Article published in:
Writing Systems and Linguistic StructureEdited by Sang-Oak Lee
[Written Language & Literacy 12:2] 2009
► pp. 188–201
Discrepancies between sounds and graphs
Irregular readings of Chinese characters
Ik-sang Eom | Hanyang University Seoul, Korea
This article attempts to analyze the causes of the irregular readings of Chinese characters both in Mandarin and in Sino-Korean (i.e. Korean pronunciations of Chinese characters). Cultural taboo, avoidance of confusion and residues of historical and/ or regional sound changes are the main causes for irregular readings in Mandarin. Semantic readings, euphony, mismatched palatalization, confusion and erroneous readings are the main reasons in Sino-Korean, among many others. This article also examines how well the graph of a Chinese character conveys the sound if it is a phonetic compound, which consists of a phonetic element and a semantic element. The discussion highlights that the function of conveying the exact pronunciation of a Chinese character is not straightforward although DeFrancis (1984b: 19) suggests that “Chinese is basically a phonetic system of writing of the syllabic type.”
Keywords: Sino-Korean, irregular readings, erroneous readings, Mandarin, discrepancies, Chinese, sounds, graphs, characters
Published online: 15 December 2009
https://doi.org/10.1075/wll.12.2.04eom
https://doi.org/10.1075/wll.12.2.04eom