'''h''' is sometimes pronounced as '''s''', especially when there is a vowel -i- in the syllable. E.g. '''兄''' '''hiung1''' may be pronounced '''siung1'''.
'''h''' is sometimes pronounced as '''s''', especially when there is a vowel -i- in the syllable. E.g. '''兄''' '''hiung1''' may be pronounced '''siung1'''.
−
'''au''' is sometimes pronounced as '''o'''. E.g. 好 '''hau3''' / '''ho3'''
+
'''au''' is sometimes pronounced as '''o'''. E.g. 好 '''hau3''' / '''ho3'''
==Phrase list==
==Phrase list==
Revision as of 00:39, 8 April 2011
Hakka (客家话; Kèjiāhuà in Mandarin) is one of the main seven or so Chinese languages. It is spoken across several provinces in Southeast China including Taiwan and Hainan and Hong Kong. In this article, the Hong Kong dialect of the Hakka language will be used.
The Hakka (客家 Kèjiā, IPA: [hak₃ ka₃₃] ) people are said to have migrated south from Northern China over the centuries to settle in southern Jiangsu and Hunan, western Fujian, eastern Guangdong, and various other areas, due to wars, famine, natural disasters, and political persecution. Hakka comes from the words '客' "guest" and '家' "families" which derives from an official term during the Qing Dynasty for the program of resettlement of the coastal areas of Guangdong after evacuation orders imposed during the reign of Emperor Kangxi. These settlers whose language seemed different to the original inhabitants were given this appellation to show they were not indigenous to the areas they became settled in. Most indigenous inhabitants occupied the more fertile basins, whilst the incoming Hakka became settled in the more inaccessible valleys and mountainous or hilly terrain. The Hakka language (客家话; Kèjiāhuà) is shares a common vocabulary with Southern languages such as Min and Yue, and there are regular sound correspondences to the historical sound system of Middle Chinese.
Pronunciation guide
The most accessible Hakka speakers are found in Hong Kong and Taiwan. Most of them will be dual language speakers, in Hong Kong, they are able to understand and speak Cantonese, whilst on the mainland of China and on Taiwan, they will also speak Mandarin. There is no standard form of Hakka and regional variations in local dialects can be surmounted by understanding the gist of the spoken sentence and knowing some sound correspondences that the user will encounter.
Vowels
The vowels can be long or short. Long vowels occur in open syllables, where there are no endings. Short vowels occur in syllables which end in nasals (-m, -n or -ng) or stops (-p, -t or -k).
Vowel Sound Length Varies with Syllable Endings
Romanised Vowel
IPA
Long Vowel (syllable ends in a vowel)
IPA
Short Vowel (syllable ends with -m, -n, -ng, -p, -t, -k)
a
[ aː ]
a in car
[ ɐ ]
a in pat
e
[ ɛː ]
ai in hair
[ e ]
e in pet
i
[ iː ]
ee in been
[ ɪ ]
i in pit
o
[ ɔː ]
or in core
[ ɒ ]
o in pot
u
[ uː ]
oo in boot
[ ʌ ]
u in put
In some dialects there is a vowel which we represent as ii, which does not occur in standard English. It is a retroflex i, the closest sound is almost like ir in "shir" when saying English 'sure'. In the Hong Kong dialect, these sounds become -i or -u.
Initial or Consonant
Consonant Sounds in Hakka
b
p
m
f
v
[ p ]
[ pʰ ]
[ m ]
[ f ]
[ ʋ ]
almost like b in boy
almost like p in pot
like m in man
like f in far
almost like v in van
d
t
n
l
[ t ]
[ tʰ ]
[ n ]
[ l ]
almost like d in dart
almost like t in star
like n in no (in most Hakka dialects)
like l in low
g
k
ng
h
[ k ]
[ kʰ ]
[ ŋ ]
[ h ]
like g in gone
like k in kin
like ng in singer
like h in how
z
c
s
y
[ ts ]
[ tsʰ ]
[ s ]
[ j ]
[ ˀ ]
like ts in tests
like t in too
like s in sow
like y in yew
A slight closing of the throat before syllables that begin with a vowel
Rimes
Syllable Rimes in Hakka
a
ai
au
am
an
ang
ap
at
ak
[ a ]
[ ɐj ]
[ ɐu ]
[ ɐm ]
[ ɐn ]
[ ɐng ]
[ ɐp ]
[ ɐt ]
[ ɐk ]
far
eye
how
ham
an
fang
lap
sad
hag ]
ia
iɐu
iɐm
iɐng
iɐp
iɐk
[ ja ]
[ jɐu ]
[ jɐm ]
[ jɐng ]
[ jɐp ]
[ jɐk ]
yarn
yow
yam
yang
yap
yak
e
eu
em
en
ep
et
[ ɛ ]
[ eu ]
[ em ]
[ en ]
[ ep ]
[ et ]
hair
eow
em
en
epic
bet
ie
ieu
iem
ien
iep
iet
[ jɛ ]
[ jeu ]
[ jem ]
[ jen ]
[ jep ]
[ jet ]
yeah
yeow
yem
yen
yep
yet
i
im
in
ip
it
[ i ]
[ ɪm ]
[ ɪn ]
[ ɪp ]
[ ɪt ]
bee
dim
tin
dip ]
lit
ii
iim
iin
iip
iit
[ ʐ ]
[ ʐm ]
[ ʐn ]
[ ʐp ]
[ ʐt ]
fur
firm
fern
burp
bird
o
oi
on
ong
ot
ok
[ ɔ ]
[ ɒj ]
[ ɒn ]
[ ɒŋ ]
[ ɒt ]
[ ɒk ]
core
coy
con
kong
cot
cock
io
ioi
ion
iong
iot
iok
[ jɔ ]
[ jɒj ]
[ jɒn ]
[ jɒŋ ]
[ jɒt ]
[ jɒk ]
yore
yoy
yon
yong
yot
yok
u
ui
un
ung
ut
uk
[ u ]
[ uj ]
[ un ]
[ uŋ ]
[ ut ]
[ uk ]
woo
wee
bun
bung
but
book
iu
iun
iung
iut
iuk
[ ju ]
[ jʌj ]
[ jʌn ]
[ jʌŋ ]
[ ʌt ]
[ ʌk ]
you
youeille
'yun
young
yut
yuck
m
n
ng
[ m ]
[ n ]
[ ng]
mmm
nnn
ung
Tones
Tones in Hakka
#
IPA
Tone Letter
Character
Romanisation
Syllable in IPA
Meaning
1
33
˧
被
pi1
[ pʰi˧ ]
quilt cover
2
11
˩
皮
pi2
[ pʰi˩ ]
skin
3
31
˧˩
彼
pi3
[ pʰi˧˩ ]
that, there, those
4
53
˥˧
鼻
pi4
[ pʰi˥˧ ]
nose
5
3
˧
匹
pit5
[ pʰi˧ ]
bolt of cloth; counter for horses
6
5
˥
蝠
pit6
[ pʰi˥ ]
flying mammal called a bat
The tone changes known as sandhi does occur, but the change in the pitch is not as great as found in other Chinese languages.
Some Sound Correspondences between dialect of the Hakka Language=
Apart from tonal differences, there are small variations in pronunciations from place to place. The following details some of the more commonly found differences, which may be helpful to the user when hearing other speakers from different areas.
h is sometimes pronounced as s, especially when there is a vowel -i- in the syllable. E.g. 兄hiung1 may be pronounced siung1.
au is sometimes pronounced as o. E.g. 好 hau3 / ho3