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- FSI - Standard Chinese - Resource Module - Student Text
- Foreign Service Institute
- CM 0102 S
- ¹ STANDARD CHINESE
- A MODULAR APPROACH
- RESOURCE MODULES:
- PRONUNCIATION and ROMANIZATION
- NUMBERS
- CLASSROOM EXPRESSIONS fl
- TIME and DATES
- SPONSORED BY AGENCIES OF THE
- UNITED STATES AND CANADIAN GOVERNMENTS
- This publication is to be used primarily in support of instructing
- military personnel as part of the Defense Language Program (resident and
- nonresident), Inquiries concerning the use of materials, including
- requests for copies, should be addressed to:
- Defense Language Institute
- Foreign Language Center
- NonresidentTraining Division
- Presidio of Monterey, CA 93944-5006
- Topics in the areas of politics, international relations, mores, etc
- which may be considered as controversial from some points of view, are
- sometimes included in the language instruction for DLIFLC students since
- military personnel may find themselves in positions where a clear
- understanding of conversations or written materials of this nature will
- be essential to their mission The presence of controversial
- statements-whether real or apparent--m DLIFLC materials should not be
- construed as representing the opinions of the writers, the DLIFLC, or
- the Department of Defense.
- Actual brand names and businesses are sometimes cited in DLIFLC
- instructional materials to provide instruction in pronunciations and
- meanings. The selection of such proprietary terms and names is based
- solely on their value for instruction in the language. It does not
- constitute endorsement of any product or commercial enterprise, nor is
- it intended to invite a comparison with other brand names and businesses
- not mentioned
- In DLIFLC publications, the words he, him, and/or his denote both
- masculine and feminine genders. This statement does not apply to
- translations of foreign language texts.
- The DLIFLC may not have full rights to the materials it produces.
- Purchase by the customer does net constitute authorization for
- reproduction, resale, or showing for profit. Generally, products
- distributed by the DLIFLC may be used in any not-for-profit setting
- without prior approval from the DLIFLC.
- STANDARD CHINESE
- A MODULAR APPROACH
- RESOURCE MODULES:
- PRONUNCIATION and ROMANIZATION
- NUMBERS
- CLASSROOM EXPRESSIONS
- TIME and DATES
- AUGUST 1979
- PREFACE
- Standard Chinese: A Modular Approach originated in an Inter-agency
- conference held at the Foreign 5ērvice Institute in August 1973 to
- address the need’ genera! ly felt in the U.S. Government language
- training community for Improving and updating Chinese materials to
- reflect current usage in BēljTng and in Taipei.
- The conference resolved to develop materials which were flexible enough
- Tn form and content to meet the requirements of a wide range of
- government agencies and academic institutions.
- A Project Board was established consisting of representatives of the
- Central Intelligence Agency Language Learning Center, the Defense
- Language Institute, the State Department’s Foreign Service institute,
- the Cryptologic School of the National Security Agency, and the U.S.
- Office of Education, later joined by the Canadian Forces Foreign
- Language School. The representatives have Included Arthur T. McNeill,
- John Hopkins, and John Ēoag CCIA); Colonel John F. Elder Hi, Joseph C.
- Hutchinson, Ivy Glbian, and Major Bernard Mulier-Thym (DU); James R.
- Frith and John B. Ratliff III (FSI); Kazuo Shltama (NSA); Richard T.
- Thompson and Julia Petrov (OE); and Lieutenant Colonel George Kozorlz
- (CFFLS) .
- The Project Board set up the Chinese Cora Curriculum Project in 1974 in
- space provided at the Foreign Service Institute. Each of the six U.S.
- and Canadian government agencies provided funds and other assistance.
- Gerard P. Kok was appointed project coordinator, and a planning council
- was formed consisting of Mr, Kok, Frances LI of the Defense Language
- Institute, Patricia O’Connor of the University of Texas, Eari M.
- RIckerson of the Language Learning Center, and James Wrenn of Brown
- University. In the fall of 1977, Lucille A. Barale was appointed deputy
- project coordinator. David W. Dellinger of the Language Learning Center
- and Charles R. Sheehan of the Foreign Service Institute also served on
- the planning council and contributed material to the project. The
- planning council drew up the original overall design for the materials
- and met regularly to review their development.
- Writers for the first half of the materials were John H. T. Harvey,
- Lucille A. Barale, and Roberta S. Barry, who worked in close cooperation
- with the planning council and with the Chinese staff of the Foreign
- Service Institute. Mr. Harvey developed the instructional formats of the
- comprehension and production self-study materials, and also designed the
- communication-based classroom activities and wrote the teacher’s guides.
- Lucille A. Barale and Roberta S. Barry wrote the tape scripts and the
- student text. By 1978 Thomas E. Madden and Susan C, PoI a had Joined the
- staff. Led by Ms. Baraìe, they have worked as a team to produce the
- materials subsequent to Module 6.
- All Chinese language material was prepared or selected by Chuan 0. Chao,
- Ylng-chlh Chen, Hslao-jung Chi, Eva Dlao, Jan Hu, Tsung-ml LI, and
- Yunhul C. Yang, assisted for part of the time by Chleh-fang Ou Lee,
- Ylng-ming Chen, and Joseph Yu Hsu Wang. Anna Affholder, Me I -1 I Chen,
- and Henry Khuo helped In the preparation of a preliminary corpus of
- dialogues.
- Administrative assistance was provided at various times by Vincent
- Basclano, Lisa A, Bowden, Jill W. Ellis, Donna Fong, Renee T, C. Liang,
- Thomas E. Madden, Susan C, Pola, and Kathleen Strype,
- The production of tape recordings was directed by Jose M. Ramirez of the
- Foreign Service Institute Recording Studio, The Chinese script was
- voiced by Ms. Chao, Ms. Chen, Mr, Chen, Ms. Dlao, Ms. Hu, Mr. Khuo, Mr.
- Li, and Ms. Yang. The English script was read by Ms. Barale, Ms. Barry,
- Mr. Basclano, Ms. Ellis, Ms. Pola, and Ms. Strype.
- The graphics were produced by John McClelland of the Foreign Service
- Institute Audio-Visual staff, under the general supervision of Joseph A.
- Sadote, Chief of Audio-Visual.
- Standard Chinese: A Modular .Approach was field-tested with the
- cooperation of Brown University? th"e~~Def ense Language Institute,
- Foreign Language Center; the Foreign Service Institute; the Language
- Learning Center; the United States Air Force Academy the University of
- Illinois; and the University of Virginia,
- Colonel Samuel L. Stapleton and Colonel Thomas G. Foster, Commandants of
- the Defense Language institute, Foreign Language Center, authorized the
- DLIFLC support necessary for preparation of this edition of the course
- materials. This support Included coordination, graphic arts, editing,
- typing, proofreading, printing, and materials necessary to carry out
- these tasks.
- []
- CONTENTS
- _(Sffl) Preface.....................
- PRONUNCIATION AND ROMANIZATION
- Introduction ....
- ⁽> Tape : Workbook (Tones).........,
- Tape 2 Workbook (Consonants and Vowels I) ...... .
- Tape 3 Workbook (Consonants and Vowels II)
- Tape 4 Workbook (Consonants and Vowels III)
- Tape 5 Workbook (Consonants and Vowels IV)
- Tape 6 Workbook (Tones In Combination) ........ 19
- El Tone Card
- ^(in) Summary
- Tones
- Consonants and Vowels ..... ..........
- I . Finals
- i I . initials .....
- Sentence Intonation
- Is, Appendices
- I: List of initials
- • II: List of Finals
- NUMBERS I ntroduct Ion
- h Tape I Workbook (Numbers 1-6)
- - Tape 2 Workbook (Numbers 7-10 and 0) ...
- Tape 3 Workbook (Numbers 11-99)........... , 57
- my Tape 4 Workbook (Numbers 1-99, Review)
- Tape 5 Workbook (Numbers 100-999)
- Tape 6 Workbook (Numbers 1,000-99,999) ........ 63
- Summary .
- CLASSROOM EXPRESSIONS
- TIME AND DATES Introduction ...........
- Tape 1 Workbook (Dates) ..... ...........
- Tape 2 Workbook (Years and Days of the Weak)
- Tape 3 Workbook (Clock Time)
- Tape 4 Workbook (Ciock Time and Parts of the Day) ... 64
- Summary
- []
- PRONUNCIATION and ROMANIZATION (P&R)
- INTRODUCTION
- Your chief concern as you start this course Is learning to pronounce
- Chinese, The Orientation Module, which plunges you right Into trying to
- say things in Chinese, naturally involves a certain amount of
- pronunciation work. This resource module is designed to supplement that
- work with a brief, systematic Introduction to the sound system of
- Standard Chinese, as well as to Its written representation in PTnyTn
- roman 1zation,
- The essential part of this module consists of the Pronunciation and
- Romanization CP&R) tapes and the accompanying displays and exorcises in
- the workbook section of this module. You should work through at least
- the first four of these tapes, and preferably the first six, while you
- are studying the Orientation ModuIe .
- Following the workbook section of this module, you will find a summary
- of pronunciation and romanization. You might want to glance at this
- before starting the tapes, particularly to locate certain charts and
- lists which could be helpful for reference. But it would probably be
- better to put off studying the summary until after you have finished the
- tapes. The tapes are Intended as an introduction, while the summary is
- not. For one thing, text discussions of the sounds of the language
- cannot equal the recorded presentations and your teacher’s oral
- presentations. For another thing, the summary provides considerably more
- Information than you wíi! need or want at first,
- Both the tapes and the summary contain discussions of the sounds of the
- language and their spellings. You may find that these discussions offer
- useful hints, allowing you to put your intellect to work on the problems
- of pronunciation and romanization, However, particularly in
- pronunciation, most of your learning must come from doing. it Is
- important to practice . reading and writing the romanization, but it is
- vital to practice recognizing and producing the sounds of the language.
- Serious and sustained attempts to mimic, as fa 1thfuiIy-as possible,
- either your Instructor or the speakers on the tapes will allow you to
- pick up unconsciously far more than you can attend to consc i ous I y.
- The most Important thing for you to do Is to abandon the phonetic
- '’prejudices" you have built up as a speaker of English and surrender
- yourself to the sounds of Chinese, Being less set than adults Tn their
- ways, children are quicker to pick up a proper accent. Try to regress to
- the phonetic suggestibility of childhood, however hard it is to shed the
- safe and comfortable rigidity and certainty of adulthood. Ths most your
- intellect can supply is a certain amount of guidance and monitoring.
- Be sure to repeat the words and sentences on the tapes In your full
- normal speaking voice, or even louder, as If you were speaking to
- someone at a reasonable distance. When you speak to yourself under your
- breath, you are considerably less precise In your pronunciation than
- when you speak aloud. This Is all right In English, since you can
- already pronounce the language. But, In Chinese, you would not be
- practicing that skill which you are trying to develop, and you would
- find yourself at a loss when you tried to switch to full volume in
- class.
- One of the advantages an adult has over a child In learning a language
- Is the ability to make use of e written representation of It. In this
- course you learn the PTnyTn system of romanization at the same time that
- you are learn i ng the sound system of Standard Chinese. (The nona
- Iphabet I c system of written characters Is taught as a separate
- component of the course.) You will find that PTnyTn is not the simplest
- possible phonetic transcription. Some of the letters and combinations of
- letters chosen to represent the sounds of Chinese are not the most
- obvious ones. While consonant letters generally stand for fixed
- consonant sounds, vowel letters can stand for various vowel sounds,
- depending on what letters precede them and follow them. Some of the
- abbreviation rules are more trouble than they are worth at first. These
- drawbacks--whI ch are actually relatively minor compared with those of
- most spelling systems--stem from the fact that PTnyTn was designed for
- speakers of Chinese, not for speakers of English. The primary
- consideration In devising the system was the most efficient use of the
- letters of the Roman alphabet to represent the sounds of Chinese. The
- drawbacks to learning PTnyTn are considerably outweighed by the
- advantage that PTnyTn is widely taught and used as a supplementary
- script In the People's Republic of China. You are learning PTnyTn not
- merely as an aid during the first few weeks of the course, but also as
- one of the ways Chinese Is actually written, and as what may well
- represent the wave of the future.
- NOTE: A number of surnames used in this module are rare. Some may even
- be unfamiliar to most Chinese, although all are authentic. These rare
- surnames are used to Illustrate various contrasts In sound and spelling.
- ♦
- TAPE 1 WORKBOOK (TONES)
- DISPLAY I: THE FOUR TONES
- HIGH
- []
- mǎ, "horse"
- []
- []
- FALLING
- []
- mà, ^(,T)+o scold"
- Exercise I: F5ng vs. Fáng
- I . Fang 2. Fang 3.
- - 6. Fang 7. Fang S.
- Fang 4. Fang 5. Fang
- Fang 9. Fang IO. Fang
- ------------- --------- --------- ------- -------- ----- ------ ---- ----- -----
- Exercise 2: WSI vs . Wěi
- ■■ -
- 1 . Wei 2. We i 3. Wei 4. We I 5. Wei
- 6. Wei 7. We I fl. We I 9. Wei 10. Wei
- Exercise 3: M f vs. MT
- — “
- 1 . Mi 2. Ml 3. Ml 4. Mi 5 . MI
- 6* Mi 7. MI fl. MI 9. Ml 10. Ml
- Exercise 4: Wú vs. Wǔ
-
- 1 . Wu 2. Wu 3. Wu 4. Wu 5 , Wu
- 6. Wu 7. Wu ■ fl. Wu 9. Wu 10. Wu
- Exercise 5: YTn vs . Yìn
- ---—a
- I . Yin 2. Yin 3. Yin 4. Yin 5. Yin
- 6. Yin 7. Yin fl. Yin 9. Yin IO. Yin
- Exercise ō: Lái vs . Làǐ
-
- 1 . Lai 2. Lai 3. Laí 4. Laí 5. Lai
- 6. La i 7. Laí 6. Lal 9, Laf 10. Lal
- Exercise 7: Hāo vs . Hao
- -
- 1. Hao 2. Hao 3. Hao 4. Hao
- 5. Hao 6. Hao 7. Hao 8. Hao
- Exercise B: YT vs. Y í vs, YT vs. Yì
- — '—■" ■
- 1 . Yi 2, YI 3. YI 4. YI 5. YI
- 6. Yl 7. Yi 8. Yi 9. Yl 10. Yi
- II. Yi 12. YI 13. YI 14. YI 15. Yl
- ifl. YI 17, YI 18. YI 19. YI 20. Yi
- ------------- --------- --------- ------- -------- ----- ------ ---- ----- -----
- TAPE 2 WORKBOOK (CONSONANTS AND VOWELS I)
- DISPLAY I: SINGLE VOWELS
- ------------------ ----------------------------- ---------------------------------
- Ch Inese Surname S i m11 ar Sound in English Or i entat i on Module Examp 1e
- Fffng Oki nawa tSF
- Mi Tahiti nī
- Hú Mono lulu Hú
- Hóng woman tóngzhl
- Ēn ch J cken ne
-
- ------------------ ----------------------------- ---------------------------------
- Exerclse 1
- ----- --------- ----- --------- ------- -------- ----- ---------
- 1 . H____ng 2. H____ng 3. H___ng 4. H___ng
- 5, H___ng 6. H___ng 7, H___ng 8. H____ng
- 9. H____ng 10. H__ng 1 1 . H___ng 12. H___ng
- ----- --------- ----- --------- ------- -------- ----- ---------
- Exercise 2
- ------- ------- ----- ------ ----- ----- ----- ------ ----- ------
- 1. MS 2. Yǐ 3. Fti 4. Lóng 5. Há’’
- 6. Wú 7. F3ng 8. Ēn 9. Lú 10. Y6ng
- I 1 . MS ng 12. in 13. Yin 14. Ming 15. Hóng
- ------- ------- ----- ------ ----- ----- ----- ------ ----- ------
- DISPLAY II: DIPHTHONGS
- ------------------ -------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------
- Ch Inese Surname S 1 m I1 ar Sound In English (with PTnyTn) Or Ien + atI on Modu1e Examp 1e
- ^(L)ÌL Shanghai (Shanghai ) tàj_tal
- Ta 1 pe 1 (Tái t>S_í_) shé 1
- Hao Mao Tse-Tung (Máo Zédōng) h So
- Lóu Chou En-lal (ZhCu Enlál) nS izh5u
- ------------------ -------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------
- Exercise 3
- 2.
- Fě I
- 3.
- Máo
- 4.
- Hóu
- 5 .
- He
- I .
- Màl
- 6.
- Hú
- 7.
- Hā
- 8.
- Lè 1
- 9.
- Lóu
- 10.
- Měng
- 1 1 .
- Méi
- 12.
- LSo
- 13.
- Lóng
- 14.
- LT
- 15.
- Ou
- 16.
- W5I
- 17.
- Ēn
- 18.
- Nàī
- 19.
- Yóng
- 20.
- Hào
- DISPLAY III: SEMIVOWELS
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | Consonant A 1 | Semivowe1 A 1 | Consonant | Orientation |
- | one | one | | |
- | | | Plus Semivowel | Modu1e |
- | | | | |
- | | | | Examp 1e |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | Háng | Wáng | Hu_áng Li^án | Gi^Sngzhōu |
- | | | MJ_áo L^áng | |
- | L,án | Wán | | xj_áoj I e |
- | | | | |
- | Máo | Yáo | | |
- | | | | |
- | Láng | Yáng | | |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- Exercise 4
- ----- -------- ----- ------- ----- --------- ----- ------- ----- -------
- 1. Hán 2. Wán 3. Huán 4 . Láng 5. Yáng
- 6. L1 áng 7. Luán 8. MIfeo 9. Huáng 10. Lifeo
- 11. Huá 12. Huá i 13. L 1 áng 14. Luán 15. Líào
- ----- -------- ----- ------- ----- --------- ----- ------- ----- -------
- DISPLAY IV: IRREGULAR COMBINATIONS OF SEMIVOWEL AND VOWEL
- Vowel Alone
- Semivowel Pius Vowel
- Or 1entatIon Module Examp 1e
- Initial
- After Consonant
- E
- An
- Lóng
- Yfe
- Yán
- Wò
- Life
- Líán
- Luò
- X 1 fe X 1 6
- Dfen 1 án
- w6
- Exercise 5
- ----- ----- ----- -------- ----- ------ ----- -------- ----- --------
- 1 . Yfe 2. Yán 3. wò 4. Life 5. L 1 án
- 6. Luò 7. LI áng 8. Lóng 9. N I fe 10. Hé *
- II. Huò 12. Yáng 13. An 14. Yfe 15. N 1 án
- 16. Wò 17. È 18. Luò 19. L 1 án 20. Life
- ----- ----- ----- -------- ----- ------ ----- -------- ----- --------
- Exercise 6
- ------- ------- ----- --------- ----- ------- ----- ------ ----- -----
- 1 . Fffng 2. Lfiu 3. Huáng 4. Máo 5. YT
- 6. Wfel 7. M t ào 8. Luò 9. Lá 1 10. Wú
- 1 1 . Hóng 12. L 1 áng 13. Luán 14. Wò 15. Yán
- 18. Yáng 17. L I án 10. Life 19. Hé 20. Yfe
- ------- ------- ----- --------- ----- ------- ----- ------ ----- -----
- Exercise 7
- 1 .
- 5.
- ^(F)____^(n)9
- 2.
- 6.
- M______
- 3.
- 4.
- 7 .
- %
- 8.
- L
- 9.
- __n
- IO.
- ng
- 1 1 .
- L n
- 12.
- H___ng
- 13.
- L ng
- 14.
- Si
- 15.
- L
- 16.
- L
- 17.
- H , _ng
- IS.
- L________
- 19.
- _____n
- 20.
- L_______
- TAPE 3 WORKBOOK (CONSONANTS AND VOWELS II)
- Exercise I
- ----- ------- ----- ------- ----- -------- ----- ------- ----- -----
- 1. Ā___ 2 . Fá___ 3. Fá___ 4. Nó___ 5. MS_
- 6. W3___ 7. Yl___ 8. Llá___ 9. MT___ 10. Llá
- 1 . W5 12. Huá 13. Yì 14. Ná 15. Huá
- ----- ------- ----- ------- ----- -------- ----- ------- ----- -----
- DISPLAY I: STOPS
- --------------- ------------- ---------------- ------------ -----------
- Unasp 1 rated Asp I rated Or ì entatI on Mode Ie Examp 1es
- BSn P3n BSoIán TàIg_íng Yáng¹
- DO ng Tōng Dan 1án t3
- 63 K5 MS ?2_u6 KUnni f ng -
- --------------- ------------- ---------------- ------------ -----------
- Exercise 2
- ---- ------- ----- ------- ------- ------- ----- -------
- 1. ___Sn 2. ___Sn 3. __Sng 4. __ōng
- 5. 6. 5ng 7. 3 8. 3n
- 9. _5ng 10. S 1 1 . ___3n 12. ___3
- ---- ------- ----- ------- ------- ------- ----- -------
- ExercIse 3
- ---- ------ ----- ------ ------- ------- ----- ------
- 1. Be I 2. Gōu 3. Tú 4. Péng
- 5. Kòng 6. DTng 7. Plan 8. Táo
- 9, Kāng 10. Dal 1 1 . B I é 12. Guó
- ---- ------ ----- ------ ------- ------- ----- ------
- DISPLAY it: AFFRICATES
- Unasp I rated
- Asp 1 rated
- Orientation Module Examples
- Retrof1 ex
- Palatal
- Denta1
- ZhSng
- J I Sng
- Zāng
- ChSng QJ áng C5ng
- tóngzhl ChéngdE²
- JJàn gT
- záo Cīngzhōu²
- DISPLAY III: /r/ AND THE RETROFLEX POSITION
- ---- ----- ------ ------------------------------
- Orientation Module Example
- Rú Zhú Ch ú rén tóngzhl ChéngdCT²
- ---- ----- ------ ------------------------------
- DISPLAY IV: THE PALATAL POSITION
- ---- ---- ---- -------------------------------------------------------------------
- YT JT QT Numbers Resource Module Examples yT (one) j I ǔ (nine) qt (seven)
- ---- ---- ---- -------------------------------------------------------------------
- Exerc i
- se 4
- Retrof1 ex
- Pal ata 1
- Retrof1 ex Pa i ata 1
- 1.
- ZhSng
- J ī ang
- 7, Zhang
- J i Bng
- 2.
- Z lying
- J i 3ng
- 3. Zhíng
- J I Sng
- 3.
- ZhSng
- .J i a n g
- 9. Z'hāng
- J i 3ng
- 4,
- Zhang
- Jiang
- 10. Zhang
- Ji3ng
- 5.
- Zh3ng
- J í 3ng
- 11« Zhang
- J i ang
- 6.
- ZhSng
- J ì ang
- fZ. Zhang
- J 1 3ng
- Exercise 5
- í .
- Zh3ng
- 2, Jiang
- 3.
- Q
- iáng 4. ChBng 5. JT
- 6.
- QT
- 7. Rú
- 8.
- Zh£í 9. Chu
- 10. Zhào
- i ! .
- Qíán
- 12. Ren
- 13,
- Chén 14, Jía
- 15* R6ng
- Exercise □
- Retraf1 ex
- Pa 1 ata 1
- De n t a j_
- Retref 1 ex
- Pa I ata i Penta 1
- 1 .
- Zh3ng
- J 1 Sng
- Zang
- 7, Zhang
- JÌSng Zāng
- 2,
- Zhang
- J J Sng
- Zing
- 8. Zhang
- Jiang zang
- 3,
- ZhSng
- J 1 3ng
- Zang
- 9, ZhSng
- Jiang Zāng
- 4.
- Zhang
- J i3ng
- Zang
- 10. ZhSng
- J ISng ZSng
- j.
- ZhSng
- J īang
- Zang
- I 1 . ZhSng
- J 13ng ZBng
- 6.
- Zhang
- J I Sng
- ZSng
- 12. ZhSng ,
- J 1Sng Z3ng
- Exercise 7
- ------- ------- ------ --------- ----- ------ ----- ------- ----- ---------
- 1 , ZhSng 2. J ì 3ng 3. ZSng 4, Chāng 5. Q 1 éng
- 6. Gang 7. ZCu 8. Cáo 9, Chén 10, Zhào
- 1 1 * Qian 12. JTn 13, Rén 14. QT 15. Ch ū
- 16. Zhú i 7. Rú 18. JT 19, CM 20. Ze 1
- ------- ------- ------ --------- ----- ------ ----- ------- ----- ---------
- Exercise 8
- ----- -------- ----- ----------- ------- ------------- ----- -----------
- 1. ___5ng 2. ___Sng 3. __1 Sng 4 . __’áng
- 5 . ___5ng 6. ___5rg 7 . __________ú a. _(_)___áo
- 9. TSn 10. _én 1 1 . ú 12. ǎi
- 13. _T !4. _én 15, àl 16, _ào
- 17, Tn 18, ________□ 19, _____5u 20. _______T
- ----- -------- ----- ----------- ------- ------------- ----- -----------
- TAPE 4 WORKBOOK (CONSONANTS AND VOWELS lit)
- DISPLAY I: AFFRICATES AND FRICATIVES
- AtfrI cates
- Fricatives
- Retrof1 ex
- Zji3ng
- ChSng
- ShSng
- Pa 1 ata 1
- J I Sng
- 2J Sng
- XI Sng
- Denta1
- £Sng
- Cāng
- S3 ng
- Exercise í: ShSng vē. X ISng
- Retrof1 ex
- Pa 1 ata 1
- RetrofI ex
- Fa 1 ata 1
- í.
- Shing
- XI Ing
- e.
- Shíng
- Xiang
- 2.
- ShSng
- Xling
- 7.
- Shing
- Xllng
- 3.
- ShSng
- Xling
- a.
- Shing
- XI Sng
- 4.
- S filing
- XI Sng
- 9.
- Shing
- XÍBng
- 5.
- Shing
- XI Sng
- 10.
- Shing
- Xling
- ExercI
- se 2;
- ìhSng vs, XISng vs.
- Sing
- *
- Ratrof J bx
- Pa I ata I
- Penta L
- RetrofI ex
- Pa 1 ata 1 Penta 1
- i .
- Sh3ng
- Xling
- Sing
- e.
- Shing
- Xiang
- S3ng
- 2.
- Ēhíng
- Xling
- S3ng
- 7.
- ShSng
- XI Sng
- Sing
- 3,
- S h in g
- XI ing
- Sing
- 8,
- ShSng
- XI Sng
- Sing
- 4.
- Shing
- XI Sng
- Sing
- 9.
- ShSng
- XlSng
- Sing
- 5.
- Shing
- XI Sng
- Sāng
- ^(í0)-
- ShSng
- Xīing
- Sāng
- Exercise 3
- 1 *
- Shing
- 2.
- Xlāng 3.
- S3ng
- 4.
- SO 5.
- Shd 6.
- XTn
- 7.
- Shào
- 8.
- Xlāo 9,
- Sòng
- ÍO.
- Xi à IL
- Su3 12.
- Shen
- Pi
- Exerclse 4
- I. Zhao 2. XI3o 3. Cáo 4. Shào 5. Qiáo 6. JiSo
- - 7. Cháo 3. Suǒ 9. Zuò 10. Càl II. ShQ 12, XTn
- - 13. ZSng 14. Chú 15. JTn 16. Song 17, Zh3u IB. Qfn
- DISPLAY II: FRICATIVES
- ShT XT ST
- Exerclse 5:
- XT vs. ST vs. ShT
- ——— - —
- —.—--
- 1 . ShT
- 2. XT
- 3. ST 4. XT 5. ST 6. ShT
- 7. ST
- 3. ShT
- 9. XT 10. ST 11. XT 12. ShT
- DISPLAY III
- Rì běn
- Exercise 6
- ----- ----- -------- ----- ----- ------- ----- ----- ----- ------ ---- ---------
- 1 . ShT 2. ChT 3. ZhT 4. Rì³ 5. XT 6. or 7. JT
- 8. YT 9. LT 10. ST I 1 . zT 12. Cf³ 1 3, QT 14. ChT
- 15. ST 16. Mi 17. ZhT 18. ZT 19. JT 20. Df 21. Rì³
- 22. Cf³ 23. XT 24. ShT 25. M í
- ----- ----- -------- ----- ----- ------- ----- ----- ----- ------ ---- ---------
- Exercise 7
- ----- ------------- ----- ----------- ------- --------- ----- --------
- 1 . _______T 2. ________T 3. ______T 4. ___3ng
- 5. ____i 5 rig 6. ___Sng 7. ___3ng 8, ___Sng
- 9. _l Sng 10. __1 áng 1 1 . ___3ng 12. ___3ng
- ----- ------------- ----- ----------- ------- --------- ----- --------
- Exercise 8
- 1 30
- Pn
- n
- I. ________________
- 4, c h ~
- 7. i j;_______
- 10. z _______
- 15. z J
- 2, zh_2____
- 5. ch ______
- 8, ch 2
- 11. ch 2__
- I 4 , y 2
- 5- q_________
- 6, th_2____
- 9, ______
- 12. zh_2____
- 15. z_________
- J T
- ChT
- Rì*
- TAPE 5 WORKBOOK (CONSONANTS AND VOWELS IV)
- DISPLAY I
- ------ ----- ----- ------
- Ēn Wōn Hūn HuSn
- Fè í Wèf Gul Guèl
- Hòu You Llū LIŌu
- ------ ----- ----- ------
- DISPLAY H
- Yōu
- L T ú
- Yòu l r ìj
- DISPLAY III
- Wò
- Luò
- Mò
- Exercise 1
- 1 . W3n
- 2.
- Hūn
- 3. Wèl
- 4.
- Gul
- 5.
- YÒu
- 6. L1Ǔ
- 7.
- Luò
- 3. Mò
- 9.
- Lún
- 10.
- Nlú
- II. Rul
- 12.
- Bó
- 13. CuT
- 14.
- Chūn
- 15.
- QI ú
- Exercise 2
- %.
- ■%
- 1 ,
- n
- 2.
- n 3.
- 4.
- 5.
- 6.
- *
- 1 7.
- 1
- 8.
- 9. 9____
- 13. ।
- 10.
- _________' I 1 .
- n
- 12.
- 14.
- ___2_n 15.
- 16.
- 1_________________________
- DISPLAY IV
- Li
- Lǔ
- LU
- Exerc i se
- 3
- a
- I .
- LI
- Lǔ
- Lu
- 6.
- LT
- -
- Lǔ
- LU
- 2.
- LT
- Lū
- LU
- 7.
- LT
- Lǔ
- LU
- 3.
- LT
- Lǔ
- V
- LU
- 0.
- LT
- Lǔ
- LU
- 4.
- LT
- LG
- LU
- 9.
- LT
- Lǔ
- LU
- 5.
- LI
- Lū
- LU
- IO.
- LT
- LǓ
- LU
- Exercl se
- 4
- 1 .
- LT
- 2.
- Lǔ
- 3.
- LU
- 4.
- LǓ
- 5.
- LU
- 6.
- LT
- 7.
- LÌJ
- 0.
- LU
- 9.
- LT
- 0.
- LǓ
- DISPLAY V
- -----------------------------------------------------
- YÚ Yuè YUán YUn
- -----------------------------------------------------
- DISPLAY VI
- Yfe
- Wán
- Wén
- m
- YUán
- YÚn
- Yán
- YUán
- Exercise 5
- 1. Shǔ
- 2.
- Sǔ
- 3.
- xù
- 4.
- Wú
- 5.
- YÚ
- 6. Zǔ
- 7.
- Zhú
- 3.
- JÚ
- 9.
- Chú
- 10.
- QÚ
- 1
- . Mìi
- 12.
- YÚ
- 13.
- Ju
- 14.
- QÚ
- 15.
- XÚ
- Exercise 6
- ----- -------- ----- ------- ------- ------ ----- -------
- 1. Shu 2. Sù 3. xù 4 . Xú'ān
- 5 . Shuàng 6. ChUn 7. jUn 8 . Yliè
- 9, què IO. LU 1 1 . Lú 12. YU
- 13. JU 14. Yìlán 15. QUán 16. Yun
- ----- -------- ----- ------- ------- ------ ----- -------
- DISPLAY VII
- òr
- TAPE 6 WORKBOOK (TONES IN COMBINATION)
- []
- f 51 le
- DISPLAY I: THE NEUTRAL TONE
- []
- []
- ExercIse I
- ---- ------ ----- ----- ----- ----- ------- ------ ----- ----- ------ -----
- 1. FSi 1 e 2. Fél 1 e 3. Fěl 1 e 4. Ffel 1 e
- 5. Fě 1 I e 6, Fél 1 e 7. Ffel 1 e 8, F51 le
- 9. Fél 1 e 10, Fèl 1 a 1 1 . FSÍ I e 12. Fél 1 e
- ---- ------ ----- ----- ----- ----- ------- ------ ----- ----- ------ -----
- DISPLAY II: THE HALF THIRD TONE
- []
- Té ì běI
- []
- BělJTng YSngp I ng BSodlng
- DISPLAY III: THE RAISED THIRD TONE
- []
- []
- NánhSl BělhSl
- Exercise 2
- ---- --------- ----- ----------- ------- ----------- ----- ----------
- 1. Thibet 2. Be i JTng 3. Yóngp íng 4. BelhSl
- 5. Bāodlng 6. Be 1hǎ1 7. Be IJTng 8. Tálbèi
- 9. Be Ihǎ1 10. BSodlng 1 1 . YÓngping i2. Be i hǎI
- ---- --------- ----- ----------- ------- ----------- ----- ----------
- DISPLAY IV: TWO-TONE SEQUENCES (1)
- --- ---------- ------------- ----------- ----------- --------
- 1 2 3 4 0
- 1 ShínxT Ktfnmí ng XIBnggSng KSIhuà FBI le
- 2 YSn'ín Y 0 n n á n TálbSl Luódlng Féi le
- 3 BSlJTng Yóngp f ng BSīhSl Guíngxl n Fèl le
- 4 Si chuSn Rèhér* ShànghS1 Fèngyì Fàl le
- --- ---------- ------------- ----------- ----------- --------
- Exercise 3
- ---------- ----------- ----- -------------- ------- ------------ ----- ------------
- 1 . Shanx1 2. Feī le 3. Luod1 ng 4. Be 1 ha I
- 5. Reher 6. Sichuan 7. YongpI ng 9. Tai be!
- 9. Ka I hua to. X1anggang 1 1 . YUnnen 12. Bel J 1 ng
- 13. Eel le 14. Shanghai 15. Guangx1n 16. Fel le
- 17. ríunml ng 18. Yan’an 19. Fel le 20. Fengy1
- Exercise i 4
- 1. ShBnxT 2, X 1 JJnggSng 3. YAn’Sn 4. Fél ie
- 5. SichuSn 6. Ktfnmf ng 7. GuSngxln 8. Fòngyl
- 9. BólhSl 10. Fěl le 1 1 . YSngp f ng 12. ShànghS1
- 13. FII le 14. YÚnnán 15. Télběl 16. Luódln
- 17. K31hua 18. Fèi le 19. Be IJTng 20. Rèhér
- ---------- ----------- ----- -------------- ------- ------------ ----- ------------
- *ihis is the name of a former province.
- []
- DISPLAY V: TWO-TONE SEQUENCES (2)
- --- -------------- ---------- ------------ --------- ----------
- 1 2 3 4 0
- 1 CSngzhōu ZhTf ú QTngdǎo 85yl ESI le
- 2 Zézhffu J iésh f Su I yUSn⁴ Méngzì Fél 1 e
- 3 WìíchSng J 1ǔ16ng Pǔěr L&shùn Fě 1 le
- 4 Z h feJ 1Sng YUè nán R1 běn Wànx1àn Fě 1 1 a
- --- -------------- ---------- ------------ --------- ----------
- Exercise 5
- ---------- ------------- ----- ----------- ------- ----------- ----- -----------
- 1 . Feí le 2. YUenan 3. Lilshun 4. Wuchang
- 5, Su i yllan 6. Fel le 7. Zhl fu 8. Wanxlan
- 9. ZhejIang IO. Fuer 1 1 . Fel le 12. J 1esh1
- 13. Bey 1 14. Cangzhou 15, Rl ben 16. Fel le
- 17. J 1 u 1 ong 18. Mengz1 19. Zezhou 20. QIngdao
- Exerc1se > 6
- I . Cffngzhōu 2. ZhèJ ISng 3. J 1 ǔ16ng 4. Su Iytlín
- 5. B5yl 6. Wànxlàn 7. Fě I le a. ZézhCu
- 9. ZhTfú IO. Yilènán 1 1 . Pǔǎr 12. Méngzì
- 13. Fēl le 14, Fèl le 15. WìíchSng 16, J 1ésh í
-
- 17. QTngdǎo 18. R1 hěn 19. LEfshùn 20. Fél le
- ---------- ------------- ----- ----------- ------- ----------- ----- -----------
- TONE CARD
- []
- SUMMARY
- TONES
- Every syllable In Standard Chinese has one of four distinctive "tones"
- or patterns of pitch. The only exception to this rule is that a syllable
- loses Its inherent tone when It Is unstressed. The tone is just as much
- a part of a syllable as the consonants and vowels and performs the same
- function--sīgnaling the meaning of the syllable* In other words,
- difference In tone between two syllables can signal a difference In
- meaning, Just as a difference In consonants or vowels does.
- It will be difficult at first to appreciate fully that a tone Is
- something that belongs to a syllable rather than something that merely
- happens to It. This Is because the only use of pitch patterns In English
- Is for Intonation of entire sentences, affecting only the meanings of
- whole sentences. For example, the rising pitch at the end of "Spinach Is
- delicious?" has nothing to do with the meaning of the word "delicious"
- but tells us that the whole sentence should be Interpreted as "Are you
- saying that spinach is delicious?" It may be difficult at first to
- remember the tone of a syllable as well as you remember the consonants
- and vowels. This Is because you have to develop the completely new habit
- of marking tones In your mental dictionary.
- []
- The Four Tones
- Display I diagrams the pitch patterns of the four tones and gives their
- descriptive names and traditional numbers. As examples, four
- single-syllable words with completely different meanings but different
- to the ear only in their tones are pronounced at the beginning of the
- first P&R tape.
- The tone diagrams may bo read as musical notations. The vertical
- dimension stands for pitch, with the top of the diagram slightly above
- your normal pitch range In English and the bottom slightly below. The
- horizontal dimension stands for duration. The thickness of the curve
- stands for loudness. These diagrams show the tones as they are heard In
- isolated syllables.
- The High tone (or First tone) has a steady high pitch and average
- length. You may find It somewhat uncomfortable to pronounce at first,
- since a steady high pitch is seldom used In English—your only relevant
- experience comes from music. Notice that the accent mark which
- represents this tone In the romanization captures the level contour
- rather than the high pitch.
- IG
- The Rising tone (or Second tone) rises from the middle of the pitch
- range to the top. it too has average length. Unlike the rising
- Intonation used In English for questions, the Rising tone gets louder as
- It rises. Notice that the tone mark In the romanization rises from left
- to right.
- I
- d"
- The Low tone (or Third tone) starts low, dips to the bottom of the pitch
- range, and then rises. The lowest part of this tone is the most
- distinctive, the part to focus on both when you are trying to pronounce
- the tone and when you are trying to recognize it. The lowest part takes
- the greatest effort and is the most, prominent, despite the fact that it
- Is actually not quite as loud as the rest of the tone. This part Is
- exaggerated, both in length and In pitch, when the syllable 1$ stressed
- for emphasis. Particularly with male speakers, it may have a harsh,
- scraping quality. The Low tone has greater than average length. In
- English a similar Intonation is sometimes used for "Well?” when you have
- been waiting to hear something. Notice that the tone mark captures the
- dipping pitch pattern.
- The Falling tone (or Fourth tone) starts at the top of the pitch range
- end drops sharply to the bottom, diminishing in loudness as it drops. It
- has shorter than average length. In English the falling Intonation used
- for exclamations, as in "Well!” is similar, but the Falling tone starts
- higher and ends lower than all but our most emphatic exclamations.
- Notice that the tone mark falls from left to right.
- The Neutral Tone
- A syllable loses Its inherent tone when It Is unstressed. An unstressed
- syllable, besides being weak and hurried, will have a pitch that Is not
- something of Its own but rather something that Is imposed on It by the
- tones of the surrounding syllables, particularly by the tone of the
- preceding syllable. In such cases we say that the syllable has tost its
- full tone, that Its tone has been neutralized, or that it is in the
- Neutral tone, ⁵ (Th© Neutral tone Is taken up at the beginning of P&R
- Tape 6.)
- DISPLAY II: THE NEUTRAL TONE
- []
- fBi le fél le fěi I e
- []
- fèl le
- Display II shows the pitch of the Neutral tone after each of the four
- tones. The examples are four verbs which differ only In their tones,
- each followed by a grammatical element In the Neutral tone, (Notice that
- ths Neutral tone Is indicated In the romanization by the absence of a
- tone mark.}
- After the Falling tone (4), the pitch of the Neutral tone amounts to the
- end of the fall. After the other three tones, It amounts to a Jump back
- to, or slightly beyond, the middle of the pitch range. In the case of
- the Low tone (3), the Jump Is from the low point, since the Low tone has
- lost Its rising tail. The pitch of the Neutral tone may also be affected
- by the tone of a syllable which follows, moving the Neutral tone in the
- direction of the start of the following tone. However, a sequence of
- Neutral tones will stay at the same pitch or will drop gradually.
- lāVfi
- BS ,
- There are a few syllables, most of them grammatical elements, which are
- always unstressed in normal speech and, therefore, are always In the
- Neutral tone. These syllables are exceptions to ths rule that every
- syllable has a basic full tone, a tone that may be neutralized but will
- reappear under stress. To make a comparison with English, it Is hard to
- say what the ’’neutral vowel¹’ In the word ’’given” has been reduced
- from, since the ending -en is never stressed.
- Tone Changes
- 3
- It rhe >m The a 1 on
- it y.
- The Low tone pronounced in isolation has a dipping-rising pitch pattern.
- This is the shape It always has before a pause. But the Low tone loses
- Its rising tall before a Neutral tone, and Display III shows that the
- Low tone also loses its tail before any non-Low tone. This display
- further shows that something even more unexpected happens to a Low tone
- before another Low tone* It changes to a Rising tone, or at least to
- something so close to a Rising tone that even native speakers cannot
- tell the difference. A Low tone which has lost Its rising tail before a
- different tone Is still recognizable, or Is even more recognizable, as a
- Low tone. But a Low tone which has changed to a Rising tone before
- another Low tone is no longer recognizable. What you will hear for ”i’m
- fine¹¹ Is Wó hSo. The only way you can tell that the first word Is reaI
- Iy w& Ts by hearing It when It is not followed by a Low tone. Another
- quirk of the Low tone Is that ft sometimes changes to a Rising tone
- before a neutralized Low tone. Whether this happens or not depends on
- considerations of grammar and word formation. It always happens, for
- example, when the syllables are separate words, as with the words qTmg j
- " + o ask,” and nl, ’’you,” In the expression Qí ng n I . . ., which
- means ”(1) ask you (to do such-and-such)¹’ or ”Rlease (do
- such-and-such).” ft does not happen in J 1SJ ie (from J i ěj i S),
- "older sister.” (The exceptional behavior of the Low tone is taken up In
- the sixth tape of this module, right after the section on the Neutral
- tone.) .
- DISPLAY HI: THIRD TONE BEFORE FULL TONES
- []
- Bè!JTng
- YSngp íng
- BāThĚI
- Bāodlng
- There are certain other tone changes that take place in longer sequences
- of syllables. The main example of this is that a Rising tone changes to
- a High tone when 1+ follows a High tone or Rising tone and is fol lowed
- by any fuI I tone. For Instance, J I5ná dà, ’’Canada,” Is pronounced J
- ISnSdà. Using tone marks, the rule may be expressed tike this:
- ” ' ” becomes - - - * becomes
- ~ ‘ becomes ~ ~ ■ becomes
- ” ' * becomes * * ^(v) ' * becomes
- " ' ' becomes - - * * becomes
- However, these tone changes will be studied only after you have gained
- control of two-syilable sequences.
- There are also cases where particular words change their tones under the
- Influence of following tones. The number I Is y T when It Is pronounced
- alone or as one of a series of digits. It Is yt before a Falling tone or
- neutralized Falling tone, and yì before any other tone. The numbers 7,
- qT, and 8, bS, are q f and bá before a Falling tone for most speakers.
- The negative marker bǔ Is bú before a Falling tone or neutralized
- Falling tone. in this course you will find bú quite a few times before
- you find bù, but keep in mind that bù is the more basic form. "No," for
- example, Is bù.
- Tone Weakening and Strengthening
- in addition to the dramatic tone changes discussed previously, there are
- certain minor automatic changes which affect all full tones In words of
- two or more syllables. These Involve all three factors shown in the tone
- dIagram--Ioudness, pitch, and length.
- Let's start with a similar phenomenon In English, In an English word of
- two or more syllables, the syllables vary In how forceful they are and
- how much emphasis they receive. We normally think of these levels of
- "stress" In terms of the loudness of the syllable, but other factors,
- Including syllable length and pitch, are even more Important. The one
- thing you need to know about the stress pattern of an English word Is
- which syllable has the main stress. This syllable will have the same
- weight as a single-syllable word pronounced alone. The stress levels of
- the other syllables, down to the level we call "unstressed," will then
- fall Into place almost automatically.
- For tons
- iave
- IF
- ng e, The id '1 mes ilc
- Flit o I va
- i*
- in
- »
- fe oud-
- >u
- । the
- i
- a I I
- Examples such as "PHO-to-graph," "pho-TOG-ra-phy," and "pho-to-GRAPH-ic"
- tel 1 you al I you need to know about the stress patterns of these
- words.
- The best way to approach the stress patterns of Chinese words Is the
- other way around. The first thing to find out Is whether any of the
- syllables are unstressed, that is, whether any are In the Neutral tone.
- (By far the most likely candidate is the last syllable.) Then the stress
- levels of the remaining, full-tons syllables will fall Into place
- according to the following rules:
- - I. The first full-tone syllable will have normal stress, the same as
- when It Is pronounced.
- - 2. The last full-tone syllable (if there is more than one) will have
- heavIer-than-normaI stress. Its loudness, pitch range, and length
- will be exaggerated.
- - 3, Any middle syllables will have I Ighter-than-normaI stress. Their
- loudness, pitch range, and length will be reduced.
- Let’s take, as an example, the Chinese phonetic equivalent of '’Italy,"
- Y ì d à 11 . All three syllables have full Falling tones, but notice 1n
- the dIagram below that the three pitch patterns are slightly different:
- the first one is normal; the middle one Is reduced; and the last one Is
- exaggerated.
- []
- -dà- -11
- []
- The few exceptions to these rules for relative levels of stress are due
- to meaning. One such exception Is that the first of two full-tone
- syllables may be given the heavIer-than-normaI stress If the first
- syllable Is more significant. For example, the word for ’'Germany" is
- pronounced by most speakers as Déguó. The syllable De- Identifies the
- country (It Is derived phonetically from Deutsch land), while -guó,
- "country,” is used In the names of many countries. Thus the first
- Rising-tone syllable Is stronger, in violation of the general rules for
- stress patterns.
- Dé-
- -guó
- The subordinate status of -guó In the names of countries Is most clearly
- seen by the fact that some speakers treat It almost as a suffix,
- pronouncing It Tn the Neutral tone, so that "Germany" becomes Oéguo.
- As with English levels of stress, these differences are fairly subtle.
- You may not be able to hear them too clearly, and you can make yourself
- understood well enough even without getting them quite right, although
- you are likely to sound like a computer. You should be able to learn
- stress patterns without even thinking about them If you will try to
- mimic Chinese speakers as closely as possible.
- After learning more about consonants and vowels In the next section of
- this summary, you will be Introduced to sentence intonation in the last
- section, where you will find that there are further modifications In the
- pitch patterns of the tones. If you are reading this summary as you
- begin the course, new Information Is piling up too fast. Don’t try to
- keep everything In mind at once. As a first approximation of the tones,
- for example, try giving your syllables Identifiable and correct tones.
- When you have mastered that, work on one or two more points. Meanwhile,
- your ear will have begun to lock Tn on what Chinese sounds like, and you
- will begin to reach the point of automatic control.
- CONSONANTS AND VOWELS
- Much of the structural simplicity of the Chinese language is made
- evident by traditional analysis of syllable structure. Start with the
- syllables which are different to the ear. There are only about 1,300
- such distinguishable syllables, not nearly as many as In English. (Many
- syllables which sound alike carry more than one meaning and are written
- with different characters for each meaning, much as the same English
- spoken syllable carries the three meanings represented by the spellings
- "two," "too," and "to.")
- most as iny”
- i
- '>
- it
- I ke
- •hout
- >eakers
- next
- I n-
- i are f
- if or
- In
- :amp I e, lhen
- m-■ ounds
- itroI .
- ige e.
- iere ir I y irry ers
- P&R MODULE
- DISPLAY IV: INITIAL-FINAL COMBINATIONS *
- -
- c :3
- .3
- 9
- c
- X
- 3
- >.
- e
- :□
- 3
- G
- X
- it :□
- 3 C
- 13
- b
- 2.
- 9
- M
- «s
- >.
- :3
- C
- -.3
- ,2.
- 9
- 3 It
- X
- -
- x
- *
- s ǎr
- M
- 1
- >.
- C
- u
- c
- c
- c
- c
- X G
- X C
- X
- X
- 'y
- 5 X
- E
- c
- X c
- X
- -
- .5
- X
- 'r
- r .2
- X
- s
- >.
- c
- c
- £
- C
- c
- G
- .s
- '9
- E X
- X
- X
- c g
- c
- £
- 3 a.
- 2 c
- s
- ■5
- C X
- .2 9
- M
- o
- 1
- c
- ■G
- .2
- .3
- ‘9
- ’x
- 8 X
- .ft
- E
- 2»
- o 'c
- .1 ■©
- .3
- J
- .1
- 0* '&
- •
- 0 •: Ě
- 3 £
- i
- c
- ì
- T>
- ■3
- 2
- c 2
- 0 .2
- s X
- s
- .3
- -3
- J!
- .2 9
- 'x
- X
- —
- i
- £
- Q.
- c.
- -
- •-
- —
- '&■
- s
- X
- 3
- 3
- I
- S 3
- X í
- X
- 3 X
- G
- 3 J2
- X G =.
- N
- C
- 1
- X
- ■5
- X í
- 3
- ■o
- 3
- C
- a
- 3
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- G 3 JZ
- M
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- c 3 ■s
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- 3
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- -a
- Ē
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- 3
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- £
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- £
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- 3
- 3
- 3
- 3
- 3
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- X
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- 3
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- c
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- £
- 6
- X
- "6
- X G
- X c
- ? o X
- 8 c JC
- 0 X
- X
- 0 N
- 8 ī
- f
- 5 c
- N
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- u G ■8
- X c 01 w
- X
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- X Si
- X £ -X
- X G
- X
- c
- 8
- 8 8
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- X = J
- X c % -s
- c e
- X £
- 8
- c
- X
- 1
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- X e
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- 3 i
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- 3
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- 2 •C
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- cf i
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- -5
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- Adapted front Elementary ChintK- Pelting. China
- DISPLAY V; INITIALS
- Stops
- Affricates
- Fricatives
- Liquids
- Nasals
- Unaspirated
- Aspirated
- Unaspirated
- Aspirated
- Labials
- b
- P
- f
- m
- Alveoìars
- d
- t
- 1
- n
- Velars
- g
- k
- h
- Dentals
- Ī
- c
- s
- Re tr of Lexes
- zh
- ch
- sh
- r
- Palatals
- i
- q
- X
- ________.________________________________________,
- P&R MODULE
- DISPLAY V3: FINALS
- Vowels Alone
- Vowels Plus Consonants
- Diphthongs
- 0-Row
- (s)-i
- (r)-j
- ■a
- a
- e
- -an
- an
- -ang
- ang
- -en
- en
- -eng
- eng
- er
- -ong
- -ai
- ai
- -ao
- ao
- -ei
- ei
- -ou
- pu
- U-Row
- -u
- wu
- -ua
- wa
- -UQAQ
- wo
- -uan
- wan
- -uang
- wang
- -u_n wen
- (weng)
- -uai
- wa:
- •
- -u i
- wei
- J-Row
- ■i
- yi
- -ia
- ya
- -ie
- ye
- ■ian
- yan
- -iang
- yang
- -in
- yin
- -ing
- ying
- -iong yong
- (yai)
- -iao
- yao
- -i_u
- you
- 0-R.ow
- -ii
- yù
- -iie
- yíie
- ■iian
- yuan
- ■tin
- yǔn
- PSR MODULE
- tn this chart, vowel letters which do not have their “standard” sound
- values are underlined. The standard sound values are taken to be the
- ones they have standing alone as finals after n : na (as in “Okinawa”),
- ne (as in “cinema⁷*), ni (as in “Bikini”), nu (as in “Ainu,” “canog”),
- and nu (as in no English word). The letter a is not taken to have a
- standard sound value. Vowel letters which have been dropped in
- abbreviations are indicated by underlined spaces.
- Before .-i, (s > stands for all denial consonants and (r) for all
- retroflex consonants.
- Hyphens mark spellings after initials.
- Finals with r suffixes are not shown.
- Then, strip off the four tones. This leaves you with about 400 different
- strings of consonant and vowel sounds. (See Display IV.)
- Next, strip off any Initial consonants, or Initials, of which there are
- 21. (See Display V and Appendix I, the latter providing an alphabetical
- list of the Initials.) What is left are the finals. There are less than
- 40 different finals--a manageable number.
- Last, classify the finals by their medials, that Is, In PTnyTn
- romanization, by whether the final starts with u_ (or w), with I (or
- y_), with u (or yíí 1, or with none of the above.⁶ This gives you four
- classes which are useful when you talk about how the finals combine with
- the Initials. You also cross-cI assify the finals by what follows the
- medials. (See Display VI and Appendix II, the latter providing an
- alphabetical list of the finals.)
- - I. FINALS
- - A. Plain Finals
- Let’s take a closer look at the structure of the final. Every final, and
- hence every syllable, has at least a vowel. Here are five vowels which
- can stand alone as finals, either with or without initials:
- ENGLISH EQUIVALENTS
- mā
- (’■horse")
- as
- i n
- "Ma"
- d£
- ("virtue")
- as
- 1 n
- "Adel 1ne"
- ("you")
- as
- 1 n
- "blkin£"
- ^(b)ì
- ("no")
- as
- 1 n
- "Budapest"
- nU⁷
- ("woman" )
- no
- English equivalent
- about
- of tter left
- AM of the English equivalents in the examples are, of course,
- approximate at best and will be further off If your pronunciation does
- not happen to be the most standard American pronunciation. The vowel
- /u/, for example, is rather different from Its equivalent in "Budapest,”
- even for people who start the name the way they start ’’boot^.* For
- someone who starts ’’Budapest¹¹ the way he starts "beāīTtythe comparison
- is way, off. The Chinese vowel Is pronounced with the tongue farther
- back In the mouth and with the lips more rounded.
- ' n
- * w), Th I s
- ■ how
- í i f y id
- ■he
- There is no English equivalent for /u/, which Is pronounced with the
- tongue in position for 71/ and the lips In position for /u/,
- simultaneously. it Is not the same as the first vowel in "Utah," which
- Is pronounced with the tips In position for /u/_(D) but with the tongue
- gliding from the position for /I/ to the position for / «j /.
- The vowels /!/, /u/, and /íi/ are written y I , wu, and yU whan they do
- not follow an initial, In most cases, you wl iT not be able to hear
- separate sounds co r respond I ng to and w, as you can hear in the
- English words ”ye'^(T) and "woo.” The three vowels are discussed again
- in the summary sections on u_ finals, j_ finals, and tl finals.
- There are two more vowel sounds which can stand alone as finals, one of
- them only after initials. Confusingly, both sounds are represented by
- the letter 1 (already seen as standing for the vowel 71/ In "Tahiti”],
- The letter preceding the j_ determines which vowel sound Is to be used.
- After a consonant pronounced with the tongue In the /s/ position (see
- page 42), i stands for a vowel pronounced with the tongue as close as
- possible to the /s/ position. Many Americans have a similar vowel in
- "Just a moment,” often indicated by the spelling ”jíst.^(IT) For
- example:
- sl_ ("tour”) approximately as 1 n "jj_st"
- After a consonant pronounced with the tongue In the /r/ position, that
- Is, with the tongue strongly curled back (see page 42), i stands for □
- vowel which Is simply a prolonged /r/ sound. FoF example:
- he nd
- d
- shí ("ten") approximately as In "washer"
- When there Is no initial consonant sound before this vowel, the letter
- r_ Is written; r I, The r_tells you how to pronounce the I; It doss not
- stand for a separate sound. The whole syiiFble is one prolonged /r/
- sound.
- Everywhere else, _I_ stands for the "standard” /I/, as In "Tahiti
- A final may also consist of a vowel followed by a consonant, either ZnZ*
- or /ng/ (or Zr/, but this has a rather different status). Here are
- examples of all the ways the vowels presented thus far can combine with
- /n/ and /ng/:
- ------- --------------- ----- ----- --------------------
- 5n ("peace") as 1 n "Onta r i o"
- máng ("busy") ZaZ as In "Me" + ZngZ
- fSn ("cent") 35 1 n "fun.," "chicken.”
- 1 áng ("co 1 d") as 1 n "1u n g”
- mtn ("peop1e") as 1 n "mean"
- mf ng ("bright") ZtZ as In "am£no" t ZngZ
- j (Tn ("ml 1Itary") ZUZ + ZnZ
- ------- --------------- ----- ----- --------------------
- The analysis of /Un/ as simply ZU/ plus ZnZ will not always hold up.
- Especially when there is no Initial , you may hear a weak vowel Ze/
- sneak In before the ZnZ, so that ZilnZ almost rhymes with Zen/.
- There is also a final written ong in which the o_ stands for a vowel
- very much like ZuZ. Actually, it Is closer to the vowel sound in "good"
- than to the vowel In "food."
- There is built-in ZrZ, tongue, as In
- 6r
- I óng (’’dragon") ZoZ as In "woman" + /ng/ one final In
- which the vowel ZeZ is followed by a pronounced with a strong curling
- back of the the Eng I Ish "her."
- ("ear") as In "ermine"
- Other syllables which end the suffix £. For example:
- nǎr ("where")
- In ZrZ have been formed by adding
- as in "Na re I ssus"
- *The consonant ZnZ at the end of a syllable may sound a little like /ngZ
- when the next syllable starts with an Zh/ or a vowel sound, as In hen
- háo, "very good," and Yán¹Sn, "Yenan." Actually, however, this variant
- of ZnZ, pronounced with the tongue not touching the roof of the mouth,
- Is quite distinguishable from ZngZ, pronounced with the back of the
- tongue touching. Notice in the romanization Yán’5n that an apostrophe
- shows which syllable the n_ belongs to.
- sonant, it
- ie nted
- In many cases, adding an /r/ suffix has a considerable effect on the
- final, knocking out an /n/ or /ng/ and changing the vowel, for example.
- (You will deal with these Instances on a case*by-case basis In the
- course.! The /r/ suffix Is most popular In the Peking dialect but is one
- feature of that dialect that has not been widely accepted as a national
- norm.
- I ways a
- s for vowe I
- A final may also consist of a diphthong, that Is, a vowel followed by a
- weaker glide to the position of /!/ or /□/.
- (Similar diphthongs exist
- In Eng 1 Ish.)
- There are four such
- finals:
- hǎj_ ("sea")
- as 1 n
- "Shanghai" "high"
- máo ("hair")
- as 1 n
- "Mao Tse-tung," "mouth
- lèl_ ("tired")
- dōu ("all”)
- These diphthongs are best
- as In "1 e I , " "si sigh"
- as In "sou 1 ," "dough" learned as units. If we look at the
- Individual letters, however, we notice that the letter o has a different
- sound value in ou than in ao and ong, and thaF the letter £ has a
- different sound value In eI than In e, en, and eng.
- by a
- A final may also consist of any of the above types (vowel alone, vowel
- plus consonant, or diphthong) preceded by a medial, that is, by a weak
- version of one of the vowels /u/, /I/, and /U/. The medlals /u/ and /!/
- are like the English semivowels written w and in "wet” and ^(T,)yet" and
- written £ and J_ In "Jaguar"“and "onion." Finals starting with theTe
- three medíals are discussed In the next three summary sections.
- dd I ng
- - B. u Finals
- You have heard and seen the full vowel /u/ following an Initial In the
- word bù, "no." When the vowel does not follow ■ an initial, it is
- written wu_.
- wú ("five") as In ¹¹ o o ze” or "woo¹¹
- As suggested by the English equivalents, you may or may not hear a /w/
- sound before the /u/.
- tie we I
- tua 1 Iy, t
- om
- I ce
- A /w/ sound may also occur before other vowels at the beginning of a
- final. The sound Is written u_ when It follows an Initial and w when It
- does not. (Since the sound Is a weak version of the vowei /u/, the sound
- will be called medial /u/.) In the following examples of finals which
- start with the media! /u/, some have Initials and therefore use the u
- spelling. Some have no initials and therefore use the w_ spelling.
- huà ("speech") as In "qua I 1 ty"
- wò ( " I " ) as In "wa I ।⁸
- Notice that the letter o In wo and uo Is used for yet another vowel
- sound, roughly the" voweT In the English word "saw," The spelling uo Is
- abbreviated to o after the initials written rn, b, £, and f (the labial
- consonants, involving the lips). The medTal sound Is still there,
- however, so that mo, "Ink," Is* pronounced as If It were spelled muò■
- huàn ("exchange") as In "quant Ity," "wan," "Juan"
- wáng ("king") as in "Wong," Zua/ as In
- "quajTty* + /ng/
- wèn ("ask") as In "Owen," "won"
- (There Is a very rare final weng ■ )
- You would expect wen to be spelled uen after Initials, but it Is
- abbreviated to un: han, "mix up." You can still hear the vowel /e/,
- however. TFTe s y I tables written hun and wfen rhyme. Notice that the
- tone mark In hùn has been shifted to the only remaining vowel letter.
- Huá1 (name of a river) as In "Waikiki ," "why"
- wòI ("stomach") as In "we I gh"
- Again, you would expect we 1 to be written ue1 after initials, but it Is
- abbreviated to u 1 ; dul , "correct/" You can still hear the diphthong
- /el/, however. The syllables written duì and wè1 rhyme. (There is some
- Justification for this spelling. In the High and Rising tones, this
- final does sound quite like the English pronoun "we," as the spelling uì
- would suggest.) Notice that the tone mark in duì has been shlTTed to the
- last available vowel letter.
- * i sc
- a<
- ।
- A
- It
- f
- I
- 5
- T
- ft II E I v
- er
- Fhe
- The
- As suggested by the English equivalents, you may or may not hear a /y/
- sound before the /I/ In y I . You will usually hear a /y/ sound before
- the /!/ in yTn and y í ng, and the vowel Itself is more like the
- "short¹' English vowel In "s£n" and "sj_ng."
- "Juan"
- A /y/ sound may also occur before other vowels at the beginning of a
- final. The sound is written i when It follows an Initial and when It
- does not. (Since tKe sound Is a weak version of the vowel /I/, the sound
- will be called medial Zi/,) In the following examples of finals which
- start with the medial /I/, some have initials and therefore use the I
- spelling. Some have no Initials and therefore use the spellTng.
- yá ("tooth”J as In "Yamaha,^(w) "yahoo”
- yfe ("also") as In "ye I I ow¹¹
- t Is we I
- I ce n ī ng
- As you have seen, In the finals written e, an, and eng, the letter e_
- stands for a vowel like the e In "ch 1 cken .^(ir)"^(J) Not Ice that In
- the final written ye or Te the letter e stands⁹ for a vowel like the e_
- In "hen.” iThis”Ts the same vowel sound e stands for in the diphthong
- written e I . In other words, an i or In the final means that e_ stands
- for the vowel of "han. "T
- nIán⁹ ("year") as In "yen"
- In this final written Ian or yan, the letter a has an exceptional sound
- value, essentially the vowel In the EngĒlsh word "hen.”
- hear *6 í rhe
- FI co able
- yéng (["Yin 6] Yang") ZyZ + /a/ as in "Ma” + ZngZī
- as In "Yonkers"
- Yòng ("use") , ZyZ + /o/ as In "woman" + /ng/
- yào ("want") as In "yow I"
- yòu ("again") as In "yeoman"
- ‘ight."
- Yet again, you would expect the final you to be written Iou after
- Initials, but It Is abbreviated to I u : IIù, "six." You can still hear
- the diphthong /ou/, however. TTù and yòu rhyme. In the High and Rising
- tones this final does sound quite like the English pronoun "you," as
- suggested by the spelling iu. Notice that the tone mark In ìIù has been
- shifted to the last available vowel letter.
- There is a very rare final ya I , not shown In Display IV.
- 0. u Finals
- The full vowel ZuZ following an initial occurs In the syllable nú,
- "woman.” When it does not follow an initial, it Is written yti.
- yū ("rain”) no English equivalent
- yUn ("rhyme”) /uZ + ZnZ
- You may or may not hear something like a ZyZ sound before the /(I/,
- which Is pronounced with the tongue position of Z i / and the lip
- position of ZuZ.
- A weak version of the vowel ZuZ, which will be called medial ZU/, may
- occur before other vowels at the beginning of a final. The sound Is
- written u_ when it follows an initial and ytī when It does not. One of
- the following examples of finals which start with the medial ZuZ has an
- Initial; therefore the U spelling is used. The other example has no
- initial, however; therefore the yU spelling Is used.
- jué ("definitely") ZU/ + Ze/ as in "hen”
- Notice that the letter e_ in this final stands for a vowel sound like
- the one In the English word "hen," as does In the final spel led ye or
- Ie and tn the final spe! led e_i_. ZU/ has the same effect as /!/
- because the same tongue position is used to produce both.
- yUán ("garden”) /ií/ + /an/ as in the British
- "answer"
- Instead of rhyming this final with the final written an, some speakers
- rhyme y U á n with the final written yen or i an, using the vowel sound
- of the English "hen."
- II. INITIALS
- Each group of initial consonants In the following summary sections (A
- through F) contains one consonant which Is distinctively "aspirated" and
- one which Is distinctively "unasp 1 rated.”
- The aspirated consonants explode with .a strong puff of air. In English,
- the consonants written t, _k (or c, as in "cow," or cp, and ch are
- lightly aspirated at the beginning of a word, as you can tell if you
- hold the back of your hand to your mouth while saying "pa," These same
- letters, including the combination ch, are used to romanize the
- distinctively, more strongly aspirated Chinese consonants.
- Unaspirated consonants explode without a puff of air, The English
- lightly aspirated consonants become unaspirated after /s/, as you can
- tell If you say "pa¹¹ and "spa¹¹ against the back of your hand. This Is
- an automatic adjustment for English speakers, and It will take practice
- to learn to pronounce English aspirated consonants as unaspirated when
- there Is no /s/ to trigger the adjustment.
- English has a series of "voiced” consonants which are pronounced with
- vibration of the vocal cords. These Include consonants written b_, d_, g
- (as In both ''Gary” and "Gerry"), I (as In "Jerry"), and z. These same
- letters plus the combination zh are used to romaníze the unvoiced,
- distinctively unaspirated Chinese consonants.
- The consonants which are neither distinctively aspirated nor
- distinctively unaspirated are the ones which can be prolonged, such as
- /s/, /I/, and /n/.
- So far consonants have been grouped In terms of the general manner In
- which they are produced. Now they will be grouped In terms of the tongue
- and lip positions used In producing them.
- A . Initials m, b, p, f ( L a b i a I )
- These are pronounced In the positions suggested by the Ietters.
- màn
- ("
- 10,000")
- as
- 1 n
- "ml 11"
- ban
- C”
- half")
- as
- 1 n
- "bl II,"
- but
- not
- vo1ced
- <"
- divide")
- as
- I n
- "£j II,"
- but
- more
- asp 1 rated
- fan
- ("
- cooked rice")
- as
- In
- "fj 1 1”
- These Initials
- are
- never fo11 owed
- by
- the
- med I a 1
- /u/
- or by
- the
- vowel or medial
- /ÍI/
- . Additionally
- _(t) /f/
- is never
- fo11 owed
- by the.
- vowel or medial /!/. (See Display IV.)
- B. Initials n, d, t, I (Alveolar)
- These are pronounced in the positions suggested
- by the
- 1etters. n_à
- ("that")
- as
- I n
- "n 1 1"
- dà
- ("big")
- as
- 1 n
- "dj II," but
- unvoiced
- tff
- ("he")
- as
- 1 n
- "til 1 but
- more
- ("pul 1")
- asp 1 rated as In "JJ 1"
- /D/ and / + / are never followed by the vowel or medial / tī /. /N/ and
- /I/ are the only Initials which may be followed either by the vowel or
- medial /il/ or by the vowel or medial /□/. (See Display IV.)
- C, Initials g, k, h (Velar)
- positions suggested by the
- These are Ietters.
- s> kà
- há
- These Initials
- pronounced In the
- ("piece¹')
- ("1esson")
- ("with")
- are never followed
- Display IV.)
- as as as by
- 1 n "£Ì II,” but unvo1ced in "Iklll," but more aspirated
- 1 n "hj II," but harsher
- the
- vowels and
- med lais /1 /
- and
- /u/,
- (See
- D. Initials z, c, s (Dental
- /5/
- Position)
- To
- These are
- Z3ng CSng
- SSng an English
- pronounced as Indicated by (surname) as In "
- (surname) as in"
- (surname) as in"
- speaker, the spelling z Is
- the English equivalents, beds," but unvoiced bets," but more aspirated
- Bess," but stronger only suggestive, and
- the spelling c Is quite arbitrary. LJke the velars (/g/, /k/, /h/ì_(t)
- these Initials are never followed by the vowels and medials /I/ and
- /(I/, (Display IV)
- As mentioned previously, the letter J_ after these /s/-posltlon sounds
- stands for a vowel with the tongue as close as possible to the /s/
- position.
- E. !n111 a Is zh, ch, sh, r (Retroflex, or /r/ Position)
- IBLJTZZJ SBH '
- These are pronounced as Indicated by the English equivalents, but with
- the tongue strongly curled back towards the position for /r/.
- ------- ------------ -----------------------------------
- ZhSng (surname) as in but unvoiced
- ChSng (su rname) as Tn "chaw," but more a sp1rāTed
- Shīng (su rname) as In "Shaw"
- rang ("al low") as in "raw”
- ------- ------------ -----------------------------------
- Like the velars (ZgZ, I'fJ, ZhZ) and dentals (hi, /cf, Zs/), these
- Initials are never followed by the vowels and medlals ZIZ and ZUZ.
- (Display IV)
- Some speakers pronounce ZrZ with a certain amount of friction so that it
- Is somewhat like the ZsZ sound In "measure." Notice that the unfamiliar
- zh spelling Is only suggestTve. The letter h_ after a consonant
- Tn’dlcates a pronunciation In the ZrZ pos111 on,
- As mentioned previously, the letter I after these ZrZ-position sounds
- stands for a vowel which Ts a prolonged ZrZ.
- sted
- f
- F. Initials j, q, * (Palatal, or ZIZ Position)
- These are pronounced as indicated by the English equivalents, but with
- the tongue pushed forward towards the position for ZI Z.
- its .
- >ted
- I S
- -------- ----------- ---------------------------------------------------------
- JJ 5ng (surname) as tn ''Jeep,’¹ but unvoiced
- SJáng (surname) as In ’’cheap,¹’ but more asp 1raTed
- XISng (surname) between the ZshZ of ’’sheep” and the ZsZ of "£ee'p^(Tr)
- -------- ----------- ---------------------------------------------------------
- The palatals are followed only by the vowels and medlals ZIZ and ZUZ.
- (See Display IV,} Pay particular attention to the spellings £ and x,
- since they are quite arbitrary to speakers of English.
- With the palatals, this survey of the consonants Is completed. Let’s
- summarize the relationship between groups of consonants and the
- different sound values of the letter I:
- ts.
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | AFTER | WHICH ARE | ZIZ IS | AS IN THE |
- | | PRO-NOUNCED | PRONOUNCED | SURNAME |
- | | WITH THE TONGUE | | |
- | | | W"íTH_ | |
- | | | TP’R-CTE'' | |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | ZzZ. ZcZ, / sZ | In the ZsZ | close to the | ST |
- | | pos111 on | ZsZ pos it Ion | |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | ZzhZ, ZchZ, | close to the | In the ZrZ | ShT |
- | ZshZ, £ | ZrZ position | pos111 on | |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | any other | In any other | In the | XT |
- | Initial , 1 | pos111 on | ”standard" ZIZ | |
- | | | pos111 on | |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- SENTENCE INTONATION
- In the previous discussion of different levels of syllable stress and
- their effect on the pitch patterns of the tones, you were concerned only
- with words pronounced In isolation, as If read from a 1 1st, Usual Iy»
- of course, words are strung together in utterances. Then, the rules of
- relative stress apply over longer unInterrupted stretches which have a
- generally speeded-up tempo end narrowed, lowered pitch range.
- In the following example, notice the shrinkage of the pitch patterns and
- the overall lowering. The surname and given name together have the
- stress pattern of a single word--wlth normal stress on the first
- syllable, lighter stress on the middle syllable, and heavier stress on
- the last syllable.
- []
- In addition to these automatic effects of stringing words together,
- deliberate effects of sentence intonation single out for attention
- particular parts of a sentence or Indicate how a whole sentence is to be
- understood.
- Normally, a surname will carry more information than a following title
- and, thus, will be given greater emphasis by heavier stress.
- []
- ’he subordinate status of the title Is shown by the fact that It is
- often pronounced with no full tone.
- B
- J
- er
- JP
- :h
- []
- T5 shI Hú Xiáo- -Jle.
- More generally, the key word or phrase In any sentence may be emphasized
- by heavy stress.
- []
- Here, the stress on the negative marker bjj emphaslzes to someone that
- he is wrong to think that he has Identified Miss Hú.
- With the exception of words that are emphasized, words in rapid normal
- speech may seem to have lost the tones you are working so hard to learn.
- But don’t feel cheated. In the first place, the words are seldom really
- monotone; there Is probably something there to hear. (When you are doing
- the talking, it Is better to risk being overly precise, since only the
- fluent speaker has the right to mumble.) In the second place, these
- words are going to be emphasized sometimes, and then you can't fudge.
- The use of stress to single out for attention particular parts of
- sentences Is basically the same In Chinese and English. The only major
- difference to keep In mind Is that in Chinese stress exaggerates the
- pitch pattern of a tone. Stress does not give the syllable a falling
- pitch pattern, as Tn English. Be careful not to turn your stressed
- Chinese syI IabIes~Into Fallingtone syllables.
- There is considerably more difference between Chinese and English In the
- use of Intonation patterns to indicate how whole sentences are to be
- understood. In English, intonation patterns are most noticeable at the
- ends of sentences. The typical pattern Is a drop at the end of the
- sentence, used for most statements and for most questions with question
- words like "who" or ” w h a t. ”
- I'm Denial KI ng.
- Who are you? %
- The most common exception to this typical pattern In English is a rise
- at the end of the sentence, used for most questions that can be answered
- "yes’* or "no.”
- Are you Mr. KlngT^Z
- You're Mr. King? f
- Who am. I?/ (meaning "You're asking
- who I am?")
- in the lest two examples, only the rising intonation shows thet these
- are "echo questions¹¹ calling for yes/no answers.
- In Chinese, the typical Intonation pattern—the pattern for most
- statements--1s the one we have already presented; the sequence of tones,
- modified by stress, with a faster tempo and a narrower, lower pitch
- range than for words in Isolation.
- You will have to fight your natural tendency as a speaker of English to
- end statements with a drop In pitch. A High tone remains a High tone; a
- Rising tone remains a Rising tone; and a Low tone, with Its rising tall,
- remains a Low tone, even at the end of a statement. Do not change them
- Into Falling tones.
- The most common exception to this typical Chinese Intonation pattern Is
- a slightly raised sequence of tones, used for most questions. Unlike the
- English rising Intonation, the Chinese raised Intonation produces
- hIgher-than-normeI pitch throughout the sentence and is used for
- questions with question words, as well as for yes/no questions.
- In the following two sentences, only the difference between raised
- Intonation and normal Intonation signals that the first Is a yes/no
- question and the second a statement.
- and who I ō t terns
- pat-ta+e~
- []
- []
- NT hSo? (You’re fine?}
- W& h S o -(Pm fine.)
- EngiIsh :rs
- Now Jet’s compare the Intonation of a question-word question with Its
- answer:
- asking that
- []
- []
- NT shī nělguo rén?
- (What’s your nationality?)
- Wò shl Máíguo rén. (I^(T)m an Amar!can.)
- ■n for
- ।
- and
- ikar tone
- ind a the
- Another Chinese intonation pattern lowers the pitch throughout the
- sentence# often giving the voice s breathy quality rather like a sigh.
- This pattern Is used for '’echo questions#¹’ which are used to verify
- what has been said. Let’s compare a normal question (raised Intonation)
- and an ’'echo question’¹ (lowered IntonatIon):
- ma-or
- :tǐon
- []
- ftwasn rst
- NT xīng Wáng ma?
- (Is your surname Wang?)
- NT xl ng Wing a?
- ([You say) your surname Is
- King?)
- In discussing these three Chinese Intonation patterns, the point has
- repeatedly been made that they affect the general pitch level of the
- whole sentence. However, there are noticeable intonations! features at
- the ends of sentences. These are particularly noticeable when the last
- syllable Is In the Neutral tone. In fact, the marker a has no real
- meaning or grammatical function of Its own, merely serving as a carrier
- of various final pitch contours which affect meaning. There are also
- cases where a final syllable with full tone Is extended to carry one of
- these final pitch contours,
- Together with Interjections and the various pause markers which
- punctuate sentences, these Intonatlonal devices provide much of ths
- expressiveness of Chinese speech. Keep listening for them.
- APPENDIX I: LIST OF INITIALS
- the p í tch i n-tl -tone . ct I on ch
- sse
- 'S
- 3
- J
- PTnyTn
- --------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Roma n 1 z a 11 o n Nearest English Equivalent
- b "b_i |l,^(lf) but unvoiced
- c "bets," but more aspirated
- ch ^(M)chaw," but more aspirated and In ZrZ position
- d "dj i 1 , " but unvo 1 ced
- f "fl 1 1 "
- g ^(T,)£l II," but unvo 1 ced
- h "M II," but harsher
- J "J_eep," but unvoiced and in /I / position
- k "Mil," but more aspirated
- 1 "LI 1”
- m "ml 1 1"
- n "nJ 1"
- P "2J 11," but more aspirated
- q "cheap," but more aspirated and In ZIZ position
- r "raw," but with tongue curled back more
- s , "Bess," but stronger
- sh "Shaw," but In ZrZ position
- t "till," but more aspirated
- w (See Appendix 11, List of Finals.)
- X between the ZshZ of "sheep" and the ZsZ of "seep," but in ZIZ posT+lon
- y (See Appendix II, List of Finals.)
- z "beds," but unvoiced
- zh "j_aw," but unvoiced and In ZrZ position
- --------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- APPENDIX 11: LIST OF FINALS
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | PTnyTn | Nearest English | Spelling w 1 thout 1 |
- | | Equivalent | n : t_i_a i |
- | Roman 1zat1 on | | |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | a | "Ma" | |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | a 1 | "Shangha1," "h 1 gh" | |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | an | "Qatar 1 o" | |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | ang | "Ma_" + /ng/ | |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | ao | "Mao Tse-tung," | |
- | | "mouth" | |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | ar | "Narc1 ssus" | |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | 6 | ’’Adeline" | |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | el | "lei," "s 1 e 1 gh" | |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | en | "fun," "ch 1 ckan" | |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | eng | "lung" | |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | er | "ermlne" | |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | 1 (after £, £, c) | "JJ_st" (/s/ | |
- | | position) | |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | (after r, zh, ch, sh) | "washer" (/r/ | r 1 |
- | | position) | |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | (elsewhere) | "Bl kin P' | yi |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | la | "Yamaha," "yahoo," | ya |
- | | "yacht" | |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | 1 an | "yen" | yen |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | I ang | /y/ + "Mia" + /ng/, | yang |
- | | "Yonkers" | |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | 1 ao | "yow 1'" | y ao |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | 1 e | "ye 11ow” | ye |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | 1 n | "mean" | y 1 n |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | 1 ng | "arnhio" + /ng/ | y Ing |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- *
- ------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ----------------------------
- PTnyTn Roman Izat i on Nearest English Equivalent Spe Hing w 1 thout Initial
- I ong /y/ + "woman" + /ng/ yong
- lu "yeoman" you
- 0¹⁰ "wa 1 1"
- ong "woman" + /ng/
- ou "soul"
- 4¹¹ "Budapest" wu
- ua "quaj fty" wa
- ua 1 "Waikiki"why" wa 1
- uan¹¹ "quant 11y," "J uan" wan
- uang "Wong"quality" + /ng/ wang
- u 1 "we 1 g_h" wel
- un¹¹ "Owen," "won" wen
- uo "wall’¹ wo
- d¹¹ íno English equivalent; pronounced with the tongue in the /I/ position and the lips In the /u/ position, simultaneous 1 y. ) yti
- Uan¹¹ /U/ + "Ontario" yUan
- Ue¹¹ / ùl / + "h^n" y Ue
- Un¹¹ /U/ + /n/ y[fn
- ------------------------ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ----------------------------
- NUMBERS (NUM)
- INTRODUCTION
- The ability to use the Chinese number system may be one of ths most
- useful skills you will acquire during this course. The Numbers resource
- module Introduces the Chinese numbers from zero through 99,999 and
- ordinal numbers.
- The essential part of this module consists of the Numbers (NUM) tapes
- and the accompanying displays and exercises In the workbook section of
- this module. The workbook text Is followed by a summary section.
- You should work through at least the first four tapes, which Introduce
- the numbers up to 100, while you are studying the Orientation Module.
- These tapes Include some work on pronunciation. Working with numbers
- offers an excellent opportunity to build up fluency and accuracy of
- pronunciation without having to learn a lot of new vocabulary.
- NUM tapes 5 and 6 are Intended to be used with the second half of the
- Money Module, where higher numbers are used in banking situations.
- However, because tapes for the resource modules are as self-contained as
- possible, you may use them at any time with a minimum of reference to
- other components of the course.
- TAPE 1 WORKBOOK (NUMBERS 1-6)
- DISPLAY I
- - I yT 4
- - 2 èr 5
- - 3 s3n 6
- ExercI so I
- A.____ e.____
- 1324 4132
- D.
- 4 3 12 3 2 14
- Exercise 2
- A. 1243 B. 3421 C. 1324 0. 4132 E. 2431
- Exercise 3
- A.____ 3.
- 12 5 6 3 5 4 6
- D.
- 5246
- Exercise 4
- C. 1645 D. 2564
- E. 6135
- A. 5315 B. 5362
- TAPE 2 WORKBOOK (NUMBERS 7-10 and 0)
- । yr
- - 2 èr
- - 3 s3n
- - 4 si
- - 5 wū
- Exercise I
- A.____ 8.
- 5 7 6 8
- 0. ___ E-
- 4 7 3 8
- Exercise
- ft. S765 B. 7843
- DISPLAY 1
- - 6 I líi
- - 7 qT
- - 8 bS
- - 9 J I Ǔ
- - IO shí
- 0 I í ng
- C. ___
- 8 7 13 2 7
- 6 6 7 5
- C. 7157 D. 2867 É.
- 5868
- Exercise 3
- A.
- 7 6 5 6
- D.
- 8 6 4 2
- B.
- C.
- --B —
- E.
- 1 3 5
- 7
- 7
- 4
- 3
- 8
- 7
- 7
- 8 8
- Exercise 4
- A.____
- 9 0 0 9
- D.
- 5 9 0 6
- Exercise 5
- B.
- E.
- 7
- 4
- %
- 9 S
- 0 3
- 0
- 9
- C.
- 9
- 0
- 8
- 7
- A. 8790
- Exercise 6
- A.____
- 17 7 6
- D.____
- 16 2 0
- B.
- 1939
- 0.
- E.
- C.
- 1
- 1
- 4096
- 4 9 2
- 9 2 9
- 0.
- 2005
- C.
- 1
- E
- 0
- 6
- 7980
- 6
- TAPE 3 WORKBOOK (NUMBERS 11-99)
- DISPLAY I
- ----- ------------ ---- ----------- ---- ---------------
- 11 shíyT 20 èrsh f 22 èrshIèr
- I2 sh f èr 30 sBnsh f 33 sBnsh1sSn
- I 3 sh í sBn 40 si sh ( 44 sish1 si
- I 4 sh í si 50 wǔsh f 55 wúsh1wǔ
- I5 sh í wǚ 60 Hùshf 66 11ush 1 II ù
- I6 sh f Ií ù 70 qTshí 77 qTsh1qT
- I 7 sh f qT 80 bSshf 88 bSshlbā
- I 8 shfbS 90 J I ūsh í 99 J I ūsh 1J 1ǚ
- 19 sh f j I ǔ
- ----- ------------ ---- ----------- ---- ---------------
- Exercise I
- ---- ----- ---- ----------------------- -------------
- 1. 2. 3. 4. 5 , _
- 12 40 30 16 20
- 6, 7. 8. 9. 10. _____
- 1 1 70 17 90 !4
- ---- ----- ---- ----------------------- -------------
- ExercIse 2
- 1 . 85
- 2.
- 17
- 3.
- 44
- 4 ,
- 93
- 5.
- 38
- 6. 29
- 7.
- 70
- 8.
- 26
- 9.
- 52
- 10.
- 61
- TAPE 4 WORKBOOK (NUMBERS 1-99, REVIEW)
- --------------------------------------
- Exercise I
- 1 . 3 2.16' 3,
- 6. 91 7. 34 8.
- Exe rcI so 2
- 1. 67 2. 12 3.
- 6. 35 7. 26 8.
- Exercise 3
- 1 . 4+5 2. 3 + 8
- 5.7+2 6.9+7
- 9. 3 + 9 10. 4 + 4
- Exercise 4
- 1. 36 2, 41 3.
- 6, 94 7. 25 8.
- Exercise 5
- 1. 21+10 2. 65+10
- 5. 59 + 10 6. 74 + 10
- 9. 25 + 10 10. 76 + 10
- --------------------------------------
- ----- ------------ ---- ----- -------
- 48 4. 70 5. 22
- 59 9. 6 10. 30
- 90 4. 54 5. 83
- 79 9. 48 10. 4
- 3. 1+2 4. 6 + 9
- 7. 0 + I 8* 5 + 6
- 72 4. 18 5. 63
- 66 9. 52 10. 27
- 3. 33 + 10 4, 18 + 10
- 7 . 42 + 10 8. 86 + 10
- ----- ------------ ---- ----- -------
- NUM MODULE
- TAPE 5 WORKBOOK (NUMBERS
- DISPLAY i
- 100-999)
- 100
- y 1 bá 1
- 600
- I I ùbā I
- 200
- i1ǎngběI
- (11ángbā 1)¹²
- 700
- qTbì i
- 300
- sSnbǎ1
- 800
- bībāT
- 400
- 500
- si bS 1
- wí bā I
- (wúbā1)
- DISPLAY II
- 900
- j I ǔbSI
- (j lúbǎI)
- 140
- y1bí1 sish í
- 655
- I IùbǎI wish!wǔ
- 222
- 11SngbíIèrsh1èr
- (11ángbS i èrsh1èr)
- 747
- qTbèlslshlqT
- 56 1
- wūbǎ í11ùsh f yT (wúbS11īùshfyT)
- 999
- J I ǔ b í1J 1 ǔ 5 h 1J 1 ū (J lúbSījlūshījlǚ)
- ------------- ------------------------ --------------------------------------
- Exe rc i se 1 (Answers are on tape.)
- 1 . 6.
- 2. 7.
- 3. • 8.
- 4. 9.
- 5. 10.
- Exerc í se 2
- 1 . 630 2. 543 3. 224 4. 468 5. 770
- 6, 185 7. 852 8. 292 9. 369 10. 987
- DISPLAY til
- COLUMN 1 COLUMN 2
- 104 yl bǎ 11 í ngsl 140 ylbilsìshf
- 202 1 i ǎngbǎ11 f ngèr 220 11Sngbá1 èrshí
- (1 i ángbǎ 1 1 í ngèr) (11ángbè1èrsh f)
- 405 s 1 bS í1 í ngwǔ 450 slbílwǔshf
- 603 1 Iùbǎ11 í ngsSn 630 1 1 íibè ī sSnsh í
- 709 qTbā i 1fngJ i □ 790 qTbǎ1 J i ǔshí
- ------------- ------------------------ --------------------------------------
- DISPLAY IV
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | 1 10 | y ì b a 1 y | 4 14 | s 1 b ǎ i y T s |
- | | Tsti í | | h 1 s ì |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | 21 1 | 1 1 | 7 16 | qTbǎ1yfsh 111 ù |
- | | āngbě1yTshlyT | | |
- | | | | |
- | | (1 | | |
- | | lángbSlyTshlyT) | | |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | 3 12 | sSnbǎ1yTsh1èr | 916 | J JubalyTshl |
- | | | | |
- | | | | (j [úbā 1 yTshl |
- | | | | bif) |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- DISPLAY V
- IM
- 121
- 131
- Exercise 3
- ----- ----- ----- ------ ------- ------- ----- -----
- I . 101 2. 1 10 3. 1 1 1 4 , 270
- 5. 308 6. 410 7 . 555 8. 90!
- 9. 613 10. 220 1 1 . 812 12. 721
- ----- ----- ----- ------ ------- ------- ----- -----
- Exercise 4
- 1 -
- 909
- 919
- 99 1
- 6.
- 4 14
- 441
- 444
- 2.
- 74 1
- 747
- 774
- 7.
- 200
- 208
- 280
- 3.
- 203
- 2 13
- 230
- 8.
- 5 1 5
- 525
- 55 1
- 4.
- 3.1 í
- 313
- 33!
- 9.
- 808
- 868
- 881
- 5.
- 602
- 612
- 62 1
- 10.
- 101
- 1 10
- 1 i 1
- Answers to
- Exerc1se
- 4; 1.919
- 2. 741
- 3. 230
- 4. 31 1
- 5 .
- 602
- 6 . 444
- 7. 208
- 8.
- 525
- 9. 808
- 10. 110
- TAPE 6 WORKBOOK {NUMBERS 1,000-99,999)
- DISPLAY I
- -------- ------------ ------- --------------
- 1 ,000 yì q ǐ In 6,000 1 i ìiq 1 In
- 2,000 1 iǎngq1In 7,000 qTq iIn
- 3,000 sSnq í In 6,000 bīq íIn
- 4,000 si q i In 9,000 j1ǔq1 In
- 5,000 wǔqIIn
- -------- ------------ ------- --------------
- DISPLAY II
- 1,246 yìqI InfīangbSI sishI I Iù
- 3,575 slnq1InwǔbSiqTshiwǔ
- 6,750 í iùqiInqTbǎiwǔshf
- Exercise I
- ----- -------- ----- ------- ----- -------- ----- -------
- 1 . 5,555 2. 3,690 5. 1 ,200 4 , 6,455
- 5. 2, B99 6. 7,131 7 . 4,256 8. 9,742
- 9. 8,329 10. 2,974
- ----- -------- ----- ------- ----- -------- ----- -------
- Exercise 2
- ---- -------- ----- ----------
- 1. 1,111 2 . 7, t 1 7
- 5. 4,9 12 6. 9,115
- ---- -------- ----- ----------
- 3. 2,210
- 7. 3,813
- 4 , 6,616
- 8, 5,419
- DISPLAY III
- COLUMN I
- COLUMN 2
- ------- ---------------------- ------- ----------------------------
- 1,001 y ì qISn1 f ngyT 1,101 yl q 1 3nyl bS 1 I í riavT
- 2,002 1 Iǎngq15n1f ngèr 2,202 1 lǎngqlínliāngbSi1í ngèr
- 6,005 1 I ùq i ān I tn gwǔ 6,605 I iìiqISínl iùbāi 1 fngwǔ
- 7,007 q T q13 n1 1ngqT 7,707 qTqīSnqTbǎl 1f ngqT
- 9,009 J!ǔ q1Sn1 tnqJi ù 9,909 J 1 ǔq iīnj1ǔbā1If ngJ 1ǔ
- ------- ---------------------- ------- ----------------------------
- Exercise 3
- 1 . ________________________________________
- - 2. ________________
- - 3. _______________
- - 4. _______________
- - 5. _______________
- - 6. _________________
- - 7, _________________
- - 8. _______________
- - 9. _______________
- - 10. _______________
- (Answers are on page 68.)
- Exercise 4
- ---- ----------- ----- -------- ---- ------- ---- -------
- 1. 8, t' 4 ? 2. 1,202 3. 4,007 4. 6,500
- 5. 7 , 2 1 2 6. 3,4 10 7. 9,704 6. 2,002
- 9. 5,330 10. 2,222
- ---- ----------- ----- -------- ---- ------- ---- -------
- DISPLAY IV
- Exercise 5
- I . ____________________________________________
- - 2. ________________
- - 3. _______________
- - 4. _______________
- - 5. ________________
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | 1! 0,000 il | y í wàn | 6í 0,000 | 91ùwàn |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | 2, 0,000 | 1 1 ǎngwàn | 1\ 0,000 | q fwàn |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | 1 | sSnwàn | 8’0,000 I | báwàn |
- | | | | |
- | 3^(l) 0,000 | | | |
- | | | | |
- | 1 | | | |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | 4* 0,000 | si wàn | 9,0,000 | j I □ w à n |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | 5‘ 0,000 | wǔwà n | | |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- - 6. _______________
- - 7. _______________
- - 8. _______________
- - 9. ________________
- - IO. ________________
- (Answers are on page 68.)
- Exerc i se 6
- ---- --------- ----- -------- ---- -------- ---- --------
- 1. 62,! 39 2. 45,365 3, 21,540 4. 69,211
- 5, 93,537 6. 14,610 7. 57,442 8. 38,793
- 9. 76,818 !O. 28,954
- ---- --------- ----- -------- ---- -------- ---- --------
- DISPLAY V
- COLUMN 1
- COLUMN 2
- 1 ,000 I
- y íwan lingyT
- I ,OOP! yfwànífngyT
- 1,00 t1
- y f w□nIf ngyT s h I y T
- 1 , 100 1 yíwànyìqiSnl īrìgyT
- i ,01 H
- y í wà nI íngyìbǎi-
- ],1101 yT wà n y1q1Sny1bǐ t-
- yTshiyT
- 1 f n g y T
- Exerc i se
- _7
- 1 .
- 6.
- 2;
- 7,
- 3.
- 8.
- 4 .
- 9,
- 5,
- 10.
- . (Answers are on page 68.)
- Exerc1se 8
- ---- -------- ----- -------- ----- -------- ----- --------
- 1. 80,015 2. 46,002 3. 70,005 4 . 22,20!
- 5. 54,003 6. 30,009 7 . 27,006 8. 10,055
- 9. 62,008 10. 90,509
- ---- -------- ----- -------- ----- -------- ----- --------
- ----- --------------------------
- DISPLAY VI
- No. 42 DàlT J 13 Sìshlèrhào
- No. 36 DàlT Jlē SSnshlllùhào
- ----- --------------------------
- Exercise 9
- ----- ----- --------- --------
- 1 . No. 42 DàlT Street
- 2, No. 36 DàlT Street
- 3. No. 29 DalT Street
- 4. No. 63 DàlT Street
- 5. No. 84 DàlT Street
- ----- ----- --------- --------
- ANSWERS TO TAPE
- 6 EXERCISES
- ExercIse
- 3
- 1 ,
- 1,001
- 6.
- 4,00B
- 2.
- 1,101
- 7,
- 9,616
- 3.
- 6,505
- 8.
- 3,403
- 4*
- 7,001
- 9,
- 5,501
- 5.
- B,0IO
- i 0.
- 6,006
- Exsrc150
- 5
- t .
- 1 i , 1 ! 1
- 6.
- 05,215
- 2.
- 52,520
- 7,
- 23,310
- j.
- 78,234
- a.
- 67,490
- 4.
- 92,46?
- 9.
- 34,043
- 5.
- 45,730
- 10.
- 29,672
- Exercise 7
- ----- -------- ----- ------------------------
- 1 , 20,001 6. Ē4,206 '
- 2. 40,010 7. 60,009
- 3. 33,001 8. 59,003
- 4. 70,601 9. 10,050
- 5, 98,015 10. 20,505
- ----- -------- ----- ------------------------
- SUMMARY
- The Chinese system of numbers is simple and predictable. You may find it
- more regular than the number system Tn English.
- +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
- | Here are | the numbers | 1 to 10 | zero: | |
- | | | plus | | |
- +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
- | yr | ( 1 ) | wǔ (5) | J’ǔ | (9) |
- +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
- | èr | (2) | 1 I Ù (61 | sh t | ( 10) |
- +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
- | s5n | (3) | qT (7) | I I ng | < 0) |
- +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
- | si | (4) | b5 (8) | | |
- +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
- | The | numbers 11 | through 19 | formed with | word for |
- | | followed by | are the | the 1 | |
- | 10, shí, | | words for | through 9: | |
- +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
- +-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
- | sh f yT | (II) | sh f si | f 14) | sh : qT | (17) |
- +-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
- | Shíèr | ( 12) | sh í wǔ | (15) | sh í b£T | (18) |
- +-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
- | sh1sSn | (13) | sh í 1 1ù | (16) | Sh í j i | (19) |
- | | | | | ū | |
- +-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
- | You can | that | the | forming | 11 | resemb1es |
- | see | | system | | through i | |
- | addition: | + ¹ > | for etc. | | 9 | |
- | 10 | | | | | |
- +-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+-----------+
- The number 20 is
- 1 i tera11y
- "two tens." All the
- multiples
- of 10 are formed with
- the words
- for 2 through 9 followed by
- the word for
- 10, sh í:
- èrsh f
- (20)
- wǔsh í
- (50) bSshf
- (80)
- sīnsh í
- (30)
- 1 i ùsh í
- (60) Jiǔshf
- (90)
- sìsh f
- (40)
- qTsh í
- (70)
- You can see
- that this
- system resembles multiplication
- : 2 x 10,
- etc.
- The remaining numbers up to 100 are
- formed by combining
- these two systems. For example, to form the word for 21,
- fIrst multiply,
- "two tens,” and then
- add
- the word for 1.
- èrshIyT
- (2 1 )
- si shIj i ǔ
- (49)
- I 1 ùsh1qT
- (67)
- èrsh1b5
- (28)
- si sh1yT
- (41 )
- qTsh1 si
- (74)
- sīn s hIèr
- (32)
- wǔsh i s5n
- (53)
- bSsh1 1 1 ù
- (86)
- sānsh1 1 I ù
- (36)
- wǔshIb5
- (59)
- J I ǔsh1èr
- (92)
- si sh1wǔ
- (45 )
- 1 1ù s hIwǔ
- (65)
- J I ǔ s h i j I ǔ
- (99)
- Notice that shi,
- 10,
- loses its tone
- in the examples above
- 1
- HUNDREDS
- Multiples of 100 are formed in the same way as multiples
- of 10: the words for
- 1 through 9 followed by the word for
- "hundred," - b ǎ i y 1 bǎ I
- (100)
- si bǎ I
- (400)
- qtbǎ I
- (700)
- 1 1 ǎngbǎ i
- (200)
- wǔbǎ i
- (500)
- bābǎl
- (800)
- (11ángbǎ 1 ) sffnbǎ1
- (300)
- (wúbǎ i )
- 1 1ù bǎ 1
- (600)
- J 1ǔbǎI (Jlubǎi)
- (900)
- Notice that the word for I, y T, occurs before -bǎ I, although It was
- not used before 10, shT. Note also the dTf'f ere nt word for 2 used when
- forming the hundreds. In the numbers 2_(t) 12, and all numbers
- containing 2 up to 100, èr Is used. Llang— Is used with hundreds.
- When forming numbers with "hundred," remember that some of the numbers
- from I through 9 change tone before the Low tone of -bǎ i . Y± (I)
- changes from a High tone to a Falling tone. L1 ǎng (2), wǔ (5), and J Iu
- (9) change from Low tones to Rising tones.
- yt yl bǎ I
- I ling- I iSngbǎl (llángbSl)
- wǔ wǔbǎI (wǔbǎ i)
- Jlǔ Jlǔbǎi (Jlúbǎí)
- The numbers I through 9 after the hundreds bring up a special point when
- there Is no number in the tens place: a zero, Iíng, Is used to mark that
- place.
- ylbǎillngyT (101) I IùbǎI Ifng I Iù
- I ISngbSIttngèr (202) qTbǎiIfngqT
- tIiángbātIfnger) bSbSilfngbff
- slnbilllngstn <303) J IùbǎI I IngjIí (909)
- slbǎi I fngsl (404 ) (J Iúba I I I ngj I ǔ )
- wǔbSI I Ingwǔ (505)
- (wúbǎ iIIngwǔ )
- When numbers Tn the teens follow the hundreds, yT (I) is Inserted before
- the word for 10, shI. To understand why this Is necessary, you need to
- distinguish between the numbers 1 through 9 and the numbers which label
- a group of numbers--more specifically, which label a power of 10, such
- as "ten," sh I, "hundred," -bǎ I , and so on. The rule is that two
- numbers which are labels for other numbers (such as -bǎ I and sh I)
- cannot occur one after the other-. Therefore, yT Is added before sh f In
- the numbers I 10 through !!9,
- ------------------------- ---------- --------------------- --------
- yì bǎ i yTsh í f 1 10 ) wūbǎ i yTsh1wǔ (5 15)
- 1 1 angbS1 yTsh1yT (211) b3bS1yTsh i1 ī ù (816)
- s 1 b ǎ I y T s h f è r (412) sffnbǎ iyTsh IqT (317)
- j 1 ǔbǎ i yTsh i s5n (913) 1 1 ùbā i yTsh i b3 (6 18)
- qTbā i yTsh i si (7 14) ylbǎIyTsh1j1ǔ (119)
- ------------------------- ---------- --------------------- --------
- The High tone of yT changes to a Falling tone before the Low tone of -
- bǎ i but does not change before s h í, as you would expect. The tone of
- yT is usually affected by any tone which follows, but this case is an
- exception.
- The remaining numbers In reguI a rIy.
- ylbǎlbSshiJiǔ
- I I ǎngbǎlèrshièr
- $3nbǎ i si shI I 1li ( 346)
- slbālbSshf
- wǔbǎIsSnsh 1 yT
- the hundreds are formed
- IīùbSI sishIqT (647) qTbǎlsānshlI IÙ (736) bSbStqTshlJiǔ (979) J ī GbS
- TI lùshièr (962)
- THOUSANDS
- The word for "thousand” Is -qISn. The thousands are
- formed In the
- same way as
- the
- hundreds.
- y1q T 5n
- (1,000)
- 1 1 ùq ī 5n
- (6,000)
- 11ǎngqISn
- (2,000)
- qTq Iffn
- (7,000)
- sSnq i 5n
- (3,000)
- blq15n
- (8,000)
- si q i 5n
- (4,000)
- j 1 u q 1 5 n
- (9,000)
- wǔq13n
- (5,000)
- Notice that 2 Is 1 iǎng- and that to a Falling tone before the High
- the High tone of
- tone of yT changes -q15n.
- Rules concerning tone changes and use of yT and H ng for numbers In the
- hundreds also apply to numbers in the thousands.
- +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
- | yì q ī S'n 1 f ngbísh ī 1 í ìj | £ 1,086) (2,220) (5,610) £8,105) |
- | | (9,017) |
- | 1 iǎngqiSnl íǎngbǎlèrshí wǔqI3n1 | |
- | i ùbǎ1yTsh1 bāq I Sny 1 bǎ H t | |
- | ngwìí | |
- | | |
- | j1ǔq1Sn1f ngyTsh1qT | |
- +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
- The use of Ifng is expanded in numbers as large as thousands. The word
- Iíng can stand for two or more adjacent zeros. This use Is similar to
- the English "and" In "one thousand and one" (1,001),
- yl q i ?n I f ngyT (1,001) I I ù q ī 8 n I f n g I ī ù
- (6,006)
- (7,007)
- (8,00S)
- (9,009)
- couId lead
- IlǎngqiSnl íngèr (2,002) qTqISnI í ngqT
- sing T SnIī ngsSn (3,003) b3qIffnIí ngbB
- si q i Sn11 ngsl (4,004) jIǔq1?n1I ng J 1ǔ
- wùqISnIf ngwù (5,005)
- Seemingly, this expansion of the meaning of l_ f ng to confusion, but
- compare the following:
- yìqIffnslbSI if ng I Iù (1,406) yìq1SnIfngsìshI I Iù (1,046) ylqI In If
- ng I I ù (I,006)
- ylqlínlfngllùshf (1,060)
- The remaining numbers In the thousands are formed reguI ar Iy.
- JlǔqlínllàngbàlqTshlbó qTqlSnsSnbǎlyTshlyT siqISnwǚbàIèrshIèr
- IlǎngqīSnylbǎíIIùshIsffn
- (9,278) (7,311) (4,522) (2,163)
- TEN THOUSANDS
- The word for "ten thousand" Is -wan.
- yfwàn (10,000) Ilùwàn (60,000)
- llàngwàn (20,000) qfwàn (70,000)
- sSnwàn (30,000) báwàn (80,000)
- sìwàn (40,000) jlùwàn (90,000)
- wǔwàn (50,000)
- Notice that the numbers yT, qT, and bff change from High tones to Rising
- tones before the FaTlIng tone of -wàn.
- The rules for hundreds and thousands also apply to ten thousands: I) The
- word I ISng- (2) Is used with -wàn, 2) Numbers which label a position
- cannot occur one right after another. 3) The word ling can stand for two
- or more adjacent zeros in a number.
- JiùwànèrqlSnsānbǎlslshi I iù I I Sngwànèrq1ffnèrbāIèrsh I èr
- (92,346 )
- (22,222)
- b á w à nIí ngb5 (80,008)
- bá wà nI í ngbffsh ī bS (80,088 3
- báwàn I í ngbgbǎ I bīsh I bā (80,888) [n the first two examples èr ts
- used for 2 when it Is not the first digit In a number.- The second
- example clearly shows that native speakers may start off with I ISng-
- and then switch to èr.
- Numbers in the ten thousands bring out a characteristic of the Chinese
- number system which Is truly different from the English system of
- numbers. Traditionally, Chinese numbers were written with the comma to
- the left of the fourth digit.
- I iSngwànwǔqiSnwǔbàlsSInshl I 1 ù 2,5536
- báwàn I Iùq1SnqtbǎIsìshIqT 8,6747
- ORDINAL NUMBERS
- Like the cardinal numbers, ordinal numbers in Chinese are also easily
- and regularly formed. The word for '’number," dì-( in the sense of
- "number I¹’} may be placed before any cardinal number to make It an
- ordinal number.
- +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
- | dlyT | ("number 1"flrst") |
- +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
- | dl èr | ("number 2," "second") ("number |
- | | 3," "third") ("number 4," |
- | dl sffn | "fourth") |
- | | |
- | dl si | ("number 5," "fifth") ("number |
- | | 6," "sixth") ("twentIath") |
- | dì wǔ | |
- | | be followed by a unit number, not |
- | dì 1 lù d ì è r s h f | by |
- | | |
- | The prefix dl - must | |
- +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
- | a number which 1$ a label | for a group of numbers. For |
- | | Instance: |
- +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
- | dl ylb§ 1 | ("LoneJ hundredth") |
- | | |
- | (NOT dìbS 1 ) | ("Cone3 thousandth") |
- | | |
- | dì yl q I līn | ("Conel ten thousandth") |
- | | |
- | (NOT dlqlín) dlyI wan (NOT diwan) | hold true for the numbers 10 tc |
- | | 19: |
- | Notice that this does NOT | |
- +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
- | d 1 sh í dlsh I yT dlsh f J 1 ǔ | ("number 10," "tenth") |
- | | |
- | | ("number 11," "eleventh") |
- | | |
- | | ("number 19," "nineteenth") |
- +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
- There is also another word, - hào, which when used with a number refers
- to things in an order. Unlike the numbers used with dl -, the numbers
- with -hāo come to be used as names for the ttīTngs they refer to, as Tn
- addresses or dates.
- Dèíl JIS Slshièrhào ("No. 42 Dà 11 Street")
- SUnyuè SānshlyThào ("March 31st¹¹)
- SAYING NUMBERS ALOUD
- There are two ways to say numbers aloud, One way Is to give the full
- form of the number, Including the labels for the powers of 10.
- 80,011 báwàniíngyTshIyT
- 12,705 y(wànI IāngqISnqTbSI 1fngwǔ
- 70,009 qíwàniíngjlu
- 48,347 siwànbSqISnsSnbāI sish1qT
- The other way Is to use "telephone style," leaving out the labels for
- the powers of 10.
- 80,011 b3-Hng-I fng-yT-yT
- 12,705 yT-èr-qT-Ifng-wu
- 70,009 qT—Ifng-I íng-lÍng-Jiu
- 48,347 s1-bS-sSn-sl-qT
- There are two things to notice when reeding numbers "telephone style,"
- First of all, since there Is a slight pause between each number, the
- tone of a syllable Is not changed by the next syllable. Therefore, ail
- numbers are pronounced with their basic tones. Secondly, Ifng cannot
- stand for more than one zero (and Is repeated If need be),
- "Telephone style" Is often used to Identify a year. The word for "year,"
- -n I án, follows the numbers.
- yT-JIǔ-wú-Iíng-nI an (1950)
- CLASSROOM EXPRESSIONS (CE)
- ------- ---------------------------- ------------------------
- CE 1
- I. Zao! Good morning.
- 2. Women shàng kè ba. let’s begin class.
- 3. N1 tTng wo shuō. Listen to me say It.
- 4 . NT dong le ma? Do you understand now?
- 5. Wǒ bù dong. 1 don't understand.
- 6. Dǒng le. 1 understand.
- 7. QÌng gSnzhe wo shuO. Please repeat after me
- 8. QT ng nI zà I shuǒ y f cl. Please say 11 aga i n.
- 9. Duì Ie. That's correct.
- 10. Bù duì . That's not right.
- I 1 . Wǒ bíi zhTdào. 1 don't know.
- 12. Shi shénme ylsl? What does It mean?
- 13. Hāo, wǒmen xià ke ba. Okay, class Is over.
- ------- ---------------------------- ------------------------
- CE 2
- - I. Wǒ mél tTngqTngchu.
- - 2. Wǒ you yIge wèntf,
- - 3. NT shuǒcuò le.
- - 4. Hide fāyTn bú +àI hSo.
- - 5. NT gēn tff shuǒ.
- - 6. Wáng Dànlán, nT wèn went!.
- - 7. Hú M ě I 1 T n g , n 1 h u í d á .
- I didn’t hear clearly.
- I have a question.
- You said It wrong.
- Your pronunciation isn’t too good.
- You talk with him OR You tell It to him.
- Wáng Dànián, you ask the questions.
- Hú Mailing, you answer them.
- 0, Q'íng riT fīnchéng Zhōngwén.
- - 9, Qìng n't fSnchéng YTngwén.
- - 10, Qlng dà yìdǐǎnr shSngyTn
- shuē.
- - II. Qlng man yldlanr shuC.
- - 12, ZhSng LāoshT, nín hàol
- - 13, MíngtI5n jlàn.
- - 14, Car Zhíīngwén zěnme shu5?
- Pieass translate it Into Ch Inese.
- Please translate it Into Engl Is h.
- Please talk a little louder.
- Please talk a little slower,
- Mr. (Teacher} ZhSng, how are you?
- See you tomorrow.
- How do you say "car" In Ch Inese?
- TIME and DATES (T&D)
- INTRODUCTION
- This resource module summarizes and supplements core module
- presentations involving dates and time. Time and Dates (T&D) tapes I and
- 2 cover dates (year, month, day of the month, day of the week, and such
- expressions as "next week¹' and "yesterday¹'). TiD tapes 3 and 4 cover
- time (clock time and such expressions as "In the morning¹').
- The prerequisites for this module are P&R tapes 1-6 and NUM tapes 1-4.
- Otherwise, the Time and Dates Module Is self-contained. Note, however,
- that dates are Introduced with tapes 5 and 6 of the Biographic
- Information Module and that time is Introduced with tapes 5 and 6 of the
- Money Module.
- TAPE 1 WORKBOOK (DATES) ¹³
- of this module restates the rules
- Exerc i se
- _l_ (Answers are on tape.)
- I ,
- (1 )
- August 5th
- (2)
- September 5th
- Í3)
- August 15th
- 2.
- ( I )
- August 2nd
- (2)
- August 20th
- (3)
- July 1 Oth
- 3.
- ( I )
- January 20th
- (2)
- July 12th
- (3)
- October 20th
- 4.
- (I )
- October 4th
- (2)
- February 8th
- (3)
- November 10th
- 5.
- ( I )
- February 9th
- (2)
- December 4th
- (3)
- June 14th
- 6.
- ( I )
- February 7th
- (2)
- December 7th
- (3)
- December 1st
- 7 .
- (I )
- April 1st
- (2)
- October 13th
- (3)
- May 7th
- 8.
- { I )
- October 10th
- (2)
- April 11 th
- (3)
- April 1st
- 9.
- < I )
- July 17th
- (2)
- March 19th
- (3)
- January 11 th
- IO.
- (I )
- December 25th
- (2)
- July 31st
- DISPLAY 1
- (3)
- January 31st
- I .
- AprII 20th
- 4.
- March 14th
- 7.
- September 3rd
- 2.
- May
- 20th
- 5 .
- March 25th
- 8.
- July 3rd
- 3.
- Ma y
- 14th
- 6.
- September 25th
- DISPLAY II
- 9.
- July 11 th
- I .
- February IB
- 3 .
- July 20
- 5.
- October 4
- 2.
- November I
- 4 ,
- May 4
- 6.
- July 1
- TfcD MODULE
- TAPE 2 WORKBOOK (YEARS AND DAYS OF THE WEEK)
- DISPLAY I
- ---- ----------- ---------- ----- ---------------
- 1. February 22, 1732 4 . June 15, 1215
- 2. July 4+h, 1776 5. May 8, 1945
- 3. January 1 , 1863 6. April 7, 1939
- ---- ----------- ---------- ----- ---------------
- DISPLAY II
- «»
- ------ ------- -------
- LAST THIS NEXT
- 1925 1 926 1 927
- ------ ------- -------
- ------ ------ ------
- I960 1961 1962
- ------ ------ ------
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | | Rea 1 | ? |
- | | | |
- | | T 1 me | |
- +-----------------------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- Exercise I
- _______________S u n d a y
- __________Monday
- ______________T u e s d a y
- __________W ednesday
- ______________T h u r s d a y
- _______________f r I d a y
- ____________S a T u r d a y
- TSD MODULE
- ^(,k)
- Exercise 2
- ----- ----------- ---------- -----------
- 1. Monday Tuesday Wednesday
- 2. Thursday Friday Saturday
- 3. Friday Saturday Sunday
- 4 , Thursday Fr1 day Saturday
- 5. Wednesday Thursday Fri day
- 6. Thu rsday Friday Saturday
- 7. Monday Tuesday Wednesday
- 8. Wednesday Thursday Friday
- ----- ----------- ---------- -----------
- DISPLAY III
- March
- +---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
- | Sunday | Monday | Tuesday | We | T | Fr1 day | S |
- | 3 | 4 | 5 | dnesday | hursday | | aturday |
- | | | | | | 8 | |
- | | | | 6 | | | 9 |
- +---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+---------+
- August
- Sunday
- 12
- Monday 1 3
- Tuesday
- 14
- Wednesday
- 15
- Thursday
- 16
- Friday 1 7
- Satu rday 1 8
- December
- Sunday
- Monday
- Tuesday
- Wednesday
- Thursday
- FrI day
- Saturday
- 20
- 21
- 22
- 23
- 24
- 25
- 26
- +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
- | TAPE | 3 WORKBOOK (CLOCK TIME) |
- | | |
- | 1. 5:00 3. | DISPLAY 1 |
- | | |
- | 2. 7:00 4. | 2:00 5. 12:00 7. |
- | | 11:00 |
- | 1 '■ /^T | |
- | | 10:00 6. 3:00 8, |
- | /io | 8:00 |
- | | |
- | 9 n | DISPLAY II |
- | | |
- | A ) v ^(X) | s. ² • / 12 X |
- | | |
- | 3. | i\ /\x । iX |
- | | |
- | fl \8 | A /io / A |
- | | |
- | 1 Vu | al 19 |
- | | o 31 |
- | 1 ⁵* AT | |
- | | V \ V |
- | 710 y" 9 \ | |
- | | X X. .6 jx |
- | \8 | |
- | | iX /II । iX |
- | | |
- | | ì\ /ia |
- | | 2\ |
- | | |
- | | a] [9 <L 3 |
- | | |
- | | 7 \ 7 |
- | | |
- | | xL s Jx |
- | | |
- | | I'X ⁶¹ /\\ |
- | | |
- | | \ / ⁰ 1 |
- | | 2\ |
- | | |
- | | 7 (⁹ T |
- | | J |
- | | |
- | | 4/ \8 1 4/ |
- | | |
- | | X JX |
- | | |
- | | 81 |
- +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
- []
- []
- []
- []
- []
- []
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | Exerc īse 1 |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | 1. 4:00 4:15 4:50 4:45 |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | 2. 6:00 6:15 6:30 6:45 |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | 3. 2:00 2:15 2:30 2:45 |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | 4. 12:00 12:15 12:30 12:45 |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | 5 . i1:00 11:15 11:30 11:45 |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | (Answers are on page 83.) |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | Exercise 2 |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | 1. 10: 6. |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | 2. 1: 7. . |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | co uì |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | 4,9: 9 . |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | 5. 4: 10. |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | (Answers are on page 83.) |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | Exercise 3 |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | 1 . 6. |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | 2. 7. |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | Of a> |
- | |
- | « |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | 4. 9. |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | 5. 10. |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | (Answers are on page 83.) |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | DISPLAY III |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | 1. 4:10 3. 7:35 5. 1:04 |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | 2. 12:25 4. 6:43 6. 9:45 |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- 4» ANSWERS TO TAPE 3 EXERCISES
- ExercIse I
- I . 4:30 2. 6:00 ‘ 3, 2:45 4.
- 5. 11:45
- Exercise 2
- - I. 10:15
- - 2.
- - 3.
- - 4.
- - 5.
- Exercise 3
- - I. 3:05
- - 2.
- - 3.
- - 4.
- - 5.
- 6.
- 7,
- - 8.
- - 9.
- - 10.
- - 6.
- - 7.
- - 8.
- - 9.
- - 10.
- TAPE 4 WORKBOOK
- (CLOCK TIME AND PARTS OF THE DAY)
- Exercise I
- Indicator
- of past time
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- | 1. ____________ 4. ____________ 7. __________„ |
- | |
- | 2¹⁴ ________________ 5. ________________ 8. ________________ |
- | |
- | 3. __ 6. ________________ 9. ________________ |
- +-----------------------------------------------------------------------+
- (Answers are on page 88.)
- DISPLAY 1
- 1 .
- 6: 15
- 3. 9:20
- 5.
- 1:17
- 2,
- 3í 10
- 4. 11:30
- 6.
- 5:05
- DISPLAY II
- 1 .
- 3:45
- 3. 11:40
- 5.
- 7:55
- 2.
- 1 : 50
- 4. 9:46
- 6.
- 12:59
- DISPLAY til <
- []
- T HE P.M. CLOCK
- []
- Exerc i se 2
- []
- I .
- 2_(t)
- 3.
- 6.
- 7 . _____________________
- 6, _______________
- (Answers are on page 89.)
- Exercise 3
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | I. | last year | last year March | last year April |
- | | February | | |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | 2. | last year | this year Aprl | next year April |
- | | | I | |
- | | J anuary | | |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | 3. | this year | this year | next year |
- | | | January | November |
- | | July | | |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | 4. | last month 3rd | this month 18th | next month 9th |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | 5. | last month 20th | next month 5th | next month 2nd |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | 6. | last week | this week | next week |
- | | Monday | Tuesday | |
- | | | | Friday |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | 7. | this week | this week | next week |
- | | Thursday | Saturday | Wednesday |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | 8. | August 6th | May 3rd | December 1 I th |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | 9. | July 2nd | January 21st | October 13th |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | IO. | February 17th | March 30th | June 8th |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- | | | (Answers are on | page 88.) |
- +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+
- DISPLAY IV
- []
- []
- []
- []
- []
- []
- E C p.m.)
- []
- G (p.m. 1
- H Cnoonl
- ANSWERS TO TAPE 4 EXERCISES
- Exercise 1
- 1 . 1:50
- 4 .
- 5:15
- 7.
- 4:20
- 2. 8:35
- 5.
- 8:05
- 8.
- 3:30
- 3. 6:00
- 6.
- 7:45
- 9,
- 11:10
- ExercIse
- 2
- 1 .
- 2:00
- p. m.
- 4.
- 9:45
- p .m.
- 7.
- 8:50
- p .r
- 2.
- 10: 15
- a .m.
- 5.
- 5:00
- a.m,
- 8.
- 11:50
- p . m
- 3.
- 12:30
- p.m.
- 6.
- 6:25
- a ,m.
- 9,
- 1 1 :O5
- a. nt
- Exercise 3
- 1 .
- last year February
- 6.
- this week
- Tuesday
- 2.
- th 1 s
- Aprl 1
- year
- 7.
- next week Wednesday
- 3.
- th I s July
- year
- 8.
- August 6th
- 4.
- next 9th
- month
- 9.
- January 21st
- 5.
- 1 ast
- 20th
- month
- 10.
- June 8th
- SUMMARY
- MONTH, DAY, AND YEAR
- in Chinese, the name's for the months of the year are the numbers I
- through 12 fol lowed by the word for "month/¹ yuè. *
- ---------- --------------- ----------- ---------------
- Y I yuè ("January") Qíyuè ("July" )
- Eryuè ("Februa ry") Báyuè ("August")
- SJnyuè ("March") J I ǚy uè ("September")
- Si yuè ("Apri1") Sh íyuè ("October")
- wǔy uè ("May") Sh fyTyuè ("November")
- L í ùyuè ("June") Sh íèryuè ("December")
- ---------- --------------- ----------- ---------------
- The tones on the numbers y T, qt, and b_5 change to Rising tones before
- the Failing tone of yue.
- The day of the month Is expressed by the number of the day
- fo11 owed
- by the
- bound word -hào.
- Literally, -hào means "number
- slhào
- (
- "the
- 4th")
- q í hào
- (
- "the
- 7th")
- sh íqThào (sh í q í hào)
- (
- "the
- 17th")
- èrsh i bShèo
- (èrshIbáhāo)
- (
- "the
- 2Sth")
- Notice that the tone when part speaker„
- numbers yT, qt, and of a larger number.
- bS TKl
- do not always s varies from
- change speaker to
- The
- order
- of the month and
- the
- day
- of the month
- 1 s the
- same in Chinese as It Is In English:
- Qíyuè slhào ("July 4")
- Báyuè Jlǔhào ("August 9")
- Shíèryue èrshièrhào ("December 22”)
- *Yuè was introduced in the Biographic Information Module with the
- spelling yuè. Starting with the Money Module, the umlaut is written only
- where It Is necessary In PTny Tn: after n_ and 1 to distinguish nu from
- nŪ and Iu from Iu.
- To ask what month or what day of the month it is, use the question word
- JT — > "how many":
- Zhèīge yuè shl Jlyuè? ("What month Is this?")
- JTntian j”íhào? ("What Is today's date?")
- J1 - ís usually used when the number In the answer Is expected to be no
- more than 10 or so (duōs.hao being used otherwise). But notice that JT -
- Is used for the day of the month, when the answer may contaTF a number
- up to 31.
- in Identifying years, four single-digit numbers are followed by the word
- »nI in, "year":
- YTJI ǔèr I 1ùnIán (I 926)
- YTJIusānsSnnIán (1933)
- YTJ i ǔslern fan (1942)
- YTJĪūwǔtfngnián (1950)
- These numbers are given in "telephone style" (one by one), not combined
- into a larger number. YT, qT, and bS do not change tone In "telephone
- style."
- When asking "what year?" the question word nēInIán Is used: NT shl
- neínián shSngde? ("What year were you born?")
- When giving the month, day, and year In Chinese, proceed from the larger
- to the smaller:
- YTqTqTI IùnIán Qíyue sìhào ("July 4, 1776")
- YTJIǔwǔI!ngn1án SSnyue sSnshīyThào ("March 31, 1950")
- YTJIuIíng Ifngnián Llùyue shíwuhào ("June 15, 1900")
- Notice that the word I íng, "zero," is Inserted each.time a zero Is
- used.
- DAYS OF THE WEEK
- The names for days of the week from Monday through Saturday are formed
- by using the word for "week," xTng, followed by a number. Notice that
- the Chinese week begins on Monday.
- ----------- ---------------
- xTngqT ("week")
- XTngqTyT ("Monday")
- XTngqTèr ("Tuesday")
- XTngqTsSn ("Wednesday")
- XTngqTsl ("Thu rsday")
- XTngqTwú ("Friday")
- XìngqTI1ù ("Saturday")
- ----------- ---------------
- There are two different words for "Sunday, neither con taintng a number:
- XTngqTtijn ("Sunday”)
- XTngqTrl
- Literally, XTngqTt]īn Is "heaven day," and XT ngqTrl is "sun day,"
- In addition to these commonly used names, which are
- standard in the Peopíe’s Republic formed with 1T b a |:
- LlbàlyT LT bà1èr LTbà ǐsīn LT ba ī si LTbàIwǔ LÌbàI I [ù LT bà IT i Sri
- Lībàirl
- To ask what day of the week is used:
- JTntǐBn xTngqTJŪ JTntǐīn iībàlJJJ
- of China, there are names
- ("Monday") ('’Tuesday") ("Wednesday¹’) ("Thursday’') ("Friday")
- {"Saturday’') {"Sunday")
- It is, the question word JT-
- ("What day is today?") ("Wha+ day Is today?")
- TIME WORDS WITH DAY, WEEK, MONTH, AND YEAR
- "next year," and
- The words for "this year, words for "today,” "tomorrow," one except ion
- (*):
- JTnn1án ("this year") mf ngn i án ("next year")
- *qu n i s n
- ("last year") hourián
- ("year after next") q i án n1á n
- ("year before last")
- and so on and the
- so forth are parallel, with
- JTntlJn
- ("today")
- mi ngtIīn
- {"tomorrow")
- zuót íSn
- ("yesterday")
- hòutI3n
- ("day after tomorrow")
- q i á nt i ffn
- ("day before yesterday")
- The words for "this month,” ’'next month," and so on and the words for
- "this week," "next week," and so forth are parallel:
- zhèlge yuè
- ("this month")
- xiàge yuè
- ("next month")
- shàngge yuè
- ("last month")
- zhèlge xTngqT OR
- zhèlge I ì bà 1 ("this week")
- xiàge xTngqT OR xiàge 11 b à i ("next week")
- shàngge xTngqT OR shàngge iībàl ("last week")
- TELLING TIME
- +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
- | | Dlān, literally meaning "dot," Is |
- | | the counter for hours |
- +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
- | on | the clock. The word zhōng, |
- | | "o'clock" (literally "clock"), |
- +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
- | í s | added optionally. |
- | | |
- | is | Yldiān (zhōng) (1:00) |
- | | QTdlàn (zhōng) (7:00) |
- | | |
- | | Liàngdlǎn (zhōng) (2:00) |
- | | BSdiǎn (zhōng) (8:00) |
- | | |
- | | SōndlSn (zhōng) (3:00) |
- | | Jlǔdiàn (zhōng) (9:00) |
- | | |
- | | Sldiàn (zhōng) (4:00) |
- | | Shídiǎn (zhōng) (10:00) |
- | | |
- | | WúdlSn (zhōng) (5:00) |
- | | ShfyTdian (zhōng) (11:00) |
- | | |
- | | LlùdlSn (zhōng) (6:00) |
- | | Shièrdiǎn (zhōng) (12:00) |
- | | |
- | | To express time on the half hour, |
- | | the word ban, "half," used : |
- +-----------------------------------+-----------------------------------+
- •J
- Llàngdlǎn bin (zhōng) (2:30)
- Wǔdlín bàn (zhōng) (5:30)
- J lūdTSn ban (zhōng) (9:30)
- ShíyTdlàn bin (zhōng) (11:30)
- Notice that these expressions can also end In zhōng, "o’clock."
- To express time on the quarter hour, the word kè, "quarter," I $ used:
- Yldlan y f kè (1:15, "a quarter after I")
- Llāngdlàn sōnkè (2:45, "three quarters past 2")
- WudiSn yíkè (5:15, "a quarter past 5")
- Shfèrdlān sōnkè (12:45, "three quarters past 12")
- A more specific way to express the idea of "quarter p a st the hour" is
- with the word guò, "to pass":
- sldiān guò yíkè ("a quarter past 4*')
- shíèrdtān guò yíkè ("a quarter past 12")
- To express the Idea of "quarter to the hour," the word chà, "to lack,"
- may be used:
- j I ǔd I ān chà yíkè OR
- chà yíkè JlǔdlSn ("a quarter to 9")
- shíyTdiān chà yíkè OR
- chà yíkè shíyTdiān ("a quarter to II¹’)
- With expressions of quarter hours before the hour, two word orders are
- possible. (Only one Is possible with expressions of time after the
- hour.)
- Expressions of quarter hours before the hour or past the hour do not end
- in zhCng, ¹¹ o^(T) clock."
- The word f 5n, "minute," Is used to give the exact time:
- I lǎngdlān shíwtifān (2:15)
- bīdíān èrshlèrfSn (8:22)
- Shídlān shffffn (10:10)
- shfèrdlān sínshiqTfān (12:37)
- F5n may be omitted ín longer time expressions:
- yìdlān sSnshiwǔ (1:35)
- yld1àn sSnshIwǔf ēn
- The word ling, "zero," may be added to clarify a time exp ressI on :
- sSndiān wǔfffn (3:05)
- s5nd1 an ling wǔf3n
- Guò and chà may be used with time expressions Including minutes:
- sffndlān guò èrshlfSn ("20 minutes after 3")
- qTdlān chà shtfSn ("10 minutes before 7") chà sh í fffn qTdlān
- To ask what time of day It Is, use the question word JT : JTdlǎn zhòng?
- ("What time Is It?")
- PARTS OF THE DAY
- In Chinese,
- the different parts of a day are referred to
- as follows:
- HOURS (approx.)
- zǎoshan g
- ("morn Ing"--fu11 daylight
- 6-11 a.m.
- (zǎochén)
- unt11 near noon)
- shàngwǚ
- ( "f orenoon"--norma 1 working
- 8 or 9 a,m.
- (shàngwu)
- hours until noon)
- until II a. m.
- or 1 p.m.
- zhōngwù
- ("noon")
- II a.m. until
- (zhōngwu)
- I p. m.
- xí àwǔ
- ("afternoon^(TI)--noon until the
- 1-5 p.a.
- (x1àwu J
- end of the business day)
- wSnshang
- ("evenlng"--after the evening
- 6-1 I p.m.
- mea 1 )
- bànyò
- ("midnight")
- yè 1 1
- ("n 1 ght"--genera11y from
- II p.m. until
- around II p.m. until sunrise)
- 4 a.m.
- In Chinese, clock time Is often preceded by a word designating the part
- of the day Involved:
- zācshang qTdlín zhffng (”7 o’clock In the morning,*¹
- 7 a.m.)
- wǎnshang bSdlín bàn zhōng (”0:30 In the evening,"
- 8:30 p .m.)
- Notice that the Chinese word order once again begins with the larger
- unit and proceeds to the smaller.
- 94
- ¹
- There are no appropriate examples In the Orientation Module. You will
- find these words In later modules.
- ²
- There are no appropriate examples In the Orientation Module. You will
- find these words In later modules.
- ³
- ThIs Is not a name.
- ⁴
- Thls Is the name of a former province.
- ⁵
- A somewhat similar neutralization happens to vowels In English. Vowels
- which are perfectly distinguishable when stressed become
- indistinguishable when unstressed. "I confined the dog" may sound the
- same as "I can find the dog," although, with stress, "con-" does not
- sound the same as "can."
- ⁶
- ln this summary, underlining calls attention to letters (the letter u)
- and slant lines call attention to sounds (the sound /□/). “
- ⁷
- Standard PTnyTn romanization u_ is written only after n and J_.
- Everywhere else (after j_, x_, and y_, it is written
- simply u.
- ⁸
- C, I Finals
- You have heard and seen the full vowel /I/ following Initials in the
- words nl, "you"? mln, "people"; and mfng, "bright." When the vowel does
- not follow an Initial, it Is written y I .
- yT ("one") as Tn "east" or "yeast"
- yTn ("cloudy") as In "YIn (Yang")
- y Ing ("win") /y/ + /Ing/ as in "sing"
- ⁹
- BesIdes the historical reason for this spelling, there Is the reason
- that adding the suffix Zr/ "brings back" a normal, "broad" /a/ voweI.
- ¹⁰
- Abbreviation of /uo/ after labials rn, b_, and f\
- ¹¹
- **/U/, /Uan/, /Ue/, and /tin/ are spelled £, uan, ue, and u n
- respectively after j_, g_, x, and y_.
- ¹²
- RomanTzat!on in parentheses indicates tone changes.
- ¹³
- The Summary at the- end presented on T&D Tape I .
- ¹⁴
- For further Information on de, as an see notes on Nos. 6-7> Unit 4, BIO.
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