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Teochew Min

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Southern Min language of China

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Teochew
Chaozhou, Chaoshan, Teo-Swa
潮州話 / 潮汕話 / 潮語
Native toChaoshan
RegionEastern Guangdong (Chaoshan), Thailand, Southern Vietnam and Cambodia, Indonesia (Jambi and West Kalimantan), Singapore
EthnicityTeochew people
Native speakersAbout 14 million in Chaoshan (2004)
more than 5 million overseas
Language familySino-Tibetan
Early formsProto-Sino-Tibetan
Dialects
Writing systemChinese characters
Teochew Romanization
Peng'im
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)
Glottologchao1238
Linguasphere79-AAA-ji
  Teochew (Teo-Swa) within the Southern Min languages
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.
Teochew Min
Traditional Chinese潮州話
Simplified Chinese潮州话
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinCháozhōu huà
Wu
Romanizationzau tseu ghae ho
Hakka
RomanizationTshèu-chû-fa
Yue: Cantonese
JyutpingCiu4 zau1 waa2
Southern Min
Hokkien POJTiô-chiu-ōe / Tiô-chiu-ōa
Teochew Peng'imDiê⁵ ziu¹ uê⁷ / Dio⁵ ziu¹ uê⁷
Eastern Min
Fuzhou BUCDièu-ciŭ-uâ

Teochew, also known as Teo-Swa (or Chaoshan), is a Southern Min language spoken by the Teochew people in the Chaoshan region of eastern Guangdong and by their diaspora around the world. It is sometimes referred to as Chiuchow, its Cantonese rendering, due to English romanization by colonial officials and explorers. It is closely related to Hokkien, as it shares some cognates and phonology with Hokkien.

Teochew preserves many Old Chinese pronunciations and vocabulary that have been lost in some of the other modern varieties of Chinese. As such, Teochew is described as one of the most conservative Chinese languages.

History and geography

Historically, the Teochew prefecture included modern prefecture-level cities of Chaozhou, Jieyang and Shantou. In China, this region is now known as Teoswa. Parts of the Hakka-speaking Meizhou city, such as Dabu County and Fengshun, were also parts of the Teochew prefecture and contain pocket communities of Teochew speakers.

As the Teochew region was one of the major sources of Chinese emigration to Southeast Asia during the 18th to 20th centuries, a considerable Overseas Chinese community in that region is Teochew-speaking. In particular, the Teochew people settled in significant numbers in Cambodia, Thailand and Laos, where they form the largest Chinese sub-language group. Additionally, there are many Teochew-speakers among Chinese communities in Vietnam, Singapore, Malaysia (especially in the states of Johor, Malacca, Penang, Kedah and Selangor with significant minorities in Sarawak) and Indonesia (especially in West Kalimantan). Waves of migration from Teochew region to Hong Kong, especially after the communist victory of the Chinese Civil War in 1949, has also resulted in the formation of a community there, although most descendants now primarily speak Cantonese and English as a result of colonialism and assimilation to the dominant Cantonese culture.

Teochew speakers are also found among overseas Chinese communities in Japan and the Western world (notably in the United States, Canada, Australia, United Kingdom, France and Italy), a result of both direct emigration from the Chaoshan region to these nations and also secondary emigration from Southeast Asia.

In Singapore, Teochew remains the ancestral language of many Chinese Singaporeans, with Chinese of Teochew descent making up second largest Chinese group in Singapore, after the Hoklo. Despite this many Teochew people, particularly the younger generations, are shifting towards English and Mandarin as their main spoken language. This is due to the Singapore government's stringent bilingual policy that promotes English as the official language of education, government and commerce and promotes Mandarin at the expense of other Chinese languages. Some Teochew assimilated with the larger Hokkien community and speak Hokkien rather than Teochew due to Hokkien's prominent role as a lingua franca previously among the Singaporean Chinese community.

Classification

Teochew is a Southern Min language. As with other Sinitic languages, it is not mutually intelligible with Mandarin, Cantonese or Shanghainese. It has only limited intelligibility with Hokkien. Even within the Teochew dialects, there is substantial variation in phonology between different regions and between different Teochew communities overseas.

The dialects of Teochew include:

  • Northern Teochew, or Chaozhou division (潮州片), including:
  • Southern Teochew, or Chaoyang-Puning division (潮普片), including:
    • Teoyeo dialect (潮阳话 / 潮陽話), spoken in the historical Teoyeo (Chaoyang) county, which includes modern Chaoyang, Chaonan, and Haojiang
    • Puning dialect (普宁话 / 普寧話), spoken in urban Puning
    • Huilai dialect (惠来话 / 惠來話), spoken in Huilai County

Some classifications consider the Hai Lok Hong dialect a part of Teochew (as the third branch), while others consider it a part of Hokkien or an independent Southern Min variety.

In the Namoa island, there are two dialects, both distinct from the mainland Teochew, with Western Namoa dialect inclining towards the Northern Teochew, and Eastern Namoa dialect showing Hokkien influence, as this part of the island was included in Zhangzhou prefecture in 16—19 centuries.

Chawan dialect, spoken in Fujian along the Guangdong border, is quite different from other southern dialects of Hokkien. It has some lexical influence from Teochew and relatively higher mutual intelligibility with it, yet in other aspects it clusters more with Hokkien than Teochew.

The main criterion in the classification of Teochew dialects is the presence or absence of the vowel /ɯ/. It is found in Northern Teochew in words like hṳ̂he "fish" and sṳ̄se "thing; matter". Southern Teochew has /u/ instead (hu, su). Hai Lok Hong and Eastern Namoa dialects have /i/ or /u/ instead, depending on the etymology of the word (hi, but su), similarly to the Chiangchew Hokkien. Southern Teochew may be further divided into Huilai—Puning dialects and Teoyeo dialects, based on their tone contours.

Major dialect groups of Teochew  Northern Teochew  Southern Teochew  Hai Lok Hong Min (sometimes included in Teochew)
  Hokkien-Teochew transitional dialects  Chiangchew Hokkien

The prestige dialects of Teochew all belong to the Northern branch. The Northern Teochew dialects are mutually intelligible between each other, but less so with the Southern branch.

Various stereotypes and cultural traits are associated with different Teochew dialects. For instance, within the Shantou city, the urban Swatow dialect is perceived as "energetic", "gentle", but also "snobbish" or "pretentious" by speakers of other dialects; the Chenghai dialect (similar to urban Chaozhou dialect) is perceived as "soft", "cute", and "high-pitched"; the Teoyeo dialect is perceived as "harsh", "aggressive" and "countrified".

Writing system

Written Southern Min is known since at least the 16th century. The earliest known work is a 1566 edition of the Tale of the Lychee Mirror, a folk drama written in a mixture of Teochew and Chinchew Hokkien.

Teochew writing is neither standardized nor is widely used. In Imperial China, most writing was conducted in Classical Chinese, while vernacular writing was only used in novels, songbooks and opera scripts. After the Xinhai revolution, only written Mandarin was supported by the government, while speakers of other Sinitic languages, including Teochew, remaining largely illiterate in their own tongues.

Teochew rime dictionaries appeared relatively late, the earliest of them being "Fifteen consonants of Teochew language" (潮語十五音, 1911) by Chio Ju-lim (蔣儒林) and "Fifteen consonants of Teochew sound" (潮聲十五音, 1913) by Teo See-tiang (張世珍).

Chinese characters

Most of the Teochew vocabulary can be traced back to Old Chinese, and thus can be written using Chinese characters. There are different ways to write words that do not have a clearly associated etymological character, including:

  • using a character with the same meaning regardless of its reading
  • borrowing a phonetically close character regardless of its meaning
  • inventing a new character
  • attempting to find an original character

Teochew shares characters with Hokkien for cognate words, but it is also influenced by the Cantonese written tradition.

Word Possible spellings
Semantic Phonetic Invented
character
Presumed
original character
pak / bag "to know" , 𧧸
tiâng / diang "who" , 𫢗
tsōi / zoi "many" , ,
thâi / tai "to kill"
/ m "not"
tse̍k / zêg "one" ,
kûiⁿ / guin "tall; high"
tshâng / cang "field" ,

Romanization

Main articles: Peng'im and Pe̍h-ūe-jī

There are two principal romanization systems for Teochew:

  • Pe̍h-ūe-jī, originally invented for Hokkien in the 19th century and adapted for Teochew (particularly the Swatow dialect)
  • Peng'im, invented in the 1960s and based on the Hanyu Pinyin romanization for Mandarin

While Peng'im has some presence in academic works published in PRC, many publications on Teochew use their custom IPA-based romanizations.

Consonants
IPA Pe̍h-ūe-jī Peng'im
/p/ p b
// ph p
/b/ b bh
/m/ m m
/t/ t d
// th t
/l/ l l
/n/ n n
/h/ h h
/k/ k g
// kh k
/g/ g gh
/ŋ/ ng ng
/ts/ ts z
/tsʰ/ tsh c
/dz/ z r
/s/ s s
  1. ^ Many missionary publications use ch , chh and j before i. ts , tsh and z are used elsewhere, like some versions of Hokkien Pe̍h-ōe-jī.
Vowels
IPA Pe̍h-ūe-jī Peng'im
/a/ a a
/ia/ ia ia
/ua/ ua ua
/ai/ ai ai
/au/ au ao
/uai/ uai uai
/iau/ iau iao
/o/ o o
/io/ io io
/oi/ oi oi
/ou/ ou ou
/iou/ iou iou
/e/ or /ɛ/ e ê
/ie/ or /iɛ/ ie
/ue/ or /uɛ/ ue
/ɯ/ or /ə/ e
/i/ i i
/u/ u u
/ui/ ui ui
/iu/ iu iu
Codas
IPA Pe̍h-ūe-jī Peng'im
// -ng -ng
/-k/ -k -g
// -h -h
/-◌̃/ -ⁿ -n
/-m/ -m -m
/-p/ -p -b
/-n/ -n
/-t/ -t
  1. ^ Obsolete in most Teochew dialects.

Phonetics and phonology

Consonants

Prenasalization of voiced plosives and lateral in Teochew Voicelessly prenasalized voiced stops and lateral

bói

bhoi

bói gô lāi tsia̍h

bhoi2 gho5 lai7 ziah8

"buy geese to eat"


Problems playing this file? See media help.

Teochew, like other Southern Min varieties, is one of the few modern Sinitic languages which have voiced obstruents (stops, fricatives and affricates); however, unlike Wu and Xiang Chinese, the Teochew voiced stops and fricatives did not evolve from Middle Chinese voiced obstruents, but from nasals.

The voiced stops and and also are voicelessly prenasalized , , , respectively.

The voiced affricate dz, initial in such words as ri (/dzi˩/), ri (/dzi˧˥/), jiâng riang (/dziaŋ˥/), jia̍k riag (/dziak˦/) loses its affricate property with some younger speakers abroad, and is relaxed to .

Teochew consonants
Bilabial Alveolar Velar Glottal
Voiced
(no frictions)
nasal m n ŋ
plosive or lateral b l 來/內 ɡ 鵝/牙
Voiceless stops aspirated
plain p t k ʔ
Voiceless affricates aspirated tsʰ 菜/樹
plain ts 書/指/食
Fricatives s 士/速 h 海/系
(d)z 爾/貳

Unlike in Hokkien, nasal initials in Teochew are not generally considered allophones of the voiced plosives, as nasals are relatively more common in Teochew and have less usage restrictions. For example, Teochew allows for syllables like nge̍kngêg, which are impossible in Hokkien.

In Southern dialects of Teochew, labial initials (/p/, /pʰ/, /b/, /m/) have labiodental allophones (, , , ) before /-u-/.

Character Pe̍h-ūe-jī Peng'im Swatow dialect Teoyeo dialect
bu
puaⁿ buan
phuâ pua
phuè puê
bhu
bué bhuê
muē muê
滿 muá muan

Syllables

Syllables in Teochew contain an onset consonant, a medial glide, a nucleus, usually in the form of a vowel, but can also be occupied by a syllabic consonant like , and a final consonant. All the elements of the syllable except for the nucleus are optional, which means a vowel or a syllabic consonant alone can stand as a fully-fledged syllable.

Onsets

All the consonants except for the glottal stop ʔ shown in the consonants chart above can act as the onset of a syllable; however, the onset position is not obligatorily occupied.

Finals

Teochew finals consist maximally of a medial, nucleus and coda. The medial can be /i-/ or /u-/, the nucleus can be a monophthong or diphthong, and the coda can be a nasal or a stop. A syllable must consist minimally of a vowel nucleus or syllabic nasal.

Nucleus -a- -ɛ̝- -- -ɯ- -i- -u- -ai- -au- -oi- -ou- -ui- -iu- ∅-
Medial ∅- i- u- ∅- i- u- ∅- i- ∅- ∅- ∅- ∅- u- ∅- i- ∅- ∅- i- ∅- ∅-
Coda -∅ a ia ua e ue o io ɯ i u ai uai au iau oi ou ui iu
-◌̃ ã ĩã ũã ũẽ ĩõ ɯ̃ ĩ ãĩ ũãĩ ãũ ĩãũ õĩ õũ ũĩ ĩũ
-ʔ iaʔ uaʔ ueʔ ioʔ ɯʔ auʔ oiʔ iuʔ
-m am iam uam im
-ŋ iaŋ uaŋ ieng ueŋ ioŋ ɯŋ ŋ̩
-p ap iap uap ip
-k ak iak uak ek iek uek ok iok ɯk ik uk
  1. Only in Northern Teochew
  2. ^ /io/, /ĩõ/, /ioʔ/, /iau/, /ĩãũ/ are pronounced as /ie/, /ĩẽ/, /ieʔ/, /iou/, /ĩõũ/ in Chaozhou and Chenghai
  3. ^ /ieng/ and /iek/ are only found in Chaozhou dialect, while other dialects merge them with /iang/ and /iak/

In most dialects of Teochew, historical codas -n and -t are merged with -ŋ and -k. They were still present in mainstream Teochew in the 19th century, but now they are found only in certain peripheral dialects of Teochew, as well as in Hai Lok Hong Min.

Chaozhou /ieng/ and /iek/ are used in syllables that previously had /ien/ and /iet/, e.g. 顯 is different from 響 in Chaozhou (as /hieŋ˥˧/ and /hiaŋ˥˧/) and Hokkien (as /hien˥˧/ and /hiaŋ˥˧/), but not Swatow (both are /hiaŋ˥˧/).

Apart from the aforementioned rhymes, there are a few limitedly used finals with both glottal stop and nazalization, usually found in ideophones and interjections, e.g. he̍hⁿ /hẽʔ˥˦/ "agitated; confused", hauhⁿ /hãũʔ˧˨/ "to eat in large bites", khuàhⁿ-ua̍hⁿ 快活 /kʰũãʔ˨˩˨꜒꜔.ũãʔ˥˦/ "comfortable".

Tones

Teochew, like other Chinese varieties, is a tonal language. Like other Southern Min varieties, Teochew has split the Middle Chinese four tone into two registers (four "dark tones" and four "light tones"). The tones are numbered from 1 through 8, either in the "dark—light" order (the checked tones are 7 and 8) or in the "level—rising—departing—entering" order (the checked tones are 4 and 8). This section follows the second order, as used in Peng'im.

level

rising

departing

entering


dark
tone number
(Peng'im)
tone diacritic
(Pe̍h-ūe-jī)
none ́ ̀ none
(ending on -p, -t, -k, -h)
tone name 陰平
Im-phêⁿ
"Dark-level"
陰上
Im-siăng
"Dark-rising"
陰去
Im-khṳ̀
"Dark-departing"
陰入
Im-ji̍p
"Dark-entering"

light
tone number
(Peng'im)
tone diacritic
(Pe̍h-ūe-jī)
̂ ̃ ̄ ̍
(ending on -p, -t, -k, -h)
tone name 陽平
Iâng-phêⁿ
"Light-level"
陽上
Iâng-siăng
"Light-rising"
陽去
Iâng-khṳ̀
"Light-departing"
陽入
Iâng-ji̍p
"Light-entering"

Depending on the position of a word in a phrase, the tones can change and adopt extensive tone sandhi.

Northern Teochew

Northern Teochew dialects are not too different from each other in their tones. There are small differences in pronunciation of the tone ⑦, which can vary between low falling (21 ˨˩) and low level (22 ˨) among different dialects and individual speakers.

citation tones post-sandhi tones

level

rising

departing

entering

level

rising

departing

entering
Chaozhou, Chenghai

dark

33 ˧

53 ˥˧

212 ˨˩˨

32 ˧˨
34 ˧˦ 35 ˧˥ 53 ˥˧ 54 ˥˦

light

55 ˥

35 ˧˥

21 ˨˩ ~ 22 ˨

54 ˥˦
23 ˨˧ 21 ˨˩ ~ 22 ˨ 23 ˨˧ 32 ˧˨
Jieyang

dark

33 ˧

53 ˥˧

212 ˨˩˨

32 ˧˨
33 ˧ 35 ˧˥ 53 ˥ 54 ˥˦

light

55 ˥

35 ˧˥

22 ˨ ~ 21 ˨˩

54 ˥˦
22 ˨ ~ 21 ˨˩ 21 ˨˩ ~ 22 ˨ 32 ˧˨
Shantou, Raoping

dark

33 ˧

53 ˥˧

212 ˨˩˨

32 ˧˨
33 ˧ 35 ˧˥ 55 ˥ 54 ˥˦

light

55 ˥

35 ˧˥

21 ˨˩ ~ 22 ˨

54 ˥˦
21 ˨˩ ~ 22 ˨ 22 ˨ ~ 21 ˨˩ 32 ˧˨

There are minor differences in tone sandhi among the Northern Teochew dialects:

  • The most important difference is that the dark departing tone (③) becomes high falling (53 ˥˧) in Chaozhou and Jieyang and high level (55 ˥) in Shantou and Raoping.
  • In Chaozhou, the two level tones (① and ⑤) become slightly rising in sandhi (34 ˧˦ and 23 ˨˧ respectively), rather than level (33 ˧ and 22 ˨ ~ 21 ˨˩) as in other dialects.
  • In Jieyang, Chenghai and Chaozhou, the sandhi of tones ②, ③, and ④ have two pronunciations, one being slightly higher (35 ˧˥, 53 ˥˧, 54 ˥˦), used before syllables with high-onset tones (⑤ 55 ˥, ② 53 ˥˧, and ⑧ 54 ˥˦), and another one slightly lower (24 ˨˦, 42 ˦˨, 43 ˦˧), used before all other tones. In Shantou and Raoping, these tones have the same post-sandhi value regardless of the next syllable's tone.
  • In Jieyang, Chenghai and Chaozhou, the pronunciation of tone ② will become low level (21 ˨˩) after post-sandhi syllables of tone ②, ③, and ④, which is caused by the assimilation of falling tones.

The light departing tone (⑦) after sandhi is usually merged with the post-sandhi tone ⑤ or ⑥, depending on the dialect. For convenience, since the difference between them is still not large, all three light tones after sandhi may be described as identical and equal to pre-sandhi tone ⑦. The sandhi rules for Northern Teochew may be simplified as follows:

citation tones post-sandhi tones

level

rising

departing

entering

level

rising

departing

entering

dark
or

light
  1. Chaozhou, Chenghai, Jieyang
  2. Shantou, Raoping

Southern Teochew

Southern Teochew tones are noticeably diverse. Based on their tones, the Southern Teochew dialects can be divided into two broad areas: Teoyeo and Hui-Pou.

citation tones post-sandhi tones

level

rising

departing

entering

level

rising

departing

entering
Teoyeo (old)

dark

21 ˨˩

551 ˥˥˩

53 ˥˧

43 ˦˧
33 ˧ 53 ˥˧ 33 ˧ 5 ˥

light

44 ˦

=③

42 ˦˨

45 ˦˥
44 ˦ 21 ˨˩ 3 ˧
Teoyeo (new)

dark

31 ˧˩

55 ˥˥ ~ 35 ˧˥

52 ˥˨

32 ˧˨
31 ˧˩ 52 ˥˨ 23 ˨˧ 5 ˥

light

33 ˧ ~ 23 ˨˧

=③

43 ˦˧ ~ 44 ˦

45 ˦˥
33 ˧ ~ 23 ˨˧ 21 ˨˩ 3 ˧
Haimen

dark

31 ˧˩

551 ˥˥˩

51 ˥˩

43 ˦˧
33 ˧ 41 ˦˩ 44 ˦ 54 ˥˦

light

44 ˦

=①

441 ˦˦˩

45 ˦˥
44 ˦ 33 ˧ 43 ˦˧
Dahao

dark

21 ˨˩

24 ˨˦

52 ˥˨

3 ˧
21 ˨˩ 52 ˥˨ 33 ˧ 45 ˦˥

light

33 ˧

=③

31 ˧˩

45 ˦˥
33 ˧ 21 ˨˩ 3 ˧
Puning and Huilai

dark

34 ˧˦

53 ˥˧
or 55 ˥

31 ˧˩

32 ˧˨
33 ˧ 34 ˧˦ 55 ˥ 54 ˥˦

light

44 ˦

23 ˨˧

42 ˦˨
or =③
or =⑥

54 ˥˦
31 ˧˩ 33 ˧ 32 ˧˨
  1. Puning, Western Huilai, older speakers in Central Huilai
  2. Eastern Huilai, younger speakers in Central Huilai
  3. Puning, Eastern Huilai
  4. Central Huilai
  5. Western Huilai

Currently, a tone shift is ongoing in the Teoyeo dialect. There is a continuum between the "old accent" and "new accent". This shift is more advanced in urban dialects in Eastern Chaoyang (incl. Haojiang, especially the Dahao dialect), among female speakers, and in the younger generations (born after the 1980s). The principal features of this shift are as follows:

  • Dark level tone (①) shifts from 21 ˨˩ to 31 ˧˩.
  • Light level tone (⑤) shifts from high level 44 ˦ to mid-level 33 ˧ or mid-rising 23 ˨˧.
  • Dark rising tone (②) shifts from high fallig 551 ˥˥˩ to high level 55 ˥, and in urban Eastern Teoyeo dialects it can even become high rising 45 ˦˥ or 35 ˧˥.
  • Dark departing tone (③) and light departing tone (⑦) are falling in a "parallel" pattern (53 ˥˧ and 42 ˦˨ respectively) in the old accent, while in the new accent they are still falling, but the light departing tone (⑦) is more "flat" (52 ˥˨ and 43 ˦˧~44 ˦ respectively).

"Old" Teoyeo accent is notable for the fact that out of its five non-checked tones, four tones have falling contour.

Hui-Pou dialects are more homogeneous in their tones than Teoyeo dialects. Puning and Eastern Huilai dialects have 8 tones, while Central and Western Huilai have 7 tones (tone ⑦ is merged with other tones). Some of the Huilai dialects undergo tone shift similar to that in Teoyeo dialects, but to a lesser extent (particularly, tone ② becomes high level 55 rather than high falling 53).

Neutral tone

Like Hokkien, Teochew has the neutral tone. In pronunciation, the neutral tone is considered to be identical to the light departing tone (⑦) in the respective dialect, but when the original tone of the syllable was dark rising (②), the neutral tone is identical to the dark departing tone (③), and when the original tone was an entering tone (④ or ⑧), the neutral tone is identical to the dark entering tone (④).

citation tones neutral tone

level

rising

departing

entering

level

rising

departing

entering

dark

light

Some works refer to the neutral tone as "left-dominant tone sandhi". However, unlike the general ("right-dominant") Teochew tone sandhi, which is a regular phonetic change, the neutral tone is lexical and its occurrence cannot be predicted. Compare the following examples with the morpheme ni "year", where some words have the neutral tone, while others preserve the original tone.

tsâiⁿ--nî 前年 zain ni "year before last"
ău--nî 後年 ao ni "year after next"
tuā-tsâiⁿ--nî 大前年 dua zain ni "three years ago"
jĭ-káu--nî 二九年 ri gao ni "year 29"

but:

kim-nî 今年 gim ni "this year"
kū-nî 舊年 gu ni "last year"
mê-nî 明年 mên ni "next year"
jĭ-tsa̍p-ngŏu-nî 二十五年 ri zab ngou ni "25 years"

Grammar

The grammar of Teochew is similar to other Min languages, as well as some southern varieties of Chinese, especially with Hakka, Yue and Wu. The sequence 'subject–verb–object' is typical, like Standard Mandarin, although the 'subject–object–verb' form is also possible using particles.

Morphology

Pronouns

Personal pronouns

The personal pronouns in Teochew, like in other Chinese languages, do not show case marking, therefore ua means both I and me and i-nâng 伊人 i nang means they and them. The Southern Min languages, like some Mandarin dialects, have a distinction between an inclusive and exclusive we, meaning that when the addressee is being included, the inclusive pronoun nángnang would be used, otherwise uánguang is employed. Outside Southern Min varieties like Teochew, no other southern Chinese variety has this distinction.

Personal Pronouns in Teochew
Singular Plural
1st person ua I / me Inclusive nángnang we / us
Exclusive uánguang we / us
2nd person lṳ́le you nṳ́ng, níngneng, ning you (plural)
3rd person ii he/she/it/him/her ing 𪜶 ing
i-nâng 伊儂 i nang
they/them
  1. Also pronounced úng / ung in Chaozhou, ńg / ng in Chenghai
Possessive pronouns

Teochew does not distinguish the possessive pronouns from the possessive adjectives. As a general rule, the possessive pronouns or adjectives are formed by adding the genitive or possessive marker kâigai to their respective personal pronouns, as summarized below:

Possessive Pronouns in Teochew
Singular Plural
1st person uá-kâi 我個 ua gai my / mine Inclusive náng-kâi 咱個 nang gai our / ours
Exclusive uáng-kâi 阮個 uang gai ours / ours
2nd person lṳ́-kâi 汝個 le gai your / yours nṳ́ng-kâi, níng-kâi 恁個 neng gai, ning gai your / yours (plural)
3rd person i-kâi 伊個 i gai his / his; her / hers; its / its i-nâng-kâi 伊儂個 i nang gai their / theirs

púng

bung

CL-books

tsṳ

ze

book

si

be

ua

I

kâi

gai

POS

本 書 是

púng tsṳ sĭ uá kâi

bung2 ze1 si6 ua2 gai5

CL-books book be I POS

"The book is mine."

As kâi gai is the generic measure word, it may be replaced by other more appropriate classifiers:

ua

I

tiâu

diao

CL-clothes

kûng

gung

skirt

uá tiâu kûng

ua2 diao5 gung5

I CL-clothes skirt

"my skirt"

Demonstrative pronouns

Teochew has the typical two-way distinction between the demonstratives, namely the proximals and the distals. The basic determiners are tsízi "this" and hṳ́he "that", and they require at least a classifier (generic kâigai, collective tshohcoh, or another), which can be optionally preceded by a numeral.

The Teochew Demonstratives
Proximal Distal
General Singular tsí (kâi) 只(個) zi (gai) this (one) hṳ́ (kâi) 許(個) he (gai) that (one)
Collective tsí tshoh 只撮 zi coh these (few) hṳ́ tshoh 許撮 he coh those (few)
Plural (non-specific) tsiózio these hióhio those
Type tsiázia this kind of hiáhia that kind of
Spatial tsí kò 只塊 zi go here hṳ́ kò 許塊 he go there
tsí lăi 只內 zi lai here inside hṳ́ lăi 許內 he lai there inside
tsí kháu 只口 zi kao here outside hṳ́ kháu 許口 he kao there outside
Temporal tsí tsûng 只陣 zi zung now; recently hṳ́ tsûng 許陣 he zung then
Degree tsiòⁿzion this much hiòⁿhion that much
Adverbial tsiòⁿ seⁿ (iōⁿ) 照生(樣) zion sên (ion) like this hiòⁿ seⁿ (iōⁿ) 向生(樣) hion sên (ion) like that
Interrogative pronouns
The Teochew Interrogative Pronouns
who / whom tiâng 𫢗 diang
tī tiâng 底𫢗 di diang
tī nâng 底儂 di nang
what mih kâi 乜個 mih gai
what (kind of) + noun mihmih + N
which di + NUM + CL + N
tī kâi 底個 di gai
where tī kò 底塊 di go
when tiang sî 𫢗時 diang si
how, why manner tsò nî 做呢 zo ni
state mih seⁿ iōⁿ 乜生樣 mih sên ion
tsò nî iōⁿ 做呢樣 zo ni ion
tsăi seⁿ (iōⁿ) 在生(樣) zai sên (ion)
how many; how much kúigui + CL + N
jio̍h tsōi 若濟 rioh zoi + CL + N

Numerals

Some numerals in Teochew have two variants: the literary one and the vernacular one.

Value Literary Vernacular Notes
0 lêng / lêng khàng / kang may also be written as .
1 ik / ig tse̍k / zêg is often considered the original character for tse̍k / zêg.
When spelling numbers digit by digit, iau iao is also used for "one".
2 / ri / no / no may also be written as
The character has a literary reading liáng / liang.
3 sam / sam saⁿ / san Literary reading is used in some set compounds.
4 sṳ̀ / se / si Literary reading is extremely rare.
5 ngóu / ngou ngŏu / ngou Literary reading is used in some set compounds.
Also pronounced as ngŏm / ngom in Southern Teochew.
6 la̍k / lag Only vernacular reading.
7 tshik / cig Only literary reading.
8 poih / boih Only vernacular reading.
9 kiú / giu káu / gao Literary reading is used in some set compounds.
10 tsa̍p / zab Only vernacular reading.
100 peh / bêh Only vernacular reading.
1000 tshoiⁿ / coin Only vernacular reading.
Also tshaiⁿ / cain (in Kekyeo and Southern Teochew).
10000 buāng / bhuang Only literary reading
Also buēng / bhuêng (in Chaozhou).
Also bāng / bang (variant in Southern Teochew).

Generally, vernacular variants are used, and literary readings are limited to certain set compounds and idioms, e.g.: Sam-kok 三國, ngóu-kim 五金, kiú-siau 九霄, ngóu-tsháiⁿ-phiang-hung 五彩繽紛, sam-sṳ-jṳ̂-kiâⁿ 三思而行, kiú-liû-sam-kàu 九流三教, etc.

However, literary forms of 一 and 二 are more commonly used, particularly in the following cases:

  • for the last digit in compound numbers:
tsa̍p ik 十一 zab ig "eleven"
saⁿ tsa̍p jĭ 三十二 san zab ri "thirty two"
  • for counting tens (but not hundreds or thousands) in compound numbers
jĭ tsa̍p ik 二十一 ri zab ig "twenty one"
but:
tse̍k peh 一百 zêg bêh "one hundred"
nŏ tshoiⁿ 兩千 no coin "two thousands"
  • in ordinal numbers, names for days, and dates
tŏiⁿ jĭ 第二 doin ri "second"
tsheⁿ khî ik 星期一 cên ki ig "Monday"
tsiaⁿ gue̍h tshiu ik 正月初一 zian ghuêh ciu ig "first day of the Lunar New Year"
jĭ-khàng-iau-poih-nî jĭ-gue̍h jĭ-hō 2018年二月二號 ri kang iao boih ni ri ghuêh ri ho "February 2, 2018"

Passive construction

In Teochew passive construction, the agent phrase by somebody always has to be present, and is introduced by the preposition khṳhkeh or pungbung, both literally meaning "to give". If the agent is not explicitly named, its position is taken by nângnang (lit. "a person; one; somebody").

i

i

s/he

pung

bung

give

nâng

nang

person

thâi

tai

kill

掉。

tiāu

diao

be lost

伊 分 儂 刣 掉。

i pung nâng thâi tiāu

i1 bung1 nang5 tai5 diao7

s/he give person kill {be lost}

"S/he was killed (by someone)."

While in Mandarin one can have the agent introducer 被; bèi or 給; gěi alone without the agent itself, in Teochew it is not grammatical to omit this dummy agent nângnang.

kâi

gai

CL

pue

buê

cup

pung

bung

give

nâng

nang

person

khà

ka

break

掉。

tiāu

diao

be lost

個 杯 分 儂 敲 掉。

kâi pue pung nâng khà tiāu

gai5 buê1 bung1 nang5 ka3 diao7

CL cup give person break {be lost}

"The cup was broken."

(cf. Mandarin 杯子給打破了; bēizi gěi dǎ pòle)

The agent phrase pung nâng 分儂 bung nang always comes immediately after the subject, not at the end of the sentence or between the auxiliary and the past participle like in some European languages (e.g. German, Dutch).

Comparison

Comparative construction with two or more nouns

Teochew, like Cantonese but unlike Hokkien, uses the construction "X ADJ kuèguê Y", to express the comparison:

i

i

s/he

ngiá

ngia

beautiful

kuè

guê

exceed

汝。

lṳ́

le

you

伊 雅 過 汝。

i ngiá kuè lṳ́

i1 ngia2 guê3 le2

s/he beautiful exceed you

"She is more beautiful than you."

(cf. Cantonese 佢靚過你; keoi5 leng3 gwo3 nei5)

However, due to modern influences from Mandarin, the Mandarin structure "X 比 Y ADJ" has also gained popularity over the years. Therefore, the same sentence can be re-structured and becomes:

i

i

s/he

bi

compare

lṳ́

le

you

雅。

ngiá

ngia

beautiful

伊 比 汝 雅。

i pí lṳ́ ngiá

i1 bi2 le2 ngia2

s/he compare you beautiful

"She is more beautiful than you."

(cf. Mandarin 她比你漂亮; tā bǐ nǐ piàoliang)

Comparative construction with only one noun

The 過- or 比-construction must involve two or more nouns to be compared; an ill-formed sentence will be yielded when only one is being mentioned:

* 伊雅過 (?)

Teochew is different from English, where the second noun being compared can be left out ("Tatyana is more beautiful (than Lisa)". In cases like this, the 夭-construction must be used instead:

i

i

s/he

iău

iau

comparatively

雅。

ngiá

ngia

beautiful

伊 夭 雅。

i iău ngiá

i1 iau6 ngia2

s/he comparatively beautiful

"She is more beautiful."

The same holds true for Mandarin and Cantonese in that another structure needs to be used when only one of the nouns being compared is mentioned. Teochew and Mandarin both use a pre-modifier (before the adjective) while Cantonese uses a post-modifier (after the adjective).

  • Mandarin

比較

bǐjiào

漂亮

piàoliang

她 {比較} 漂亮

tā bǐjiào piàoliang

  • Cantonese

keoi5

leng3

di1

佢 靚

keoi5 leng3 di1

There are two words which are intrinsically comparative in meaning, i.e. iâⁿian "to win" and susu "to lose". They can be used alone or in conjunction with the 過-structure:

tsí

zi

niá

nian

kûng

gung

su

su

(過)

(kuè)

(guê)

hṳ́

he

領。

niá

nian

只 領 裙 輸 (過) 許 領。

tsí niá kûng su (kuè) hṳ́ niá

zi2 nian2 gung5 su1 (guê3) he2 nian2

"This skirt is not as good as that one."

ua

lăi

lai

kâi

gai

電腦

tiĕng-náu

diêng nao

iâⁿ

ian

i

i

kâi

gai

hoh

hoh

濟。

tsōi

zoi

我 內 個 電腦 贏 伊 個 好 濟。

uá lăi kâi tiĕng-náu iâⁿ i kâi hoh tsōi

ua2 lai6 gai5 {diêng6 nao2} ian5 i1 gai5 hoh4 zoi7

"My computer (at home) is far better than his."

Note the use of the adverbial hoh tsōi 好濟 hoh zoi at the end of the sentence to express a higher degree.

Equal construction

In Teochew, the idea of equality is expressed with the word pêⁿbên or pêⁿ-iōⁿ 平樣 bên ion:

tsí

zi

púng

bung

tsṳ

ze

kah

gah

hṳ́

he

púng

bung

pêⁿ

bên

重。

tăng

dang

只 本 書 佮 許 本 平 重。

tsí púng tsṳ kah hṳ́ púng pêⁿ tăng

zi2 bung2 ze1 gah4 he2 bung2 bên5 dang6

"This book is as heavy as that one."

i

i

no

nâng

nang

pêⁿ

bên

平樣。

pêⁿ-iōⁿ

bên ion

伊 兩 儂 平 平樣。

i nŏ nâng pêⁿ pêⁿ-iōⁿ

i1 no6 nang5 bên5 {bên5 ion7}

"They are the same."

("They look the same/They're as good as each other/They're as bad as each other"; lit. "The two people are the same same way")

Superlative construction

To express the superlative, Teochew uses the adverb siăngsiang or siăng-téng 上頂 siang dêng. The latter variant is usually used with a complimentary connotation.

tsí

zi

koiⁿ

goin

mue̍h

muêh

上頂

siăng-téng

siang dêng

好食。

hó-tsia̍h

ho ziah

只 間 物 上頂 好食。

tsí koiⁿ mue̍h siăng-téng hó-tsia̍h

zi2 goin1 muêh8 {siang6 dêng2} {ho2 ziah8}

"This (restaurant) is (absolutely) the most delicious."

伊儂

i-nâng

i nang

tùi

dui

ua

siăng

siang

好。

ho

伊儂 對 我 上 好。

i-nâng tùi uá siăng hó

{i1 nang5} dui3 ua2 siang6 ho2

"They treat me best." lit. "The people treat me very well."

Vocabulary

Teochew vocabulary consists of several layers, including:

  • Pan-Sinitic words, found in most other languages of the Sinosphere (such as Hokkien, Japanese, Mandarin, Cantonese, Korean, etc), often derived from Literary Chinese or orthographically borrowed from Japanese or Mandarin
ì-kièng 意見 i giêng "opinion",
kok-ke 國家 gog gê "state; country",
kak-hung 結婚 gag hung "to marry",
khùng-nâng 困難 kung nang "hard; difficult",
seng-mĕng 生命 sêng mêng "life",
tāu-hū 豆腐 dao hu "tofu"
tiĕng-uē 電話 diêng-uê "telephone",
tshuk-kháu 出口 cug kao "exit",
huang-uàⁿ 方案 huang uan "plan; scheme",
bûng-huè 文化 bhung huê "culture",
kāng-huâ-kok 共和國 gang hua gog "republic",
tiĕng-náu 電腦 diêng nao "computer"
  • Basic words derived from Old Chinese, usually via Proto-Min; generally, they are not found in other languages of the Sinosphere, except as morphemes in compound words
lṳ́ le "you",
ma̍k mag "eye",
tṳ̄ de "chopsticks",
nâng nang "man; person",
saⁿ san "shirt"
ta da "dry",
khṳ̀ng keng "to hide",
khṳh keh "to give",
lim lim "to drink"
  • Teochew-specific words
tàⁿ dan "to say; to talk",
ĭⁿ in "to sleep",
ngà nga "stupid; foolish",
jṳ̂ re "to wipe; to mop",
tsò-nî 做呢 zo-ni "why; how"

Most of the Teochew vocabulary (around 70-80%) consists of the pan-Sinitic words. However, their proportion is much lower among the most basic words used in daily speech, as they tend to belong to the last three categories. This pattern is also seen in other languages of the Sinosphere, e.g. in Japanese, where the Sino-Japanese words constitute around 60-70% of total vocabulary, but only around 20% of words used in common speech.

Literary and vernacular readings

Main article: Literary and colloquial readings

In Teochew, like in other Min languages, it is common for a character to have at least two readings, called "literary" and "vernacular". The number of such doublets in Teochew is somewhat smaller than in Hokkien, due to Teochew being prone to use only vernacular readings and lose their literary counterparts.

Relationship with Hokkien

Teochew and Hokkien are both Southern Min languages. Hokkien, which is spoken in southern Fujian, shares many phonetic similarities with Teochew, but they have low lexical similarity. Although Teochew and Hokkien share some cognates, there are pronounced differences in most vowels with some consonant and tone shifts.

Teochew has only 51% intelligibility with the Tong'an Xiamen dialect of Hokkien (Cheng 1997), approximately the same as the percentage of intelligibility as between Russian and Ukrainian languages, while it has even lower mutual intelligibility language with other dialects of the Hokkien language.

Most Teochew people do not speak Hokkien and the majority of Hokkien and Teochew people both see themselves as a distinct ethnic groups / nation. There are a minority of Teochew people who speak Hokkien as their mother tongue, most of whom have close contact or relatives in the neighbouring three originally-Teochew counties of what is now South Fujian, which were seceded to Fujian during the early Tang dynasty and subsequently assimilated into the Hokkien population. These Hokkien-speaking Teochews are more likely to treat Teochew simply as accented dialect of Hokkien. These people usually have a strong sense of Hokkien identity.

Pronunciation

In Hokkien, denasalization of initial consonants is extensive, and sounds , , are usually viewed as allophones of /b/, /l~d/, /g/ used with nasalized rhymes. In Teochew and Hai Lok Hong, denasalization is less common.

Character Teochew Hokkien
'to go against' nge̍k ge̍k
'jade' ge̍k
'suitable' ngî
'doubt'
'handle; knob' niú liú
'willow' liú
'man' nâng lâng
'cage' lâng
'slow' măng bān
'ten thousand' buāng
'eye' ma̍k ba̍k
'ink' ba̍k

Hokkien and Hai Lok Hong have three pairs of codas: -ng/-k, -m/-p and -n/-t. Most dialects of Teochew have merged -n/-t with -ng/-k. On the other hand, many Teochew dialects, except urban Swatow and Chenghai, do not dissimilate the Middle Chinese rhyme -jom, e.g. they have huàm , huăm , huap , while Hokkien has huàn , huǎn , huat .

Teochew (except some Southern Teochew dialects) and Hai Lok Hong have 8 citation tones, while most dialects of Hokkien have 7 tones.

In individual rhymes, the differences between Hokkien and Teochew are comparable to differences between the dialects of each language. For example, both Northern Hokkien and Northern Teochew have the /ɯ/ sound, which is not found in Southern Teochew and Southern Hokkien. Northern Hokkien and Teochew both have -ng (in Hokkien and Southern Teochew) or -ung (in Northern Teochew) rhyme in words like pn̄g/pūng, mn̂g/mûng, while Southern Hokkien and Hai Lok Hong have -uiⁿ instead ( pūiⁿ, mûi).

Grammar

Teochew grammar shows some Cantonese or Hakka influence. For example,

  • Teochew uses comparative structure with -kuè "to exceed, to surpass", as in Cantonese, while Hokkien uses native Min comparative construction with an adverb khah "more".
  • Teochew, like Cantonese, uses bare classifiers to mean "this", but this usage is not typical for Hokkien.
  • Teochew uses relevant classifiers to indicate possession; e.g., the phrase "my book" may be expressed with both uá púng tsṳ 我本書 (with classifier for books) and uá kâi tsṳ 我個書 (with possessive particle) in Teochew, but in Hokkien, only góa ê tsṳ 我兮書 is used.

Teochew differs from Hokkien in function words:

Teochew Hai Lok Hong Hokkien explanation
kâi kâi ê possessive particle

(dialectal)
𫩷 leh
佇咧 tǐ-leh
progressive aspect marker
在塊 -tŏ-kò -nín --leh durative aspect marker
pung
khṳh
pun
kho
hō͘ passive or causative agent preposition
àiⁿ àiⁿ beh "to want" (modal verb)
hoh hoh chin "very" (dummy adverb in adjectival sentences)

Vocabulary

Teochew has many differences with Hokkien in its basic vocabulary. Some of the differences are due to influence from Cantonese, while others are alternative yet still native Min words.

gloss Teochew Cantonese Hokkien
"to see" thóiⁿ tái khòaⁿ
"to read" 讀書 tha̍k-tsṳ 讀書 duhksyū 讀冊 tha̍k-chheh
"to sleep" n̍gh, ĭⁿ fan khùn
"beautiful" ngiá leng súi
"to speak" tàⁿ góng kóng
seh
"what" 乜個 mih-kâi 乜嘢 mātyéh 啥乜 siáⁿ-mi̍h
"child" 孥囝 nou-kiáⁿ 細路 sailouh 囡仔 gín-á
"black" ou hāk

Teochew tends to use more vernacular readings where Hokkien prefers the literary readings. For instance, Hokkien uses 多謝 to-siā for "Thank you", with literary reading for the first character, while Teochew reads it with the vernacular reading as tsōi-siā. The character has both literary reading (Teochew ang, Hokkien an) and vernacular reading (both uaⁿ), the latter more commonly used in Teochew (安全 uaⁿ-tshuâng, 安心 uaⁿ-sim, 安穩 uaⁿ-úng, 治安 tī-uaⁿ, etc), while being rare in Hokkien (used in a few place names: 同安 Tâng-uaⁿ, 南安 Lâm-uaⁿ, 惠安 Hūi-uaⁿ).

For some characters, literary readings only exist in Hokkien (even if used exclusively for declamation of Classical Chinese texts), while many vernacular readings are used only in Teochew.

Character Type of reading Teochew Hokkien Middle Chinese
(Baxter)
or Proto-Southern-Min
(Kwok Bit-Chee)
Old Chinese
(Baxter-Sagart)
'meat' literary jio̍k MC nyuwk *k.nuk
vernacular ne̍k he̍k PSM *nhɯk3
'white' literary pe̍k MC baek *bˤrak
vernacular pe̍h pe̍h PSM *peʔ8
'before' literary chiân MC dzen *dzˤen
vernacular tsôiⁿ chêng /
châiⁿ /
chûiⁿ
PSM *tsõi2
'ant' literary MC ngjeX *m-qʰrajʔ
vernacular hiă hiă PSM *hia4
'branch' literary chi MC tsye *ke
vernacular ki ki PSM *ki1
'abundant' literary MC pjuwH *pək-s
vernacular PSM *pu5
'beautiful' literary múi MC mijX *mrəjʔ
vernacular bué

See also

Notes

  1. Min is believed to have split from Old Chinese, rather than Middle Chinese like other varieties of Chinese.
  2. Chinese: 潮州話, Teochew: Tiê-tsiu-uē / Tiô-tsiu-uē (Pe̍h-ūe-jī) / Diê ziu uê / Dioziu uê (Peng'im), Mandarin: Cháozhōu huà
  3. Chinese: 潮汕話, Teochew: Tiê-suaⁿ-uē / Tiô-suaⁿ-uē (Pe̍h-ūe-jī) / Diê suan uê / Diosuan uê (Peng'im), Mandarin: Cháoshàn huà
  4. Mandarin 'Chaozhou'
  5. Mandarin 'Chaoshan'

References

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  2. Language atlas of China (2nd edition), City University of Hong Kong, 2012, ISBN 978-7-10-007054-6.
  3. 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
  4. Pulleyblank, Edwin G. (1984), Middle Chinese: A study in Historical Phonology, Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, p. 3, ISBN 978-0-7748-0192-8
  5. Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin; Bank, Sebastian (July 10, 2023). "Glottolog 4.8 - Min". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology. doi:10.5281/zenodo.7398962. Archived from the original on October 13, 2023. Retrieved October 13, 2023.
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  7. ^ Zhang, Jingfen (January 4, 2021). Tono-types and Tone Evolution: The Case of Chaoshan. Springer Nature. ISBN 978-981-334-870-7.
  8. 潘家懿; 鄭守治 (March 1, 2010). "粵東閩南語的分布及方言片的劃分". 臺灣語文研究. 5 (1): 145–165. doi:10.6710/JTLL.201003_5(1).0008.
  9. Lin, Lunlun; Lin, Chunyu (2007). Guangdong Nan'ao Dao fang yan yu yin ci hui yan jiu. Huaxia ying cai ji jin xue shu wen ku (Di 1 ban ed.). Beijing: Zhonghua shu ju. ISBN 978-7-101-05600-6. OCLC 190795329.
  10. ^ Qibin, Zhang (December 23, 2023). "LANGUAGE SITUATION IN THE CHAOSHAN COMMUNITY: A PILOT STUDY". Sociolingvistika. 3 (15): 98–124. doi:10.37892/2713-2951-3-15-98-124. ISSN 2713-2951.
  11. 潘家懿 (2009). "粤东闽语存在齿唇音声母". 中国语文 (2009–1): 81–83.
  12. 呉芳 (2013). 粤东闽语前后鼻音韵尾类型研究. 潮学研究丛书 (in Chinese). 曁南大学出版社. ISBN 978-7-5668-0646-8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  13. ^ Lin, Qing (2019). The Diachrony of Tone Sandhi: Evidence from Southern Min Chinese. Frontiers in Chinese Linguistics (1st ed. 2019 ed.). Singapore: Springer Singapore : Imprint: Springer. ISBN 978-981-13-1939-6.
  14. 林伦伦, 陈小枫. 广东闽方言语音研究. 1996: 汕头大学出版社. pp. 95–96. ISBN 7810360914.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  15. 徐馥瓊. 粤东闽语语音研究. ISBN 9787520398350.
  16. "潮陽地區四降調系統的變異及演化". Language and Linguistics (in Chinese). 21 (3): 467–511. July 16, 2020. doi:10.1075/lali.00068.zha. ISSN 1606-822X.
  17. ^ Ling, XU Hui; 许惠玲 (2007). "Aspect of Chaozhou Grammar A Synchronic Description of the Jieyang Variety / 潮州話揭陽方言語法研究". Journal of Chinese Linguistics Monograph Series (22): i–304. ISSN 2409-2878.
  18. Kwok, Bit-Chee (2018). Southern Min: comparative phonology and subgrouping. Routledge studies in East Asian linguistics. Vol. 2. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-94365-0.

Sources

  • Beijing da xue Zhongguo yu yan wen xue xi yu yan xue jiao yan shi. (2003). Han yu fang yin zi hui. (Chinese dialectal vocabulary) Beijing: Yu wen chu ban she (北京大學中國語言文學系語言學教研室, 2003. 漢語方音字彙. 北京: 語文出版社) ISBN 7-80184-034-8
  • Cai Junming. (1991). Putonghua dui zhao Chaozhou fang yan ci hui. (Chaozhou dialectal vocabulary, contrasted with Mandarin) Hong Kong: T. T. Ng Chinese Language Research Centre (蔡俊明, 1991. 普通話對照潮州方言詞彙. 香港: 香港中文大學吳多泰中國語文研究中心) ISBN 962-7330-02-7
  • Chappell, Hilary (ed.) (2001). Sinitic Grammar: Synchronic and Diachronic Perspectives. Oxford; New York: OUP ISBN 0-19-829977-X
  • Chen, Matthew Y. (2000). Tone Sandhi: patterns across Chinese dialects. Cambridge, England: CUP ISBN 0-521-65272-3
  • DeFrancis, John. (1984). The Chinese language: fact and fantasy. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0-8248-1068-6
  • Li, Xin Kui. (1994). Guangdong di fang yan. (Dialects of Guangdong) Guangzhou, China: Guangdong ren min chu ban she (李新魁, 1994. 廣東的方言. 廣州: 廣東 人民出版社) ISBN 7-218-00960-3
  • Li, Yongming. (1959). Chaozhou fang yan. (Chaozhou dialect) Beijing: Zhonghua. (李永明, 1959. 潮州方言. 北京: 中華)
  • Lin, Lun Lun. (1997). Xin bian Chaozhou yin zi dian. (New Chaozhou pronunciation dictionary) Shantou, China: Shantou da xue chu ban she. (林倫倫, 1997. 新編潮州音字典. 汕頭: 汕頭大學出版社) ISBN 7-81036-189-9
  • Norman, Jerry. (2002). Chinese. Cambridge, England: CUP ISBN 0-521-29653-6
  • Ramsey, S. Robert (1986). Languages of China. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press ISBN 0-691-06694-9
  • Xu, Huiling (2007). Aspects of Chaoshan grammar: A synchronic description of the Jieyang dialect. Monograph Series Journal of Chinese Linguistics 22
  • Yap, FoongHa; Grunow-Hårsta, Karen; Wrona, Janick (ed.) (2011). "Nominalization in Asian Languages: Diachronic and typological perspectives". Hong Kong Polytechnic University /Oxford University : John Benjamins Publishing Company ISBN 978-9027206770

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