Dear Members
I am researching these three Chinese characters:
力 手 元
Pronounced li shou yuan in Manderin, or 'power hand ancient' in English.
I would be very grateful if anyone could provide me with a Hokkien translation?
Thank you.
Hokkien Pronounciation.
Hokkien Pronounciation.
Last edited by Shida on Wed Sep 29, 2010 6:14 am, edited 2 times in total.
Re: Hokkien Pronounciation.
Hi Shida:
Sorry, the other day the format was kelam-kabut, did not see your message.
力 = lik
手 = siu
元 = guan
Regards,
aokh1979
Sorry, the other day the format was kelam-kabut, did not see your message.
力 = lik
手 = siu
元 = guan
Regards,
aokh1979
Re: Hokkien Pronounciation.
Dear aokh1979aokh1979 wrote:Hi Shida:
Sorry, the other day the format was kelam-kabut, did not see your message.
力 = lik
手 = siu
元 = guan
Regards,
aokh1979
Thank you very much for your reply. It is very much appreciated.
Best Wishes
Adrian
PS: What is the prevailing language for Fuzhou?
Last edited by Shida on Tue Sep 28, 2010 6:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Hokkien Pronounciation.
Should beaokh1979 wrote:Hi Shida:
Sorry, the other day the format was kelam-kabut, did not see your message.
力 = lik
手 = siu
元 = guan
Regards,
aokh1979
lak, C'iu, guan
As standalone, they use their colloquail sound.
Re: Hokkien Pronounciation.
Thank you xng - your knowledge is very much appreciated.xng wrote:Should beaokh1979 wrote:Hi Shida:
Sorry, the other day the format was kelam-kabut, did not see your message.
力 = lik
手 = siu
元 = guan
Regards,
aokh1979
lak, C'iu, guan
As standalone, they use their colloquail sound.
Best Wishes
Shida
Min Dong of Fuzhou.
I am told that dialects of Hokkien can vary dramatically, even within a ten mile area of Fujian. I have discovered that the 3 characters where used in the Fuzhou area, and therefore promounced in Min Dong. There have been two very good translations provided on this thread:
力 = lik
手 = siu
元 = guan
力 = lak
手 = ciu
元 = guan
My question is this; which one of these pronounciations is closest to Min Dong? And how much does Hokkien of Min Nana vary in Fujian?
Thank you for your valauable help.
Best Wishes
shida
力 = lik
手 = siu
元 = guan
力 = lak
手 = ciu
元 = guan
My question is this; which one of these pronounciations is closest to Min Dong? And how much does Hokkien of Min Nana vary in Fujian?
Thank you for your valauable help.
Best Wishes
shida
Re: Min Dong of Fuzhou.
I think there is some miscommunication.Shida wrote:I am told that dialects of Hokkien can vary dramatically, even within a ten mile area of Fujian.
shida
Hokkien language usually mean Minnan and not MinDong.
There are 7 main languages in Hokkien province as diverse as spanish, english, italian etc.
You are asking something like what is the european word for 'hand' which is non existent.
This is a minnan forum.
Re: Min Dong of Fuzhou.
Shida wrote:I am told that dialects of Hokkien can vary dramatically, even within a ten mile area of Fujian. I have discovered that the 3 characters where used in the Fuzhou area, and therefore promounced in Min Dong. There have been two very good translations provided on this thread:
力 = lik
手 = siu
元 = guan
力 = lak
手 = ciu
元 = guan
My question is this; which one of these pronounciations is closest to Min Dong? And how much does Hokkien of Min Nan very in Fujian?
Thank you for your valauable help.
Best Wishes
shida
Re: Min Dong of Fuzhou.
Thank you xng.xng wrote:I think there is some miscommunication.Shida wrote:I am told that dialects of Hokkien can vary dramatically, even within a ten mile area of Fujian.
shida
Hokkien language usually mean Minnan and not MinDong.
There are 7 main languages in Hokkien province as diverse as spanish, english, italian etc.
You are asking something like what is the european word for 'hand' which is non existent.
This is a minnan forum.
I am referencing this link:
Fujian
http://www.chinatour.com/attraction/fujian.province.htm
And focusing upon this extract:
'Because of its mountainous nature and the numerous waves of migration from central China in the course of history, Fujian is one of the most linguistically diverse places in all Han Chinese areas of China. Local dialects can become unintelligible within 10 km. This is reflected in the expression that "if you drive five miles in Fujian the culture changes, and if you drive ten miles, the language does". Classification of these various dialects has confounded linguists. In general, most dialects of Fujian are put into a broad Min category, then subdivided into Min Bei, Min Dong, Min Zhong, Min Nan, Pu Xian, and Shao Jiang. (The seventh subdivision of Min, Qiong Wen, is not spoken in Fujian.) The Fuzhou dialect is part of Min Dong, but some linguists classify it as Min Bei; the Amoy language is part of Min Nan. Hakka, another subdivision of spoken Chinese, is spoken around Longyan by the Hakka people who live there.'
Thank you for pointing out this information.
Best Wishes
shida
'
Re: Hokkien Pronounciation.
If you're talking about literary pronunciations, there's not going to be much of a differencc between this forum's "Hokkien" and the languages spoken in Hokciu 福州 or 福清 "Hockchia" or 莆田 Henghwa. In fact, there's not even going to be much of a difference vs Korean, tones aside. If you're talking about colloquial pronunciations, there's still a lot of similarities between the languages I just mentioned. The vocabulary and tone rules are really different though. If you read Chinese, you might want to take a spin on the ISPEAKMIN forum.