Talk:Checked tone

I removed the tone numbers in the comparative chart, since each language had a different convention, making them worse than useless for comparison. kwami (talk) 09:30, 14 September 2009 (UTC)


 * If it is possible, the original contributors to this article should change the tone marks in the table to proper tone letters, and give their syllables in IPA. I have cited a source for my reconstruction of MC fanqie and IPA gloss as from the online Japanese resource http://kanji-database.sourceforge.net/dict/sbgy/. Dylanwhs (talk) 00:02, 20 January 2011 (UTC)

Hokkien readings.
I've gone back to earlier editions of this page where the original tone letter rendering was present. However, since then, new information with slight differences in pronunciation in the Hokkien examples have occured. I'm preserving the following so other wikipedians with a good grasp of Hokkien can edit the piece and see which is appropriate.

Edit 20 Jan 2011 - this was so the tone letters could be included.

,

,

,

,

,

Previously the IPA had diacrtitics rather than tone letters.

,

,

,

,

,

,

As you can see, there are vowel differences and spellings which need to be addressed. Dylanwhs (talk) 10:46, 20 January 2011 (UTC)

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"yang" meant where "yin" is written?
In the article I read:


 * Upper yin (short yin, 短陰入/上陰入)
 * Middle / Lower yin (long yin, 長中入/下中入), derived from the upper tone
 * Upper yin (short yang, 中入/短陽入/上陽入)
 * Lower yin (long yang, 長陽入/下陽入)

I wonder whether the author meant:


 * Upper yin (short yin, 短陰入/上陰入)
 * Middle / Lower yin (long yin, 長中入/下中入), derived from the upper tone
 * Upper yang (short yang, 中入/短陽入/上陽入)
 * Lower yang (long yang, 長陽入/下陽入)

Can s/he please comment on this?Redav (talk) 22:53, 22 February 2020 (UTC)