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The Structure of the Chinese Monosyllable in a Hunanese Dialect (Changsha)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 December 2009
Extract
The only kind of speech behaviour with which the present study is directly connected is the oral naming of Chinese characters. Chinese characters have been prominent cultural objects for thousands of years. Even the sketchiest description of what they have been called by countless millions over a vast area of Asia would be a colossal task. All that is here attempted is a systematic analysis of what a certain number of selected characters were called by Mr. K. H. Hu, of Changsha.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies , Volume 8 , Issue 4 , February 1937 , pp. 1055 - 1074
- Copyright
- Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies 1937
References
page 1056 note 1 See Liu, Fu, Les mouvements de la langue nationale en Chine, 1925, paras. 125–7, p. 35, and also paras. 171–7, pp. 49–50.Google Scholar
page 1058 note 2 See note s on Table VI, p. 1065.Google Scholar
page 1060 note 1 See Table VII and note s.
page 1060 note 2 See pp. 1059, 1073.
page 1065 note 1 See Table II.
page 1065 note 2 See Table V.
page 1066 note 1 See pp. 1062, 1070.
page 1068 note 1 See note s on Table VI, p. 1065.
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