Cantonese bopomofo
Cantonese Bopomofo, or Cantonese Phonetic Symbols (traditional Chinese: 粵語注音符號; simplified Chinese: 粤语注音符号; Jyutping: jyut6 jyu5 zyu3 jam1 fu4 hou6; Cantonese Yale: Yuht-yúh jyu-yām fùh-houh) is an extended set of Bopomofo characters used to transcribe Yue Chinese and, specifically, its prestige Cantonese dialect. It was first introduced in early 1930s, and then standardized in 1950. It fell into disuse along with the original Bopomofo for Mandarin Chinese in the late 1950s.
| |
---|---|
Script type | Semisyllabary
|
Time period | 1931 to 1958 in Mainland China |
Related scripts | |
Parent systems | Oracle bone script
|
Sister systems | Taiwanese Phonetic Symbols, Suzhou Phonetic Symbols, Hmu Phonetic Symbols |
Unicode | |
Unicode range |
|
Romanization of Chinese |
---|
Mandarin |
Wu |
Yue |
Min |
Gan |
Hakka |
Xiang |
Polylectal |
See also |
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.