Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Zhuyin

Encyclopedia : Z : ZH : ZHU : Zhuyin


Chinese language romanization
Chinese language
   General Chinese

Mandarin

For Standard Mandarin
    EFEO
    Gwoyeu Romatzyh
    Hanyu Pinyin
    Latinxua Sinwenz
    Lessing-Othmer
    Mandarin Phonetic Symbols II
    Postal System Pinyin
    Tongyong Pinyin
    Wade-Giles
    Yale

Cantonese

For Standard Cantonese
    Ball
    Barnett-Chao
    Chalmers
    Canton
    Hong Kong Government
    Jyutping
    Meyer-Wempe
    Sidney Lau
    S. L. Wong (romanisation)
    Standard Cantonese Pinyin
    Standard Romanization
    Tipson
    Williams-Eitel
    Yale

Wu

For Shanghainese
    Northern Wu (2005)
    Lumazi (2004)
    Latin Phonetic Method (2001)
    Zhu Xiaonong (1995)
    Qian Nairong (1989)
    Y. R. Chao (1928)
    Davis-Silsby (1900)
    Edkins (1853)
    Summers (1853)

Min Nan
For Min Nan dialects in Fujian and Taiwan
    Pe view] • [ talk] • [ edit]

Zhuyin Fuhao (Traditional Chinese: 注音符號; Hanyu Pinyin: Zhùyīn Fúhào; Wade-Giles: Chu-yin fu-hao), or "Symbols for Annotating Sounds", often abbreviated as Zhuyin, or known as Bopomofo (ㄅㄆㄇㄈ) after the first four letters of this Chinese phonemic alphabet (bo po mo fo), is the national phonetic system of the Republic of China (Taiwan) for teaching the Chinese languages, especially Standard Mandarin, to people learning to read and write and/or to people learning to speak Mandarin. (See Uses). The system uses 37 special symbols to represent the Mandarin sounds: 21 consonants and 16 vowels. Each symbol represents a group of sounds without much ambiguity.

History

The Commission on the Unification of Pronunciation, led by Woo Tsin-hang from 1912 to 13, created a system called Guoyin Zimu (國音字母 "National Pronunciation Letters") or Zhuyin Zimu (註音字母 or 注音字母 "Sound-annotating Letters") which is based on Zhang Binglin's shorthands. (For differences with the Zhang system, see Commission on the Unification of Pronunciation#Phonetic symbols.) A draft was released on July 11, 1913 by the Republic of China National Ministry of Education, but it was not officially proclaimed until November 23, 1918. Zhuyin Zimu was renamed to Zhuyin Fuhao in April 1930. The use of Zhuyin Fuhao has continued after 1949 on Taiwan and its outlying islands under ROC administration. On the Chinese mainland, Zhuyin Fuhao was superseded by the pinyin system promulgated by the People's Republic of China, although the pronunciation of words in standard dictionaries are given in both pinyin and Zhuyin.

The ROC Education Ministry has attempted for many years to phase out the use of Zhuyin in favor of a system based on Roman characters (see MPS II). However, this transition has been extremely slow due to the difficulty in teaching elementary school teachers a new Roman-based system.

Use as an input method

Zhuyin can be used as an input method for Chinese characters. It is one of the few input methods that can be found on most modern personal computers without the user having to download or install any additional software. It is also one of the few input methods that can be used for inputting Chinese characters on certain cell phones.

Zhuyin keypads are typical on cell phones in Taiwan
Enlarge
Zhuyin keypads are typical on cell phones in Taiwan

A typical keyboard layout for Zhuyin on computers
A typical keyboard layout for Zhuyin on computers

Symbol origins

There was no official document explaining the details of the origins of the characters, but they are apparent if one understands some basic Chinese characters. The zhuyin symbols are mainly fragments of characters that contain the sound that each symbol represents. For example: A few were made by adding additional strokes, for example: A few are virtually identical to Chinese characters still in use, for example: Many are nearly entirely identical to radicals with the same sounds, for example: Other symbols are based entirely or partly on obsolete variants of characters, for example: There are still others that are totally unlike any known symbols, but were designed to look like, and be written in the same style as, Chinese characters. The Zhuyin characters usually are represented in typographic fonts as if drawn with an ink brush (as in Regular Script).

Uses

These phonetic symbols sometimes appear as ruby characters printed next to the Chinese characters in young children's books, and in editions of classical texts (which frequently use characters that appear at very low frequency rates in newspapers and other such daily fare). In advertisements, these phonetic symbols are sometimes used to write certain particles (e.g., ㄉ instead of 的); other than this, one seldom sees these symbols used in mass media adult publications except as a pronunciation guide (or index system) in dictionary entries. Bopomofo symbols are also mapped to the ordinary Roman character keyboard (1 = bo, q = po, a = mo, and so forth) used in one method for inputting Chinese text when using the computer.

Unlike pinyin, the sole purpose for Zhuyin in elementary education is to teach Standard Mandarin pronunciation to children. Grade one textbooks of all subjects (including Mandarin) are entirely in zhuyin. After that year, Chinese character texts are given in annotated form. Around grade four, presence of Zhuyin annotation is greatly reduced, remaining only in the new character section. School children learn the symbols so that they can decode pronunciations given in a Chinese dictionary, and also so that they can find how to write words for which they know only the sounds.

Pinyin, on the other hand, is dual-purpose. Besides being a pronunciation notation, pinyin is used widely in publications in mainland China. Some books from mainland China are published purely in pinyin with not even a single Chinese character. Those books are targeted to minority tribal groups or Westerners who know spoken Mandarin but have not yet learned written Chinese characters.

Zhuyin will probably never replace Traditional Chinese just as hiragana has never replaced characters in Japanese texts even though substituting hiragana for characters is always an option. Not only are the characters valued for esthetic and other axiological reasons, but (once they have been learned) reading characters required fewer eye fixations and eliminates the ambiguities in any alphabetic or syllabic writing system caused by the immense number of homonyms in Chinese.

Zhuyin is also used to write some of the aboriginal languages of Taiwan. For these it is a primary writing system, not an ancillary system as it is for Chinese.

For non-native speakers of Mandarin Chinese, Zhuyin can be useful as a learning tool. Because it does not use romanization, confusion over "Latin alphabet" sounds and "Chinese" sounds is not an issue. As well Zhuyin's formation of initials and finals to form syllables is more straightforward than Pinyin's. However, for one not familiar with Zhuyin, it can be more difficult to first understand the proper pronunciations. With its own keyboard layout, it is also less easily used to enter Chinese by people using a standard latin-based keyboard.

Writing

The boxes represent the outermost extent of the Zhuyin and Hanzi.
graphic version of the tone marks

-->
Zhuyin symbols are written like Chinese characters, including the general order of strokes and positioning. They are always placed to the right of the Chinese characters, whether the characters are arranged vertically or horizontally. Technically, these are Ruby characters. Very rarely do they appear on top of Chinese characters when written horizontally as furigana would be written above kanji in a Japanese text. Because a syllable block contains usually two or three Zhuyin symbols (which themselves fit in a square format) stacked on top of each other, the blocks are rectangular.

The tone marks are similar to the later developed Pinyin tone symbols, except that the first tone has no symbolization at all, and the neutral tone appears as a black dot. The neutral dot is the only mark to be placed on top of the vertical Zhuyin syllable block, the remaining three are in a vertical strip to the right of the character.

The tone marks are sometimes given in Regular Script style, matching the associated Chinese characters, and have the same basic shape as do those of the pinyin tone symbols. However, they vary in detail. The thickened end of Zhuyin's second (rising) tone is always at the lower left, whereas the second tone mark in the Pinyin system is a straight line of uniform width. The third tone mark displays the greatest variation.

Zhuyin's tone symbolization was used in the ROC-sponsored romanizations created by the Mandarin Promotion Council. The tone symbols in that system were identical with the Zhuyin tone symbols, except that they were not in Regular Style calligraphy, but in a Western font face and so resemble the tone symbols used in Pinyin.

Most ㄅㄆㄇㄈ characters are written in the same stroke order as other Chinese characters. However, because they are an alphabet, some are written faster. For example, both ㄓ and ㄖ are written in three strokes. (

; 
)

Zhuyin vs. Tongyong Pinyin & Hanyu Pinyin

Zhuyin and Pinyin are based on the same Mandarin pronunciations, hence there is a mostly 1-to-1 mapping between the two systems. In the table below, the 'Zhuyin' and 'Pinyin' columns show equivalency.

【】represents the form used in combination with other symbols.
A comparison between Pinyin and Zhuyin for Standard Mandarin can also be done by comparing entries in the following pages:
Zhuyin vs. Pinyin
Initials
Zhuyin Tongyong Pinyin Hanyu Pinyin Wade-Giles Example(Zhuyin, Hanyu)
b b p   八 (ㄅㄚ, ba)
p p p' 杷 (ㄆㄚˊ, pa)
m m m 馬 (ㄇㄚˇ, ma)
f f f 法 (ㄈㄚˋ, fa)
d d t 地 (ㄉ一ˋ, di)
t t t' 提 (ㄊ一ˊ, ti)
n n n 你 (ㄋ一ˇ, ni)
l l l 利 (ㄌ一ˋ, li)
g g k 告 (ㄍㄠˋ, gao)
k k k' 考 (ㄎㄠˇ, kao)
h h h 好 (ㄏㄠˇ, hao)
j j ch 叫 (ㄐ一ㄠˋ, jiao)
c q ch' 巧 (ㄑ一ㄠˇ, qiao)
s x hs 小 (ㄒ一ㄠˇ, xiao)
jhih 【jh】 zhi 【zh】 chih 【ch】   主 (ㄓㄨˇ, zhu)      
chih 【ch】 chi 【ch】 ch'ih 【ch'】 出 (ㄔㄨ, chu)
shih 【sh】 shi 【sh】 shih 【sh】 束 (ㄕㄨˋ, shu)
rih 【r】 ri 【r】 jih 【j】 入 (ㄖㄨˋ, ru)
zih 【z】 zi 【z】 tzû 【ts】 在 (ㄗㄞˋ, zai)
cih 【c】 ci 【c】 tz'û 【ts'】 才 (ㄘㄞˊ, cai)
sih 【s】 si 【s】 ssû 【s】 塞 (ㄙㄞ, sai)
Finals
Zhuyin Tongyong Pinyin Hanyu Pinyin Wade-Giles Example(Zhuyin, Hanyu)
a a a 大 (ㄉㄚˋ, da)
o o o 多 (ㄉㄨㄛ, duo)
e e e   得 (ㄉㄜˊ, de)
e ê eh 爹 (ㄉ一ㄝ, die)    
ai ai ai 晒 (ㄕㄞˋ, shai)
ei ei ei 誰 (ㄕㄟˊ, shei)
ao ao ao 少 (ㄕㄠˇ, shao)
ou ou ou 收 (ㄕㄡ, shou)
an an an 山 (ㄕㄢ, shan)
en en en 申 (ㄕㄣ, shen)
ang ang ang 上 (ㄕㄤˋ, shang)
eng eng eng 生 (ㄕㄥ, sheng)
er er erh 而 (ㄦˊ, er)
yi 【i】 yi 【i】 yi 【i】 逆 (ㄋ一ˋ, ni)
yin 【in】 yin 【in】 yin 【in】 音 (一ㄣ, yin)
ying 【ing】 ying 【ing】 ying 【ing】 英 (一ㄥ, ying)
wu 【u】 wu 【u】 wu 【u】 努 (ㄋㄨˇ, nu)
wun 【un】 wen 【un】 wen 【un】 文 (ㄨㄣˊ, wen)
wong 【ong】 weng 【ong】 ng 【ung】 翁 (ㄨㄥ, wong)
yu 【u, yu】 yu 【u, ü】 yü 【ü】 女 (ㄋㄩˇ, nü)
yun 【un, yun】 yun 【un】 yün 【ün】 韻 (ㄩㄣˋ, yun)
yong yong 【iong】 yung 【iung】 永 (ㄩㄥˇ, yong)

Dialect letters used to write sounds not found in Standard Mandarin (not many web browsers can display these glyphs, see #External links for PDF pictures.)

Char Name
V
Ng
广 Gn

Extended Bopomofo for Min-nan and Hakka
Char Name   Char Name   Char Name   Char Name
Bu   Oo   Im   Ong
Zi   Onn   Ngg   Innn
Ji   Ir   Ainn   Final P
Gu   Ann   Aunn   Final T
Ee   Inn   Am   Final K
Enn   Unn   Om   Final H

See also

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: