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How to Pronounce Chinese Names a Little Better

23 pointsby oconnor6636 months ago

3 comments

sneed_chucker6 months ago
Nice to have a quick and dirty pronunciation guide for this.<p>Interesting how useless transliteration can be unless the reader is familiar with the system. Naiively applying conventional pronunciation rules to transliterated words can yield mixed results.<p>Russian is kind of similar, though not as extreme as Mandarin. For example, most English speakers pronounce Khrushchev as &quot;kroosh-chev&quot; because that&#x27;s how it reads if you&#x27;re used to English spelling rules. But a more accurate (though still wrong) pronunciation would be more like &quot;Hrooshoff&quot; with a phlegm on the H and a rolled R if you can do it.<p>But getting to that pronunciation in the first place requires knowing that kh is Х, that shch is щ, and that the e is actually a ё (which is a separate letter from е in Russian, but the dots are frequently omitted because speakers of the language know which е&#x27;s are е&#x27;s and which are ё).
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theodric6 months ago
I&#x27;ve always wondered why the Romanized transliteration of Mandarin doesn&#x27;t map normally to conventions used in the Latin letter-using world. For whom was it designed, then? This makes no more sense than Sinofying English by using Chinese characters to somehow represent different sounds than they normally would to a Mandarin speaker.
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euroderf5 months ago
Together, I and U get a tad complicated. &quot;iu&quot; is pronounced like &quot;iou&quot; (Yo!), and &quot;ui&quot; is pronounced like &quot;uei&quot; (Way!).