黃 宇宙洪荒 日月盈昃 辰宿列張......) However, in my school , another long ancient article was taught and we had to take an examination on it, recite intensively. It's called 太上道祖頌. (唯我道祖, 博大莫名, 象啟元始, 氣函太清, 周室守藏, 咸谷傳經.....) |
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#16 |
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Yau:
Just curious. Were you attending a Taoist school in HK? |
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#18 |
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But what contributes to the specific Southeast Asian accent of Cantonese? Influenced by the local language?
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#19 |
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乡民一个
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Quote:
But what contributes to the specific Southeast Asian accent of Cantonese? Influenced by the local language?
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#20 |
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乡民一个
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how does a Cantonese pronunciation system differentiate 对, 帝 and 带?
or 陈, 春 and 残? |
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