Sinological Phonetic Notation
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Chinese linguists use a number of additional phonetic symbols that are not part of the standard
International Phonetic Alphabet The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) is an alphabetic system of phonetic notation based primarily on the Latin script. It was devised by the International Phonetic Association in the late 19th century as a standard written representation ...
. These symbols are commonly encountered in introductory textbooks of Chinese phonetics and in introductory
descriptive In the study of language, description or descriptive linguistics is the work of objectively analyzing and describing how language is actually used (or how it was used in the past) by a speech community. François & Ponsonnet (2013). All aca ...
works of any Chinese "dialects". Many Western linguists who work in the field of Chinese linguistics also use these symbols, for instance, Loggins (2022) writes " ointroduce the general reader to what they may encounter should they consult one of such publications, I am using the IPA-castaways and .


Letters

These primary vowel letters are used by those who want symbols for five equally-spaced vowels in formant space. They derive from the Americanist proposal by Bloch & Trager. * = central * = mid * = mid * = a vowel between and . The following letters, sometimes mistakenly called "apical", derive from Karlgren, from the 'long i' and 'long y' of the Swedish Dialect Alphabet, with a terminal added to resemble a turned long iota. * = or * = or * = * = The following consonant letters are featural derivatives of and , which in the Sinological literature often stand for and rather than
alveolo-palatal In phonetics, alveolo-palatal (alveolopalatal, ''alveo-palatal'' or ''alveopalatal'') consonants, sometimes synonymous with pre-palatal consonants, are intermediate in articulation between the coronal and dorsal consonants, or which have simu ...
and of the IPA. * = * = or * = or * = * = or * = or Unicode support is pending for modifier (superscript) variants of all but .


Tone diacritics

Sinologists tend to use superscript Chao tone numerals rather than the Chao tone letters of the IPA, even though the numerals conflict with their values in other parts of the world. The correspondence is 1 for low pitch and 5 for high; single digits are frequently doubled to prevent confusion with
tone number Tone numbers are numerical digits used like letters to mark the tones of a language. The number is usually placed after a romanized syllable. Tone numbers are defined for a particular language, so they have little meaning between languages. Othe ...
s, though sometimes a single digit is used with a short vowel and a double digit with a long vowel. * or = * or = * or = * or = * or =


Universal Phonetic Symbol Set in China

The ''Universal Phonetic Symbol Set in China'' is a set of nationally recognized phonetic symbols based on the IPA. It consists of the following sets of symbols,The Universal Phonetic Symbol Set in China [中国通用音标符号集
Ministry of Education of the People’s Republic of China, Language and Writing Standards no. GF 3007-2006.
* the full set of IPA consonant, vowel and tone letters, as well as a substantial fraction of historical and ext-IPA; * the Sinological letters listed above; * the affricate ligatures , plus analogous ligatures for , of which tθ dð are scheduled for Unicode 18; * Americanist notation noted in the IPA handbook such as ''č'' and ''ƛ''; Greek letters commonly substituted for IPA such as ''γ'' and ''η''; ''ψ'' of UPA, and ''þ'' * the IPA variants schwa with the hook of an ''r'', gelded question mark, and baby gamma; * an ʅ-ʯ ligature and what looks like an ι-ɕ ligature; * tone letters include both generic and tone-sandhi , and the various combinations they form; the neutral-tone letters and sandhi , and the traditional tone marks of yin ꜀píng, ꜂shǎng, qù꜄, ruʔ꜆ and yang ꜁píng, ꜃shǎng, qù꜅, ruʔ꜇; * the full set of IPA combining and spacing diacritics, including old IPA / Sinological ʻ for aspiration, as well as some historical and ext-IPA diacritics; * the Sinological dot ; * the arrows ↑ ↓ ↗ ↘ ⤴ ⤵ ↕ and the inverse of ↕ wo arrows facing each other vertically * ≺ for inhalation and the null symbol ''slashed zero''.


References

International Phonetic Alphabet Phonetic alphabets Sinology {{phonetics-stub