Zhuyin

Zhuyin Fuhao, often shortened as zhuyin and commonly called bopomofo, is a type of sound-based writing for the Chinese language. In Chinese, "bo", "po", "mo" and "fo" are the first four of the conventional ordering of available syllables. As a result, the four syllables together have been used to refer to many different phonetic systems. For Chinese speakers who were first introduced to the Zhuyin system, "bopomofo" means zhuyin fuhao.

Origin of zhuyin symbols
ZhuyinPinyinOrigin
Initials
bFrom , the top portion , bāo
pFrom , the combining form of ,
mFrom , the archaic form of the radical ,
fFrom , fāng
dFrom the archaic form of , dāo. Compare the bamboo form.
tFrom the upside-down seen at the top of
nFrom 𠄎, ancient form of , nǎi
lCalligraphic form of ,
gFrom the obsolete character , guì/kuài, 'river'
kFrom from 考, kǎo
hFrom , hàn
jFrom the archaic character from 纠, jiū
qFrom the archaic character , quǎn, graphic root of the character , chuān (modern )
xFrom , a seal form of , xià.
zhFrom /𡳿, archaic form of , zhī.
chFrom the radical , chì
shFrom the character , shī
rA semi-cursive form of ,
zFrom the radical 节, jié, dialectically zié
cVariant of , , dialectically ciī. Compare semi-cursive form and seal-script.
sFrom the old character , , which was later replaced by its compound , .
Finals
i, yFrom ,
u, wFrom , ancient form of , .
ü, yuFrom the ancient character , , which remains as a radical
aFrom ,
oFrom the obsolete character 𠀀 , inhalation, the reverse of 考, kǎo, which is preserved as a phonetic in the compound , .[1]
eDerived from its allophone in Standard Mandarin, , o
eFrom , . Compare the Warring States bamboo form.
aiFrom 𠀅 hài, bronze form of .
eiFrom , an obsolete character meaning , , "to move".
aoFrom , yāo
ouFrom , yòu
anFrom the obsolete character , hàn, "to bloom", preserved as a phonetic in the compound , fàn
enFrom , yǐn
angFrom , wāng
engFrom , an obsolete form of , gōng
erFrom , the bottom portion of , ér used as a cursive form
i( and inverted ) Perhaps , in addition to . It is the minimal vowel of , , , , , , that is spelled "ih" in Tongyong Pinyin and Wade-Giles and "i" in pinyin.
Bopomofo
Traditional Chinese
Simplified Chinese

The zhuyin characters are represented in typographic fonts as if drawn with an ink brush (as in Regular Script). They are encoded in Unicode in the bopomofo block, in the range U+3105 ... U+312D.

History

After the overthrow of China's last emperor during the Xinhai Revolution in 1911, the new government in China created Zhuyin to help the common people read more easily.[2] However, the Chinese Communist Party, including Mao Zedong himself, wanted to ban writing Chinese characters altogether and replace them with the Latin alphabet.[3] When the People's Liberation Army defeated the Kuomintang (the founding party of the Republic of China) in 1949 and sent them off to exile in Taiwan, the use of Zhuyin dropped in mainland China because the CPC was interested in using the Latin alphabet for writing Chinese phonetically.[2] However, Zhuyin is still widely used in Taiwan as it is used to type Chinese on computer and phone keyboards.

Features

Zhuyin was made to closely represent the sounds of Mandarin Chinese. Symbols are divided into two categories, the initials (the first sounds in a syllable) and the finals (the main vowel, the glide consonants ([y/i; IPA:/j/] and [w/u; IPA:/w/]) that come before the main vowel and all the sound that comes after it). There are 4 tone marks to represent the 5 Mandarin tones.

References

  1. "Unihan data for U+ 20000".
  2. "Zhuyin fuhao / Bopomofo". omniglot.com. Retrieved 2017-07-09.
  3. "Oracle Bones". The New Yorker. Retrieved 2017-07-09.
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