Penang Hokkien - Diaper Cake Tutorial
Penang Hokkien (Chinese: æ§åç¦å»ºè¯; PeÌh-Åe-jÄ«: Peng-siâ⿠Hok-kià n-oÄ) is a local variant of Hokkien Chinese spoken in Penang, Malaysia. It is the lingua franca among the majority Chinese population in Penang as well as other northern states of Malaysia surrounding it.
Penang Hokkien is a subdialect of Zhangzhou (æ¼³å·; Hokkien: Chiang-chiu) Chinese, together with widespread use of Malay and English borrowed words. It is said that it most closely resembles that spoken in the district of Haicang (æµ·æ») in Longhai (é¾æµ·; Hokkien: Liông-hái) county and in the districts of Jiaomei (è§'ç¾) and Xinglin (ææ) in neighbouring Xiamen prefecture. In Southeast Asia, similar dialects are spoken in the states bordering Penang (Kedah, Perlis and northern Perak), as well as in Medan and North Sumatra, Indonesia. It is markedly distinct from Southern Peninsular Malaysian Hokkien and Taiwanese Hokkien.
It is predominantly a spoken dialect: it is rarely written in Chinese characters, and there is no standard romanisation.
Tones
In Penang Hokkien, the two Departing tones (3rd & 7th) are virtually identical, and may not be distinguished except in their sandhi forms. Most native speakers of Penang Hokkien are therefore only aware of four tones in unchecked syllables (high, low, rising, high falling), and two Entering tones (high and low) in checked syllables. In most systems of romanisation, this is accounted as seven tones altogether. The tones are:
The names of the tones no longer bear any relation to the tone contours, e.g. the (upper) Rising (2nd) tone is actually a high falling tone. As in Amoy and Zhangzhou, there is no lower Rising (6th) tone.
Tone sandhi
Like in other Minnan dialects, the tone of a syllable in Penang Hokkien depends on where in a phrase or sentence the relevant syllable is placed. For example, the word ç gû in isolation is pronounced with an ascending tone, [˨˦] (24), but when it combines with a following syllable, as in çè gû-bah, it is pronounced with to a low level tone, [˨˩] (21).
The rules which apply when a syllable is placed in front of a connected syllable in standard Minnan, simply put, are as follows:
- 1st becomes 7th
- 7th becomes 3rd
- 3rd becomes 2nd (often sounds like 1st in Penang Hokkien)
- 2nd becomes 1st
- 5th becomes 7th
Checked syllables (-h):
- 4th becomes 2nd (often sounds like 1st in Penang Hokkien)
- 8th becomes 3rd
Checked syllables (-p,-t,-k):
- 4th becomes 8th
- 8th becomes 4th
Although the two departing tones (3rd & 7th) are virtually identical in Penang Hokkien, in their sandhi forms they become [˥˦] (54) and [˨˩] (21) and are thus easily distinguishable.
The "tone wheel" concept does not work perfectly for all speakers of Penang Hokkien.
Minnan and Mandarin tones
There is a reasonably reliable correspondence between Hokkien and Mandarin tones:
- Upper Level: Hokkien 1st tone = Mandarin 1st tone, e.g. é ke / jÄ«.
- Lower Level: Hokkien 5th tone = Mandarin 2nd tone, e.g. é¾ lêng / lóng.
- Rising: Hokkien 2nd tone = Mandarin 3rd tone, e.g. 馬 bÎ / mÇ.
- Departing: Hokkien 3rd/7th tones = Mandarin 4th tone, e.g. å " thá» / tù, 象 chhiÆ¡Ìâ¿ / xià ng.
Words with Entering tones all end with -p, -t, -k or -h (glottal stop). As Mandarin no longer has any Entering tones, there is no simple corresponding relationship for the Hokkien 4th and 8th tones, e.g. å kok / guó, but ç¼ hoat / fÄ. The tone in Mandarin often depends on what the initial consonant of the syllable is (see the article on Entering tones for details).
Literary and colloquial pronunciations
Hokkien has not been taught in schools in Penang since the establishment of the Republic of China in 1911, when Mandarin was made the Chinese national language. As such, few if any people have received any formal instruction in Hokkien, and it is not used for literary purposes. However, as in other variants of Min Nan, most words have both literary and colloquial pronunciations, and the literary pronunciations still appear in limited circumstances, e.g.:
- in given names (but generally not surnames), e.g. å® an rather than oaâ¿, ç giȯk rather than gÄk;
- in a few surnames, e.g. è' iȧp rather than hiȯh
- in other proper names, e.g. é¾å±±å Liông-san-tông rather than *Lêng-soaâ¿-tnÌg
- in certain set phrases, e.g. å·®ä¸å¤ chha-put-to rather than *chhÉ-mÌ-to, è¦ç¬' kièn-sià u rather than *kìâ¿-chhiò
Unlike in Taiwan and mainland China, the literary pronunciations of numbers higher than two are not used when giving telephone numbers, etc.; e.g. äºäº"å jÄ«-gÆ¡Ì-sì instead of jÄ«-ngá»-sù. Literary variants are generally eschewed in favour of colloquial pronunciations, e.g. å¤§å¸ toÄ-ȯh instead of tÄi-hȧk.
Differences from standard Minnan
Most of the differences between Penang Hokkien and Amoy Hokkien exist also in Zhangzhou, e.g.:
- The use of -uiâ¿ where Amoy has -ng, e.g. é mûiâ¿, 飯 pÅ«iâ¿, é ¸ suiâ¿, etc.;
- The use of -É and -Éâ¿ where Amoy has -e and -iâ¿, e.g. 家 kÉ, è¦ hεÌ, ç" sÉâ¿;
- The use of -oe where Amoy has -e and vice versa, e.g. ç« hóe, æª bÅe, å° tÄ", ç´° sè;
- The use of -oa where Amoy has -oe, e.g. 話 Åa, è± hoa, ç" koa;
- The use of -iÆ¡â¿ (also pronounced -iauâ¿) where Amoy has -iuâ¿, e.g. ç¾ iÆ¡Ìâ¿, ä¸ tiÆ¡Ìâ¿, æ³ siÆ¡Ìâ¿;
- The mix of -iang and -iong in some words where Amoy has -iong, e.g. ä¸ siÄng, é¦ hiang;
- The use of j- in some words where Amoy has l-, e.g. å ¥ jıËp, ç± jȯah, æ¥ jıËt;
- The use of Zhangzhou pronunciations such as ç³ môai (Amoy: bê), å ç" sin-sÉâ¿ (Amoy: sien-siâ¿), etc.;
- The use of Zhangzhou expressions such as æ'ç¾¹ th(i)au-kiong (Amoy: 湯å thng-sî)
Differences from the Zhangzhou dialect
Although Penang Hokkien is based on the Zhangzhou dialect, there are some obvious differences, which in many cases result from the influence of other Minnan dialects, e.g.:
- The lower "Entering" (8th) tone in Penang, which is pronounced high [˦] (4) as in Amoy and many other parts of Fujian, whereas in most Zhangzhou dialects it is low with a slight lilt [˩˨] (12);
- The use of -u in some words such as æ± lú, 豬 tu, é hû, etc., where Zhangzhou has lÃ, ti and hî. This is a characteristic of dialects in other parts of Zhangzhou and Xiamen prefectures.
- The use of -iauâ¿ instead of the Zhangzhou -iÆ¡â¿, e.g. ç¾ iaûâ¿, ä¸ tiaÅ«â¿, æ³ siaÅ«â¿;
- The adoption of pronunciations from Teochew: e.g. æ' wá (Zhangzhou: góa), æ'人 wang, æ±äºº luang, ä¼äºº iang (Zhangzhou and Amoy: é® gún / góan, æ lÃn, å in)
- The adoption of Amoy and Quanzhou pronunciations like æ¹å¢ pháiâ¿-sè (Zhangzhou: bái / pháiâ¿-sì), ç¾ pah (Zhangzhou: pεÌh), etc.
Borrowed words
Malay
Like other dialects in Malaysia and Singapore, Penang Hokkien borrows heavily from Malay, but sometimes to a greater extent than other Hokkien dialects, e.g.:
- almari: wardrobe (probably originally from Portuguese)
- anting: earring
- balai: police station
- balu (baru): new(ly), just now
- bangku: stool (probably originally from Portuguese)
- batu: stone
- berlian: diamond
- binatang: animal
- bunting: pregnant
- cilaka (celaka): damn it
- campur : to mix ( can be used in conjunction with bei as in bei campur)
- jamban: toilet
- gatai (gatal):itchy
- geli: creepy; hair-raising
- kawin (kahwin): marry
- kisien (kesian): pity
- lampin: nappy/diaper
- loti (roti): bread (via Malay from Sanskrit)
- macam-macam: what a fuss
- mana: as if?, since when? (also to be found in Teochew with the same meaning)
- manik: bead
- mata: police (from Malay mata-mata; also present in Teochew)
- pasar: market, originally from the word Bazaar
- pinggang: waist
- puluk: bolster
- pun: also
- rasa: to feel
- sabun, soap (via Malay from Portuguese; also present in Taiwanese)
- sampah: garbage
- sayang: to love; what a pity/waste
- sombong: snobbish
- suka, to like (via Malay from Sanskrit)
- tapi: but
- tolong: please
- tongkat: walking stick
- tuala, towel (via Malay from Portuguese)
There are also many Hokkien words which have been borrowed into Malay, sometimes with slightly different meanings, e.g.:
- beca (trishaw; originally é¦¬è» bÎ-chhia, "horse-cart")
- bihun (ç±³ç² bÃ-hún, "rice vermicelli")
- Jepun (æ¥æ¬ JıËt-pún, "Japan")
- loteng (attic; originally æ¨"é laû-téng, "upstairs")
- kicap (sauce; originally é®æ± kê-chiap, "fish sauce")
- kongsi (to share; originally å ¬å¸ kong-si, "company/firm/clan association")
- kuaci (ç"å koa-chÃ, "edible watermelon seeds")
- kuetiau (ç²¿æ¢ kóe-tiaû, "flat rice noodle")
- kuih (粿 kóe, "rice-flour cake")
- mi (麵 mī, noodles),
- sinseh (å ç" sin-sÉâ¿, "traditional Chinese doctor")
- tauhu (è±è taÅ«-hÅ«, "tofu")
- tauke (é 家 thaû-kÉ, "boss")
- teh (è¶ tεÌ, "tea")
- teko (è¶é· tεÌ-ká», "teapot")
- Tionghua (ä¸è¯ Tiong-hôa, "China/Chinese")
- tukang (å»å·¥)
English
Penang Hokkien has also borrowed some words from English, some of which may have been borrowed via Malay, but these tend to be more technical and less well embedded than the Malay words, e.g. brake, park, pipe, pump, etc.
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