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Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
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The Chinese Rime Tables

Linguistic philosophy and historical-comparative phonology

Edited by David Prager Branner
University of Maryland

2006. viii, 358 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 4785 8 / EUR 120.00 / USD 180.00
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978 90 272 8847 9 / EUR 120.00 / USD 180.00
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This book, the first in its field in a Western language, examines China’s native phonological tool with regard to reconstruction, theory, and linguistic philosophy.

After an introductory essay on the nature of the tables and the history of their interpretation, the book concentrates on three areas: application of rime table theory to reconstruction, the history of rime table theory, and the application of the tables to descriptive linguistics. An appendix details a number of 20th century systems for transcribing their phonology into Roman letters.

Major topics include Altaic contact-influence on Chinese, early native understanding of the tables’ meaning, the phonological work of Yuen Ren Chao, and Stammbaumtheorie/diasystemic thinking about Chinese. New reconstructions of Han and “Common Dialectal” phonology appear here, as do complete texts and translations of the Shouwen fragments and Yunjing preface.


Table of contents

Introduction: What Are Rime Tables and What Do They Mean?
David Prager Branner
1–34
Part I: Rime-Tables in Chinese Reconstruction
On the Principle of the Four Grades
Abraham Chan
37–46
The Four Grades: An Interpretation from the perspective of Sino-altaic language contact
Chris Wen-Chao Li
47–58
On Old Turkic Consonanticism and Vocalic Divisions of Acute Consonants in Medieval Hŕn Phonology
An-King Lim
59–82
The Qičyůn System ‘Divisions’ as the Result of Vowel Warping
Axel Schuessler
83–96
Part II: The History of Rime Table Texts and Reconstruction
Reflections on the Shouwen Fragments
W. South Coblin
99–122
Zhāng Línzhī on the Yůnjěng
W. South Coblin
123–150
Simon Schaank and the Evolution of Western Beliefs About Traditional Chinese Phonology
David Prager Branner
151–167
Part III: Rime Tables as Descriptive Tools
How Rime-Book Based Analyses Can Lead Us Astray
Richard VanNess Simmons
171–182
Modern Chinese and the Rime Tables
Jerry Norman
183–188
Common Dialect Phonology in Practice.: Y.R. Chao’s Field Methodology
Richard VanNess Simmons
189–208
Some Composite Phonological Systems in Chinese
David Prager Branner
209–232
Common Dialectal Chinese
Jerry Norman
233–254
Appendix I: Pronunciation Guide to Boodberg's Alternative Grammatonomic Notation
Gari K. Ledyard
255–264
Appendix II: Comparative Transcriptions of Rime Table Phonology
David Prager Branner
265–302
Bibliography
303–326
Index of Biographical Names
327–332
General Index
333–358