五嶽
See also:
五岳
Chinese
five
mountain
trad.
(
五嶽
/
五岳
)
五
嶽
/
岳
simp.
(
五岳
)
五
岳
Pronunciation
Mandarin
(
Pinyin
)
:
wǔyuè
(
Zhuyin
)
:
ㄨˇ ㄩㄝˋ
Cantonese
(
Jyutping
)
:
ng
5
ngok
6
Wu
(
Wugniu
)
(
Northern
)
:
6
ng-ngoq
Mandarin
(
Standard Chinese
)
Hanyu Pinyin
:
wǔyuè
Zhuyin
:
ㄨˇ ㄩㄝˋ
Tongyong Pinyin
:
wǔyuè
Wade–Giles
:
wu
3
-yüeh
4
Yale
:
wǔ-ywè
Gwoyeu Romatzyh
:
wuuyueh
Palladius
:
уюэ
(ujue)
Sinological IPA
(key)
:
/u²¹⁴⁻²¹ ɥɛ⁵¹/
Homophones
:
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五岳
五嶽
/
五岳
五月
Cantonese
(
Standard Cantonese
,
Guangzhou
–
Hong Kong
)
+
Jyutping
:
ng
5
ngok
6
Yale
:
ńgh ngohk
Cantonese Pinyin
:
ng
5
ngok
9
Guangdong Romanization
:
ng
5
ngog
6
Sinological IPA
(
key
)
:
/ŋ̍¹³ ŋɔːk̚²/
Wu
(
Shanghai
)
:
Wugniu
:
6
ng-ngoq
MiniDict
:
ng
去
ngoh
Wiktionary Romanisation (Shanghai)
:
3
hhngg-ngoq
Sinological IPA (
Shanghai
)
:
/ŋ̍²² ŋoʔ⁴⁴/
Noun
五嶽
the
Five
Great
Mountains
of
China
, namely:
Mount Tai
(
東嶽
/
东岳
(
Dōngyuè
)
, in
Shandong
),
Mount Hua
(
西嶽
/
西岳
(
Xīyuè
)
, in
Shaanxi
),
Mount Heng
(
南嶽
/
南岳
(
Nányuè
)
, in
Hunan
),
Mount Heng
(
北嶽
/
北岳
(
Běiyuè
)
, in
Shanxi
), and
Mount Song
(
中嶽
/
中岳
(
Zhōngyuè
)
, in
Henan
).
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