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pro vyhledávání: '"W. South Coblin"'
Autor:
W. South Coblin
Publikováno v:
Bulletin of Chinese Linguistics. 14:169-186
One of the most common morphemes meaning “mother” in the Hakka dialects is a syllable pronounced [oi1], [ɔi1], or the like. This word, so far as is known, has no phonologically systematic cognates in other Chinese dialect families and is not att
Autor:
W. South Coblin
Publikováno v:
Journal of Chinese Linguistics.
Autor:
W. South Coblin
Publikováno v:
Studies in Colloquial Chinese and Its History ISBN: 9789888754090
In the 15th Century Standard Chinese (i.e., Guānhuà) recorded by the Korean Sinologist, Sin Sukchu (1417-1475) there are differences between the reading pronunciations and spoken forms of certain Chinese characters, e.g., 莊 is transcribed tʂaŋ
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::2e7263094c89f5f3ad3e460b7f575b6d
https://doi.org/10.5790/hongkong/9789888754090.003.0010
https://doi.org/10.5790/hongkong/9789888754090.003.0010
Publikováno v:
Journal of the American Oriental Society. 135
This paper attempts to show that the Shianbei word for ‘paper’ was *qaɣVdu, which is cognate to Written Mongolian qaɣudasu ‘tree bark, sheet of paper’, and that *qaɣVdu was subsequently borrowed into other languages as Sogdian kāγaδā,
Autor:
W. South Coblin
Publikováno v:
Bulletin of Chinese Linguistics. 10:133-143
Closely associated with the Chinese rime table (Chin. děngyùntú 等韻圖) tradition is an ordered list of syllables, referred to in Chinese as the Sānshíliù zìmŭ 三十六字母. As this term indicates, there are thirty-six members in the us
Autor:
W. South Coblin
Publikováno v:
Bulletin of Chinese Linguistics. 7:41-48
The Wènqíjí of the late sixteenth century Míng scholar Zhāng Wèi 張位 contains a short chapter entitled “Local Pronunciations of Various Areas”. The work comprises a number of direct sound glosses on Chinese characters, with the glossing
Autor:
W. South Coblin
Publikováno v:
Historiographia Linguistica. 39:129-133
Autor:
W. South COBLIN
Publikováno v:
Cahiers de Linguistique Asie Orientale. 38:125-162
During most of its history the Guānhuà koine is thought to have been rooted in the southern Mandarin dialects of the Yangtze watershed. However, the earliest alphabetic recordings of this language, dating from the mid-fifteenth century, show that i
Autor:
W. South Coblin
Publikováno v:
Bulletin of Chinese Linguistics. 2:85-91
The Language Atlas of China classifies the Yanzhou dialects as belonging to the Huizhou family. Cao (1996) has studied four Yanzhou dialects (i.e. Chun’an, Suian, Jiande, and Shouchang) and has expressed doubts about the Atlas classification. In th