数字上古音
Uploader Comments (instemast2)
All Comments (24)
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這要是穿越到了古代,還不得鬱悶死啊
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@VR2UNA I can't get it. Their /s/ are necessary because they are third-tone characters. If they are absent, how to distinguish them from others?
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Very obviously the S at the end of 2 and 4 should be silent, like in Paris. But it seems that demonstrator doesn't know this.
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@gariadara Chinese is often described as a "monosyllabic" language. However, this is only partially correct. It is largely accurate when describing Classical Chinese and Middle Chinese
but however i was not stating that chinese is monosyllabiv if you read my post, i was stating it is tonic
which means every tone has a meaning
another thing is that you confuse word for chinese for word in english, fei ji is 2 words in chinese
but it discribe 1 object,
human - ren in chinese
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@sung3344 you're kidding, this sounds nothing like cantonese.
/watch?v=3vweAecglyY
yat, yi, saam, sei, m, luk, chat, baat, kau, sap
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@rocketman10owen That's not true. Chinese is not monosyllabic at all. And in fact the further back in time you go, the more disyllabic words you see. Example, the word for "they" is "tamen." The word for airplane is "feiji" airport is "feijichang" (three syllables here). Most chinese words are compound words made up of two or three words. Some are four syllables but those are rarer. I think what you're referring to on this video are the consonant clusters, as all the words are 1 syllable here.
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根據目前鄭張尚芳、王力等學者的研究,上古漢語(先秦)存在有複
子音與主次要母音,有興趣的人可以看看維基百科「上古音系」。 -
天阿 誰可以替我解釋我所聽到的東西
上古中文讓我嚇到 本來以為差別在於多了入聲音 跟一些鼻腔的音
沒想到一個字的音節那麼多@@!!!! 太屌了啦 怎麼查出來的
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怎麼像法語啊?
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@sung3344 佩服,居然聽得懂
金理新:)
instemast2 3 years ago