Simplified Wade
| Transliteration of Chinese |
|---|
| Mandarin |
| Wu |
| Yue |
| Min |
| Gan |
| Hakka |
| Xiang |
| Polylectal |
| See also |
Simplified Wade, abbreviated SW, is a modification of the WadeâGiles romanization system for writing Standard Mandarin Chinese. It was devised by the Swedish linguist Olov Bertil Anderson (1920–1993),[1] who first published the system in 1969.[2] Simplified Wade uses tonal spelling: in other words it modifies the letters in a syllable in order to indicate tone differences. It is one of only two Mandarin romanization systems that indicate tones in such a way (the other being Gwoyeu Romatzyh). All other systems use diacritics or numbers to indicate tone.
Initials
[edit]One of the important changes that Anderson made to WadeâGiles to was to replace the apostrophe following aspirated consonants with an ⟨h⟩.[note 1] This modification, previously used in the Legge romanization, was also adopted by Joseph Needham in his Science and Civilisation in China series. The table below illustrates the spelling difference.[3]
| Wadeâ Giles |
Simplified Wade |
HĂ nyÇ PÄ«nyÄ«n |
IPA |
|---|---|---|---|
| pʻ | ph | p | pʰ |
| tʻ | th | t | tʰ |
| kʻ | kh | k | kʰ |
| chʻ | chh | q | tÉʰ |
| ch | tÊʰ | ||
| tsʻ | tsh | c | tsʰ |
| tzʻ |
While WadeâGiles spells the initials differently before the vowel [ÉčÌ©] (written Ć in WG but y in SW), Simplified Wade spells them the same as everywhere else:[4]
| Wadeâ Giles |
Simplified Wade |
|---|---|
| tzĆ but tsu, tsang, etc. |
tsy like tsu, tsang, etc. |
| tzʻĆ but tsʻu, tsʻang, etc. |
tshy like tshu, tshang, etc. |
| ssĆ but su, sang, etc. |
sy like su, sang, etc. |
Like most romanization systems for Standard Mandarin, Simplified Wade uses r for WadeâGiles j: WG jih, jĂȘ, jĂȘn, jĂȘng, jo, jui, jung, etc., become SW ry, re, ren, reng, ro, ruei, rung, etc.[5]
All other initials are the same as in WadeâGiles.[6]
Finals
[edit]The finals of Simplified Wade differ from those of WadeâGiles in the following ways:[7]
- An -h at the end of a WadeâGiles final is dropped in Simplified Wade: WG -ieh, yeh, -ĂŒeh, yĂŒeh, ĂȘrh become SW -ie, ye, -ĂŒe (but see below), yĂŒe (but see below), er.
- A circumflex in a WadeâGiles final is dropped in Simplified Wade: WG ĂȘ, -ĂȘn, wĂȘn, -ĂȘng, wĂȘng, ĂȘrh become SW e, -en, wen, -eng, weng, er.
- The WadeâGiles ĂȘ/o final is always e in Simplified Wade: for WadeâGiles ko, kʻo, ho; ĂȘ or o; tĂȘ, tʻĂȘ, chĂȘ, chʻĂȘ, tsĂȘ, tsʻĂȘ, jĂȘ, etc., Simplified Wade has ke, khe, he; e; te, the, che, chhe, tse, tshe, re, etc.
- The WadeâGiles ui/uei final is always uei in Simplified Wade (except when it forms a syllable on its own; then it is wei in both WG and SW). WadeâGiles writes kuei and kʻuei but otherwise -ui (hui, shui, jui, etc.), while Simplified Wade writes not only kuei and khuei but also huei, shuei, ruei, etc.
- While WadeâGiles writes the syllable [i] as i or yi depending on the character, Simplified Wade consistently uses yi.
- Like Gwoyeu Romatzyh, Simplified Wade uses -y for WadeâGiles -ih and -Ć: WG chih, chʻih, shih, jih, tzĆ, tzʻĆ, ssĆ become SW chy, chhy, shy, ry, tsy, tshy, sy.
Equivalents of WadeâGiles ĂŒ
[edit]When ĂŒ is available, it is used as in WadeâGiles. Otherwise, the following rules apply:
- The WadeâGiles syllable yu becomes you and WG yĂŒ becomes yu: WG yu, yĂŒ, yĂŒeh, yĂŒan, yĂŒn become you, yu, yue, yuan, yun (yung remains yung).
- WadeâGiles hsĂŒ becomes hsu or hsyu: WG hsĂŒeh becomes hsue or hsyue; WG hsĂŒan becomes hsuan or hsyuan; WG hsĂŒn becomes hsun or hsyun; WG hsĂŒ becomes hsu or hsyu.
- In all other cases, WadeâGiles ĂŒ becomes yu, e.g., nyu, lyue, chyu, chyun, chhyu, chhyue, chhyuan.
Tones
[edit]Both Gwoyeu Romatzyh and Simplified Wade use tonal spelling, but in two very different fashions. In Gwoyeu Romatzyh, the spelling of the tone and the spelling of the final often fuse together: WG -iao has the basic spelling -iau in GR, which becomes -yau in the 2nd tone, -eau in the 3rd tone, -iaw in the 4th tone, and remains -iau in the 1st tone â hence WG chiao1, chiao2, chiao3, chiao4 become GR jiau, jyau, jeau, jiaw. There are different rules for different cases: WG pʻin1, pʻin2, pʻin3, pʻin4 become GR pin, pyn, piin, pinn, but WG sui1, sui2, sui3, sui4 become GR suei, swei, soei, suey.
In Simplified Wade, on the other hand, the 2nd, 3rd and 4th tones are always indicated by an otherwise silent letter following the final: -v for the 2nd tone, -x for the 3rd tone, and -z for the 4th tone.[8] The spelling of the tone and the spelling of the final are always separable from each other. Simplified Wade's tonal spelling is therefore similar to the adding of a digit at the end of the syllable.
The 1st tone is always indicated by the absence of a letter following the final.[9] Examples:
| First tone |
Second tone |
Third tone |
Fourth tone |
|---|---|---|---|
| ma | mav | max | maz |
| chiao | chiaov | chiaox | chiaoz |
| phin | phinv | phinx | phinz |
| suei | sueiv | sueix | sueiz |
When a vertical apostrophe is used above one or more syllables, any syllable without a vertical apostrophe carries the neutral tone: HĂ nyÇ PÄ«nyÄ«n lĂĄi le is laÌiv-le in Simplified Wade.[10]
The right apostrophe
[edit]A right apostrophe is used to indicate a syllable break in an otherwise ambiguous spelling, e.g., piÊŒaox for WG pi1-ao3, freeing up the spelling piaox to unambiguously mean WG piao3.[11] Due to the tone letters, this is only needed when the first syllable carries tone 1.
See also
[edit]- WadeâGiles
- WadeâGiles table
- Comparison of Chinese transcription systems
- Spelling in Gwoyeu Romatzyh
Notes
[edit]Citations
[edit]Bibliography
[edit]- Anderson, Olov Bertil (1970). A Concordance to Five Systems of Transcription for Standard Chinese. Lund: Studentlitteratur.
- Anderson, Olov Bertil (1973). Konkordans till fem transkriptionssystem för kinesiskt rikssprÄk. Lund: Studentlitteratur.
- Malmqvist, N. G. D. (2011). Bernhard Karlgren: Portrait of a Scholar. Bethlehem, Pennsylvania: Lehigh University Press.