Fuzhou dialect
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| Fuzhou dialect | |||||||||||||||||
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| Traditional Chinese: | 福州話 | ||||||||||||||||
| Simplified Chinese: | 福州话 | ||||||||||||||||
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| Alternative Chinese name | |||||||||||||||||
| Traditional Chinese: | 平話 | ||||||||||||||||
| Simplified Chinese: | 平话 | ||||||||||||||||
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| Fuzhou Dialect 福州話 / 平話 |
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| Spoken in: | People's Republic of China (Fuzhou); Republic of China (Matsu Islands); Malaysia (Sibu, Miri, Sarikei, Bintulu, Yong Peng, Sitiawan and Ayer Tawar); Singapore; and some Chinese communities in the west, particularly in the Chinatowns of New York and London. | |
| Total speakers: | Less than ten million | |
| Language family: | Sino-Tibetan Chinese Min Min Dong Fuzhou Dialect |
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| Writing system: | Chinese characters and Foochow Romanized | |
| Official status | ||
| Official language in: | none; one of the statutory languages for public transport announcements in the Matsu Islands, Republic of China [1] | |
| Regulated by: | no official regulation | |
| Language codes | ||
| ISO 639-1: | zh | |
| ISO 639-2: | chi (B) | zho (T) |
| ISO 639-3: | cdo | |
| Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. | ||
Fuzhou dialect (福州話, Foochow Romanized: Hók-ciŭ-uâ ), also known as Foochow, Foochow dialect, Fuzhouhua or Foochowese, is considered the standard dialect of Min Dong, which is a branch of Chinese mainly spoken in the eastern part of Fujian Province. Native speakers also call it Bàng-uâ (平話), meaning the language spoken in everyday life.
Although traditionally called a dialect, Fuzhou dialect is actually a separate language according to linguistic standards, because it is not mutually intelligible with other branches of Min Language and other Chinese languages. Therefore, whether Fuzhou dialect is a dialect or a language is highly disputable.
Centered in Fuzhou City, Fuzhou dialect mainly covers eleven cities and counties, viz.: Fuzhou (福州), Pingnan (屏南), Gutian (古田), Luoyuan (羅源), Minqing (閩清), Lianjiang (連江, Matsu included), Minhou (閩侯), Changle (長樂), Yongtai (永泰), Fuqing (福清) and Pingtan (平潭). Fuzhou dialect is also the second local language in northern and middle Fujian cities and counties, like Nanping (南平), Shaowu (邵武), Shunchang (順昌), Sanming (三明) and Youxi (尤溪).
In some regions abroad, Fuzhou dialect is also widely spoken, especially in Sitiawan and Sibu, Malaysia, where it has been called "New Fuzhou" due to the influx of immigrants there in the 1900s. Similarly, the dialect has spread to the USA, UK and Japan as a result of immigration in recent decades.
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After Han China's occupation of Minyue (閩越) in 110 BC, Han people began its reign in what is Fujian Province today. Having lost their nationalities, the aboriginal Minyue people, a branch of Yue peoples (百越), were gradually assimilated into Chinese culture.[1] The Ancient Wu and Ancient Chu language brought by the mass influx of Han immigrants from Northern area gradually mixed with the local Minyue language and finally developed into the Ancient Min language, from which Fuzhou dialect evolved.[2]
Fuzhou dialect came into being during the period somewhere between late Tang Dynasty and "Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms"[3], and has been considered by most as a Chinese dialect ever since. However, it is also worth noting that its substratum is constituted by large quantities of well-preserved Minyue vocabulary. Viewed from these point, Fuzhou dialect is a de facto mixed language of Ancient Chinese and Minyue language.
The famous book Qī Lín Bāyīn (戚林八音, Foochow Romanized: Chék Lìng Báik-ĭng), which was compiled in the 17th century, is the first and the most full-scale rime book that provides a systematic guide to character reading for people speaking or learning Fuzhou dialect. It once served to standardize the language and is still widely quoted as an authoritative reference book in modern academic research in Chinese phonology.
In 1842, Fuzhou was open to Westerners as a treaty port after the signing of the Treaty of Nanjing. But due to the language barrier, however, the first Christian missionary base in this city did not take place without difficulties. In order to convert Fuzhou people, those missionaries found it very necessary to make a careful study of the Fuzhou dialect. Their most notable works are listed below:[4]
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- 1856, M. C. White: The Chinese language spoken at Fuh Chau
- 1870, R. S. Maclay & C. C. Baldwin: An alphabetic dictionary of the Chinese language in the Foochow dialect
- 1871, C. C. Baldwin: Manual of the Foochow dialect
- 1891, T. B. Adam: An English-Chinese dictionary of the Foochow dialect
- 1898, R. S. Maclay & C. C. Baldwin: An alphabetic dictionary of the Chinese language of the Foochow dialect, 2nd edition
- 1906, The Foochow translation of the complete Bible ([2], [3])
- 1923, T. B. Adam & L. P. Peet: An English-Chinese dictionary of the Foochow dialect, 2nd edition
- 1929, R. S. Maclay & C. C. Baldwin (revised and enlarged by S. H. Leger): Dictionary of the Foochow dialect
By the end of the Qing Dynasty, Fuzhou society had become largely monolingual. But for decades the Chinese government has discouraged the use of Fuzhou dialect in school education and in media, so the number of Mandarin speakers has been greatly boosted. It is reported that merely less than half of the children and youngsters in Fuzhou are able to speak this language.[5]
Nevertheless, it should also be noted that Fuzhou dialect is currently widely spoken among some native speakers as an "endearing" language. Speaking Fuzhou dialect in Fuzhou often allows mutual speakers a certain level of familiarity. Even though Mandarin Chinese is more often heard in casual conversations on the city streets, the careful observer will notice that in more communal settings, such as small neighborhoods in the city or the surrounding countryside, Fuzhou dialect is often the dominant language.
In Matsu, Taiwan, the teaching of Fuzhou dialect has been introduced into elementary schools.
Phonetically, Fuzhou dialect is a tonal language, which has extremely extensive sandhi rules in the initials, rimes, and the tones. These over-complicated rules make Fuzhou dialect one of the most difficult Chinese languages.[6]
There are seven original tones in Fuzhou dialect, which reserves the tonal system of Ancient Chinese:
| Name | Tone contour | Description | Example |
| Ĭng-bìng (陰平) | 55 | high level | 君 |
| Siōng-siăng (上聲) | 33 | middle level | 滾 |
| Ĭng-ké̤ṳ (陰去) | 213 | low falling and rising | 貢 |
| Ĭng-ĭk (陰入) | 24 | middle rising stopped | 谷 |
| Iòng-bìng (陽平) | 53 | high falling | 群 |
| Iòng-ké̤ṳ (陽去) | 242 | middle rising and falling | 郡 |
| Iòng-ĭk (陽入) | 5 | high level stopped | 掘 |
The sample characters are taken from the Qī Lín Bāyīn.
In Qī Lín Bāyīn, the Fuzhou dialect is described as having eight tones, which explains how the book got its title (Bāyīn means "eight tones"). That name, however, is somewhat misleading, because Ĭng-siōng (陰上) and Iòng-siōng (陽上) are identical in tone contour; therefore, only seven tones exist.
Ĭng-ĭk and Iòng-ĭk (or so-called entering tonal) characters are ended with either velar stop [k] or Glottal stop [ʔ].
Besides those seven tones listed above, two new tonal values, "21" (Buáng-ĭng-ké̤ṳ, 半陰去) and "35" (Buáng-iòng-ké̤ṳ, 半陽去) also occur in connected speech (see Tonal sandhi below).
The rules of tonal sandhi (連讀變調) in Fuzhou dialect are complicated, even compared with those of other Chinese dialects. When two or more than two characters combine into a word, the tonal value of the last character remains stable but those of its preceding characters change in most cases. For example, "獨", "立" and "日" are characters of Iòng-ĭk (陽入) with the same tonal value "5", and are pronounced as [tuʔ5], [liʔ5] and [niʔ5], respectively. When combined together as the phrase "獨立日" (Independence Day), "獨" changes its tonal value to "21", and "立" changes its to "33", therefore the pronunciation as a whole is [tuʔ21 liʔ33 niʔ5].
The two-character tonal sandhi rules are shown in the table below:
| Ĭng-bìng (陰平, 55) |
Iòng-bìng (陽平, 53) |
Shǎngshēng (上聲, 33) |
Ĭng-ĭk (陰去, 213) |
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Ĭng-bìng (陰平, 55) |
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Iòng-bìng (陽平, 53) |
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Siōng-siăng (上聲, 33) |
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Ĭng-ĭk-gák (陰入甲) are Ĭng-ĭk (陰入) characters with glottal stop and Ĭng-ĭk-ék (陰入乙) with /k/.
However, the tonal sandhi rules of more than two characters are much more complicated than can be conveniently displayed in a single table.
There are seventeen initials in all:
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/kʰ/ (氣), /k/ (求) |
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The Chinese characters in the brackets are also sample characters from Qī Lín Bāyīn.
Most Chinese linguists argue that Fuzhou dialect should be described as possessing a null onset. In fact, any character that has a null onset begins with a glottal stop [ʔ].
Some speakers find it difficult to distinguish between the initials /n/ and /l/].
No such labiodental phonemes as /f/ or /v/ exist in Fuzhou dialect, which is one of the most conspicuous characteristics shared by all branches in the Min Family, as well as Korean and Japanese.
[β] and [ʒ] exist in connected speech (see Initial assimilation below) only.
In Fuzhou dialect, there are various kinds of initial assimilation (聲母類化), all of which are progressive. When two or more than two characters combine into a phrase, the initial of the first character stays unchanged while those of the following characters, in most cases, change to match its preceding phoneme, i.e., the coda of its preceding character.
| The Coda of the Former Character | The Initial Assimilation of the Latter Character |
| Null coda or /-ʔ/ |
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| /-ŋ/ |
/p/ and /pʰ/ change to [m];
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| /-k/ | Any initials remain unchanged. |
The table below shows the eleven vowel phonemes of Fuzhou dialect.
| front | fr. rounded | back | |
| close | /i/ | /y/ | /u/ |
| close-mid | /e/ | /ø/ | /o/ |
| open-mid | /ɛ/ | /œ/ | /ɔ/ |
| open | /a/ | /ɑ/ |
Eleven vowel phonemes, together with the codas /-ŋ/ and /-ʔ/, are organized into forty-six rimes.
| Simple Vowels | /a/ or /ɑ/(蝦 or 罷) | /ɛ/ or /a/(街 or 細) | /œ/ or /ɔ/(驢 or 告) | /o/ or /ɔ/(哥 or 抱) | /i/ or /ɛi/(喜 or 氣) | /u/ or /ou/(苦 or 怒) | /y/ or /øy/(豬 or 箸) | ||||||||
| Compound Vowels | /ia/ or /iɑ/(寫 or 夜) | /ie/ or /iɛ/(雞 or 毅) | /iu/ or /ieu/(秋 or 笑) | /ua/ or /uɑ/(花 or 話) | /uo/ or /uɔ/(科 or 課) | /yo/ or /yɔ/(橋 or 銳) | /ai/ or /ɑi/(紙 or 再) | /au/ or /ɑu/(郊 or 校) | /ɛu/ or /ɑu/(溝 or 構) | /øy/ or /ɔy/(催 or 罪) | /uai/ or /uɑi/(我 or 怪) | /ui/ or /uoi/(杯 or 歲) | |||
| Nasal Coda /-ŋ/ | /aŋ/ or /ɑŋ/(三 or 汗) | /iŋ/ or /ɛiŋ/(人 or 任) | /uŋ/ or /ouŋ/(春 or 鳳) | /yŋ/ or /øyŋ/(銀 or 頌) | /iaŋ/ or /iɑŋ/(驚 or 命) | /ieŋ/ or /iɛŋ/(天 or 見) | /uaŋ/ or /uɑŋ/(歡 or 換) | /uoŋ/ or /uɔŋ/(王 or 象) | /yoŋ/ or /yɔŋ/(鄉 or 樣) | /ɛiŋ/ or /aiŋ/(恒 or 硬) | /ouŋ/ or /ɔuŋ/(湯 or 寸) | /øyŋ/ or /ɔyŋ/(桶 or 洞) | |||
| Glottal Coda /-ʔ/ | /aʔ/ or /ɑʔ/(盒 or 鴨) | /øʔ/ or /œʔ/(扔 or 嗝) | /eʔ/ or /ɛʔ/(漬 or 咩) | /oʔ/ or /ɔʔ/(樂 or 閣) | /iʔ/ or /ɛiʔ/(力 or 乙) | /uʔ/ or /ouʔ/(勿 or 福) | /yʔ/ or /øyʔ/(肉 or 竹) | /iaʔ/ or /iɑʔ/(擲 or 察) | /ieʔ/ or /iɛʔ/(熱 or 鐵) | /uaʔ/ or /uɑʔ/(活 or 法) | /uoʔ/ or /uɔʔ/(月 or 郭) | /yoʔ/ or /yɔʔ/(藥 or 弱) | /ɛiʔ/ or /aiʔ/(賊 or 黑) | /ouʔ/ or /ɔuʔ/(學 or 骨) | /øyʔ/ or /ɔyʔ/(讀 or 角) |
As has been mentioned above, there are theoretically two different entering tonal codas in Fuzhou dialect: /-k/ and /-ʔ/. But for most Fuzhou dialect speakers, those two codas are only distinguishable when in the tonal sandhi or initial assimilation. Therefore, most Chinese linguists think that the codas /-k/ and /-ʔ/ has merged together.
All rimes come in pairs in the above table: the one to the left represents a close rime (緊韻), while the other represents an open rime (鬆韻). The close/open rimes are closely related with the tones. As single characters, the tones of Ĭng-bìng (陰平), Siōng-siăng (上聲), Iòng-bìng (陽平) and Iòng-ĭk (陽入) have close rimes while Ĭng-ké̤ṳ (陰去), Ĭng-ĭk (陰入) and Iòng-ké̤ṳ (陽去) have the open rimes. In connected speech, an open rime shifts to its close counterpart in the tonal sandhi.
For instance, "福" (hók) is a Ĭng-ĭk character and is pronounced as [houʔ24] and "州" (ciŭ) a Ĭng-bìng character with the pronunciation of [tsiu55]. When these two characters combine into the word "福州" (Hók-ciŭ, Fuzhou), "福" changes its tonal value from "24" to "21" and, simultaneously, shifts its rime from [-ouʔ] to [-uʔ], so the phrase is pronounced as [huʔ21 tsiu55]. While in the word "中國" [tyŋ53 kuɔʔ24] (Dṳ̆ng-guók, China), "中" is a Ĭng-bìng character and therefore its close rime never changes, though it does change its tonal value from "55" to "53" in the tonal sandhi.
The phenomenon of close/open rimes is unique to Fuzhou dialect and this feature makes it especially intricate and hardly intelligible even to other Min languages.
Most words in Fuzhou dialect have cognates in other Chinese languages, so a non-Fuzhou speaker would find it much easier to understand Fuzhou dialect written in Chinese characters than spoken in conversation. But it should also be noted, however, that false friends do exist: for example, "莫細膩" (mŏ̤h sá̤-nê) means "don't be too polite" or "make yourself at home", "我對手汝洗碗" (nguāi dó̤i-chiū nṳ̄ sā̤ uāng) means "I help you wash dishes", "伊共伊老媽嚟冤家" (ĭ gâe̤ng ĭ lâu-mā lā̤ uŏng-gă) means "he and his wife are quarreling (with each other)", etc. Sheer knowledge of Mandarin vocabulary does not help one catch the meaning of these sentences.
The majority of Fuzhou dialect vocabulary dates back to more than 1,200 years ago. Some daily-used words are even preserved as they were in Tang Dynasty, which can be illustrated by a poem of a famous Chinese poet Gu Kuang (顧況).[7] In his poem Jiǎn (囝), Gu Kuang explicitly noted:
囝,音蹇。閩俗呼子為囝,父為郎罷。
Translation: 囝 is pronounced as 蹇. In Fujian vernacular son is called 囝, and father 郎罷.
In Fuzhou dialect, "囝" (giāng) and "郎罷" (nòng-mâ) are still in use today, without any slightest change.
Quite a few words from Ancient Chinese (mainly Ancient Wu and Ancient Chu) have retained the original meanings for thousands of years, while their counterparts in Mandarin Chinese have either fallen out of daily use or varied to different meanings.
This table shows some Fuzhou dialect words from Classical Chinese, as contrasted to Mandarin Chinese:
| Meaning | Fuzhou dialect | Foochow Romanized | Mandarin | Pinyin |
| eye | 目睭/目珠 | mĕ̤k-ciŭ ([møyʔ5 tsiu55]) | 眼睛 | yǎnjīng |
| you | 汝 | nṳ̄ ([ny33]) | 你 | nǐ |
| chopstick | 箸 | dê̤ṳ ([tøy242]) | 筷子 | kuàizi |
| to chase | 逐 | dṳ̆k ([tyʔ5]) | 追 | zhuī |
| to look, to watch | 覷 | ché̤ṳ ([tsʰøy213]) | 看1 | kàn |
| wet | 潤 | nóng ([nouŋ213]) | 濕 | shī |
| black | 烏 | ŭ ([u55]) | 黑 | hēi |
| to feed | 豢 | huáng ([huɑŋ213]) | 養² | yǎng |
- 1 "看" (káng) is also used as the verb "to look" in Fuzhou dialect.
- 2 "養" (iōng) in Fuzhou dialect means "give birth to (a child)".
And this table shows some words that are both used in Fuzhou dialect and Mandarin Chinese, while the meanings in Mandarin Chinese have altered:
| Word | Foochow Romanized | Meaning in Classical Chinese and Fuzhou dialect | Pinyin | Meaning in Mandarin |
| 走 | cāu ([tsau33]) | to flee | zǒu | to walk |
| 細 | sá̤ ([sɑ213]) | tiny, small, young | xì | thin, slender |
| 說 | siók/suók ([suɔʔ24]) | to explain, to clarify | shuō | to speak, to talk |
| 讲 | gōng | to say, to declare | jiǎng | to say |
| 懸 | gèng ([keiŋ53]) | tall, high, salty | xuán | to hang, to suspend (v.) |
| 喙 | chói ([tsʰui213]) | mouth | huì | beak |
Some daily used words, shared by all Min languages, came from the ancient Minyue language. Such as follows:
| Word | Foochow Romanized | Meaning |
| 骹 | kă ([kʰa55]) | foot and leg |
| 囝 | giāng ([kiaŋ33]) | son, child, whelp, a small amount |
| 睏 | káung ([kʰɑuŋ33]) | to sleep |
| 骿 | piăng ([pʰiaŋ55]) | back, dorsum |
| 儂 | nè̤ng ([nøyŋ53]) | human |
| 厝 | chió/chuó ([tsʰuɔ53]) | home, house |
| 刣 | tài ([thai53]) | to kill |
| 徛 | kiê ([khiɛ242]) | to stand |
| 歞 | ngâung ([ŋɑuŋ242]) | stupidity |
| 伓 | ng ([ŋ]) | not (negative prefix, never used separately) |
The literary and colloquial readings (文白異讀) is a feature commonly found in all Chinese dialects throughout China. The literary readings (文讀) are mainly used in formal phrases and written language, while the colloquial ones (白讀) are basically used in vulgar phrases and spoken language.
This table displays some widely used characters in Fuzhou dialect which have both literary and colloquial readings:
| Character | Literary reading | Phrase | Meaning | Colloquial reading | Phrase | Meaning |
| 行 | hèng [heiŋ53] | 行李 hèng-lī | luggage | giàng [kiaŋ53] | 行墿 giàng-diô | to walk |
| 生 | sĕng [seiŋ55] | 生態 sĕng-tái | zoology, ecology | săng [saŋ55] | 生囝 săng-giāng | childbearing |
| 江 | gŏng [kouŋ55] | 江蘇 Gŏng-sŭ | Jiangsu | gĕ̤ng [køyŋ55] | 閩江 Mìng-gĕ̤ng | Min River |
| 百 | báik [pɑiʔ24] | 百科 báik-kuŏ | encyclopedical | báh [pɑʔ24] | 百姓 báh-sáng | common people |
| 飛 | hĭ [hi55] | 飛機 hĭ-gĭ | aeroplane | buŏi [pui55] | 飛鳥 buŏi-cēu | flying birds |
| 寒 | hàng [haŋ53] | 寒食 Hàng-sĭk | Cold Food Festival | gàng [kaŋ53] | 天寒 tiĕng gàng | cold, freezing |
| 廈 | hâ [hɑ242] | 大廈 dâi-hâ | mansion | â [ɑ242] | 廈門 Â-muòng | Amoy (Xiamen) |
The First Opium War, also known as the First Anglo-Chinese War, was ended in 1842 with the signing of the Treaty of Nanjing, which forced the Qing government to open Fuzhou to all British traders and missionaries. Since then, quite a number of churches and Western-style schools have been established. Consequently, some English words came into Fuzhou dialect, but without fixed written forms in Chinese characters. The most frequently used words are listed below:[8]
- kŏk, [khouʔ5], noun, meaning "an article of dress", is from the word "coat";
- nă̤h, [nɛʔ5], noun, meaning "a meshwork barrier in tennis or badminton", is from the word "net";
- pèng, [pheiŋ53], noun, meaning "oil paint", is from the word "paint";
- pĕng-giāng, [pheiŋ53 ŋiaŋ33, noun, meaning "a small sum of money", is from the word "penny";
- tă̤h, [thɛʔ5], noun, meaning "money", is from the word "take";
- gă̤-lō̤, [kɛ53 lo33], noun, meaning "girl" in a humorous way, is from the word "girl";
- sò̤, [so53], verb, meaning "to shoot (a basket)", is from the word "shoot";
- ă-gì, [a55 ki53], verb, meaning "to pause (usually a game)", is from the word "again".
- Mā-lăk-gă, [ma21 laʔ5 ka5], meaning "Southeastern Asian (esp. Singapore and Malaysia)", is from the word "Malacca".
Some common phrases in Fuzhou dialect:
- Fuzhou dialect: 福州話 / Hók-ciŭ-uâ / [huʔ21 tsiu53 uɑ242]
- Hello: 汝好 / nṳ̄ hō̤ / [ny33 ho33]
- Good-bye: 再見 / cái-giéng / [tsai53 kiɛŋ213]
- Please: 請 / chiāng / [tshiaŋ33]; 起動 / kī-dâe̤ng / [khi55 lɔyŋ242]
- Thank you: 謝謝 / siâ-siâ / [sia53 liɑ242]; 起動 / kī-dâe̤ng / [khi55 lɔyŋ242]
- Sorry: 對不住 / dó̤i-bók-cê̤ṳ / [tøy21 puʔ5 tsøy242]
- This: 嚽 / cuòi / [tsui53]; 啫 / ciā / [tsia33]; 茲 / cī / [tsi33]
- That: 噲 / huòi / [hui53]; 嘻 / hiā / [hia33]; 許 / hī / [hi33]
- How much?: 偌 / nuâi (nuô-uâi) / [nuai242] ([nuo53 uɑi242])
- Yes: 正是 / ciáng-sê / [tsiaŋ53 nɛi242]; 無綻 / mò̤ dâng / [mo21 lɑŋ242]; 著 / diŏh (duŏh) / [tyoʔ5] ([tuoʔ5])
- No: 伓是 / ng-sê / [ŋ53 nɛi242]; 綻 / dâng / [tɑŋ242]; 賣著 / mâ̤ diŏh (mâ̤ duŏh) / [me55 tyoʔ5] ([me55 tuoʔ5])
- I don't understand: 我賣會意 / nguāi mâ̤ huôi-é / [ŋuai33 me21 hui53 ɛi213]
- What's his name?: 伊名什乇? / Ĭ miàng sié-nó̤h? / [i55 miaŋ53 sie21 nɔʔ24]
- Where's the hotel?: 賓館洽底所? / Bĭng-guāng găk diē-nē̤? / [piŋ53 kuaŋ33 kaʔ5 tie24 nœ33]
- How can I go to the school?: 去學校怎行? / Kó̤ hăk-hâu cuōng giàng? / [kho53 haʔ21 hɑu242 tsuoŋ24 kiaŋ53]
- Can you speak Fuzhou dialect?: 汝會講福州話賣? / Nṳ̄ â̤ gōng Hók-ciŭ-uâ mâ̤? / [ny33 e53 kouŋ33 huʔ21 tsiu53 uɑ242 ma242]
- Can you speak English?: 汝會講英語賣? / Nṳ̄ â̤ gōng Ĭng-ngṳ̄ mâ̤? / [ny33 e53 kouŋ33 iŋ53 ŋy33 ma242]
Most of the characters of Fuzhou dialect stem from Ancient Chinese and can therefore be written in Chinese characters. Many books published in Qing Dynasty have been written in this traditional way, such as Mǐndū Biéjì (閩都別記, Foochow Romanized: Mìng-dŭ Biék-gé) and the Bible in Fuzhou dialect. However, Chinese characters as the writing system for Fuzhou dialect do have many shortcomings.
Firstly, a great number of characters are unique to Fuzhou dialect, so that they can only be written in informal ways. For instance, the character "mâ̤", a negative word, has no common form. Some write it as "賣" or "袂", both of which share with it an identical pronunciation but has a totally irrelevant meaning; and others prefer to use a newly-created character combining "勿" and "會", but this character is not included in most fonts.
Secondly, Fuzhou dialect has been excluded from the educational system for many decades. As a result, many if not all take for granted that Fuzhou dialect does not have a formal writing system and when they have to write it, they tend to misuse characters with a similar Mandarin Chinese enunciation. For example, "會使 (â̤ sāi)", meaning "okay", are frequently written as "阿塞" because they are uttered almost in the same way.
Foochow Romanized, also known as Bàng-uâ-cê (平話字), is a romanization of Fuzhou dialect invented in the middle of 19th century by some Western missionaries.
- ^ In Sima Qian's Records of the Grand Historian, it is recorded that after the fall of Minyue, Emperor Wu of Han emptied its territory by ordering an exodus of the entire Minyue population to the area between the Yangtze River and Huai River (武帝時,閩越反,滅之,徙其人於江淮閒,盡虛其地。).
- ^ Li Rulong, Liang Yuzhang: Fuzhou Dialect Records, 2001, ISBN 7-80597-361-X
- ^ Ditto.
- ^ Li, Zhuqing: A study of the "Qī Lín Bāyīn", University of Washington, 1993
- ^ Survey by Fuzhou Evening Paper Showing Less Than Half of Fuzhou Youth Able to Speak Fuzhou Dialect (Chinese)
- ^ Yuan Jiahua: Summary of Chinese Dialects, 2nd Edition, 2003, ISBN 9787801264749
- ^ Zhao Rihe: Fuzhou Dialect Rhyme Dictionary, 1998, MRXN-1998-0465
- ^ Chen Zeping: Loan Words in Fuzhou Dialect, Fujian Normal University, 1994
- Cathryn Donohue: The tone-vowel interaction in Fuzhou revisited, University of Nevada, Reno
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- Fuzhou dialect textbook: Elementary school textbook in Matsu.
- Fuzhou dialect phonology, by James Campbell.
- SĬNG GÔ IÓK CIÒNG CṲ̆: The Old Testament, in Foochow Romanized.
- SĬNG IÓK CṲ̆: The New Testament, in Foochow Romanized.
- MĀ-TÁI HÓK-ĬNG: Matthew's Gospel, in Foochow Romanized.
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