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into the sound, refers to"Guangyun".and other ancient rhyme books that also belong to the voiceVoiced wordsThe tone of the voice. Entering the sound as a tone and its characteristic incoming rhyme Entering the sound as a tone.
Modern. Mandarin has been merged into other tones and disappeared, and even the unique sounding endings of the words have also fallen off, because the sounding is similar to many dialects, which is not easy to distinguish.
The pronunciation is very difficult to master. There is no need for the development of sound in modern Chinese to the level it is today.
It is an indisputable fact that Mandarin has four tones. Whether it's a Chinese dictionary.
It is still the Chinese textbooks of various schools that say so. However, I have found that in some sentences, interjections can sometimes come out loud. Like, "Ah! It's beautiful! The word "ah" in this sentence is more often pronounced as a short sound, that is, into the sound.
If you read "ah" in this sentence, you can say the past, but it's just not authentic. There are other interjections that can also be pronounced in certain situations. For example, "Oh!
I understand! "Oh"; "Hmmm! Very good!
"Hmm".
I've consulted some other university tutors, and they all agree with me. The standardization of Chinese pronunciation is often used for different pronunciation words and soft words.
Child-like words are organized, and you may not notice the problem of sounding.
Because the theory of the four tones of Mandarin (yin, yang, up, and go) has long been closed, few people doubt it. Judging from the actual situation, whether it is daily speaking, cross talk sketches, poetry recitations or news broadcasts, several of the exclamations listed above are also read into the voice.
In order to adapt to the development of language, we changed the pronunciation of "ai ban" to "dai ban"; Replace "conclusive" with "querce"; Pronounce "special (te shu chu)" as "special (te shuu)" and so on. So, can we read the above interjections as intonation in a specific context? Can these particular usages be boiled down to sound changes?
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Entering the sound is a kind of descentphasePair shortersound andBluntPronounce. Ancient and modern Hokkien, Cantonese and some dialects also have invoices, such as Shanxi dialects, which have a lot of invoices. For example, "no", the Taiyuan pronunciation is a short flat tone of ba, and most of the incoming tones are very short tunings.
> because modern Chinese uses Beijing pronunciation as the standard pronunciation, the northern dialect as the basic dialect, and the typical modern dialect is the grammatical norm of Mandarin. The pronunciation of Beijing is not sounded, so there is no sound in Mandarin. This is determined by political, economic, cultural, and other factors.
The Chinese accent in the Nanjing dialect has not disappeared If you speak Mandarin, you should ask for the three tones of Beijing dialect to be more accurate. The time it takes for the sound to disappear is close to the time when the end plug falls off. This was a gradual process, and most scholars believe that the disappearance of tonal typology in most parts of northern Mandarin began in the late Tang Dynasty to the late Song or early Yuan Dynasty.
Entering the sound is one of the four tones of the Chinese language. The sound is short and can be heard right away. Wu, Min, Cantonese, Hakka, Pinghua, Gan, Xinxiang, Hui, Jin, Jianghuai, some southwestern Mandarin and a small number of Jilu Mandarin have retained their voices, but the voices of modern Mandarin have disappeared.
In the Middle Ages, the sound was divided into yinping, yangping, shangsheng, and qusheng, but there was no sounding in modern standard Chinese, which is based on modern northern Chinese. People who speak Mandarin dialects (except Jianghuai Mandarin, Southwest Mandarin, and a few Jilu Mandarin) have lost their native voices, including Mandarin based on Mandarin dialects, and cannot distinguish between voices without training.
The most accepted view in linguistic circles is that the intonation merged into the laryngeal plosive in the Northern Song Dynasty and eventually disappeared in the Southern Song Dynasty.
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The disappearance of the sound began at the end of the Song Dynasty and the beginning of the Yuan Dynasty, the Mongols occupied most of the northern areas, and the Yuan Dynasty compiled the "Central Plains Phonology" based on the Dadu (Beijing) dialect, which replaced the original "Guangyun", mixed with many Mongolian characteristics, especially the assignment of the voice to the other three tones, resulting in the northern dialect initial structure is very different from that of ancient Chinese, no voice, no voiced sound, and the overall tone is mainly high-pitched. After the Song Dynasty moved south, Chinese accents are still widely used in southern Chinese dialects, southern official dialects (including southwestern official dialects) and northern Jin dialects.
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Because it was supposed to be kept at the time, but when it was used, it was very troublesome and was removed.
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Mandarin has no sound. This is determined by political, economic, cultural and other factors.
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Because it's promoted, everyone agrees with it, so it can't be removed, I think so.
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For this reason, because Tupu has become a fait accompli, it is better not to say it. If you are interested, you can search for the history of Mandarin.
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This is something that scientists have decided on and is not something we can change.
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Modern Mandarin has no sound, why it was removed in the first place, this reason is difficult to speculate.
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This is the conclusion that people have come to for decades, eliminating cumbersome grammar and making it simpler.
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It didn't matter when Mandarin wasn't popularized at the beginning, but now that it's popularized, you can't change it at will.
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People have one idea at a time, and what they thought at the beginning is always different from what they think now.
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Putonghua (Standard Mandarin Putonghua), another name for modern Standard Chinese, is a lingua franca with Beijing pronunciation as the standard sound, northern official dialect as the basic dialect, and exemplary modern vernacular writings as the grammatical norms.
Chinese is not the same as Mandarin, and the promotion of Mandarin is not to artificially eliminate dialects, but mainly to eliminate dialect barriers, so as to facilitate social communication, and there is no contradiction with the people's use of inherited dialects.
The main ** of modern Mandarin is the Yuan Dynasty based on the Dadu (Beijing) dialect of the "Central Plains Rhyme", formerly known as the Ming and Qing Dynasty official dialect, to the Yongzheng period, the Qing Dynasty officially established Beijing dialect as the standard official dialect. Compared with the dialects of the southeast, modern Mandarin retains relatively few ancient sounds, and has disappeared from the "into".
Voice characteristics. Mandarin pronunciation is characterized by:
1. Initials have no voiced sound except for the posterior fricative, nasal, and side sounds of the tip of the tongue;
2. The finals are multi-compound vowels, and the nasal finals are divided into front and back;
3. There is no voiced opposition of initials, no rhyme, confluence of sharp groups, less tones, simple tones, and soft voices and children's rhymes.
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Mandarin, originally learned by the northern nomads, developed from non-standard Chinese, is the official dialect of the Manchu Qing Dynasty. The pronunciation of Mandarin, although it basically meets the pronunciation requirements of "Pingshui Rhyme". However, because the nomads who speak the Altaic accent are born with incomplete pronunciation and inaccurate pronunciation.
Therefore, the Chinese pronunciation represented by northern Mandarin is easy to roll the tongue and has a childish sound. The pronunciation is more vague and messy, and the pronunciation is simplified, not so particular about the change of pronunciation.
Into the voice, it is the bone of the Chinese language"! In authentic Chinese, it is precisely because of the many changes in the sound that it enriches a lot of phonological changes and reduces the occurrence of accented words. Most of the world's major languages have short but powerful vocalizations similar to those of the invoice.
Mandarin without a sound is like writing and drawing, except for the speed and thickness of the line, it does not know how to pay attention to the change of the pen. The lack of sound makes the Chinese language lose its original rhythmic beauty, which is a regrettable loss.
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Is there a delay in the Mandarin without a voice? Have literary works, legal documents, documents, international treaties, scientific and technological works, and various media written in Mandarin affected? If not, it means that this "voice" is redundant and should be removed!
First of all, you need to figure out the correct pinyin of the words, that is, the pronunciation, for example, some words must distinguish between the front and back nasal sounds, as well as the nasal sounds such as "l, n", so that your Mandarin pronunciation is standard. You can listen to the recordings in the textbook and listen to the standard pronunciation. Then it's just a matter of reading more, purely reading more, reading more, becoming proficient, and that's it. >>>More
Then speak in tongues!! There are people who understand the same!! Language means to communicate with others. Of course, communication starts from the heart.
Let's talk about the disadvantages of speaking Mandarin, remember to speak Wenzhou when you go out of the house. >>>More
Mandarin should be the oral form of expression of the "Chinese" that is usually required to be spoken. The Chinese language should also include written expressions. It should be the same in Hong Kong and Taiwan.
Because there are many people who say it, and the country vigorously promotes it, you think it sounds good >>>More