Mandarin The entering tone is extant in
Jianghuai Mandarin and
Minjiang Sichuanese. Other dialects have lost the entering tone, and syllables that had the tone have been distributed into the four modern tonal categories, depending on their initial consonants. The
Beijing dialect that forms the basis of
Standard Mandarin redistributed syllables beginning with originally unvoiced consonants across the four tones in a completely random pattern. For example, the three characters , all pronounced in Middle Chinese (William Baxter's reconstruction), are now pronounced , with tones 1, 3 and 4 respectively. The two characters , both pronounced , are now pronounced and respectively, with the character splitting on semantic grounds (tone 3 when it is used as a component of a name, mostly tone 2 otherwise). Similarly, the three characters (MC ) are now pronounced . The four characters (MC ) are now pronounced . In those cases, the two sets of characters are significant in that each member of the same set has the same
phonetic component, suggesting that the phonetic component of a character has little to do with the tone class that the character is assigned to. In other situations, however, the opposite appears to be the case. For example, the group of six homophones, all in Middle Chinese and divided into a group of four with one phonetic and a group of two with a different phonetic, splits so that the first group of four is all pronounced and the second group of two is pronounced . Situations like this may result from the fact that only one of the characters in each group normally occurs in speech with an identifiable tone, and as a result, a "
literary pronunciation" of the other characters was constructed based on the phonetic element of that character. The chart below summarizes the distribution in the different dialects.
Identifying checked tones in Modern Standard Mandarin There are several conditions that can be used to determine if a character historically had a checked tone in Middle Chinese based on its current reading in Modern Standard Mandarin. However, there are many characters, such as , , , and which do not satisfy any of these conditions at all. • A character with a nasal final in Modern Standard Mandarin will have the checked tone in Middle Chinese. (The only exception is .) • A character with the sibilant final // in Standard Chinese, i.e. those with initials , , and final , will have the checked tone in Middle Chinese. • A character with the final -uai or -uei in Modern Standard Mandarin will not have the checked tone in Middle Chinese. (Exceptions: , and others) • A character with a tenuis obstruent initial (pinyin: , , , , , , )in Standard Mandarin and the third tone will not have the checked tone in Middle Chinese. (Exceptions: , when used as a surname, , , , among others) • Characters that begin with an unaspirated obstruent and end in a nasal final ( or ) in Mandarin almost never have light level tone (or second tone in Modern Standard Mandarin, marked in pinyin with an
acute accent). This is a corollary of the first condition in the table above, where characters that begin with an unaspirated
obstruent (pinyin , , , , , ), end in a vowel, and have a
light level tone () in Mandarin (corresponding to a rising tone in
Standard Mandarin) almost always derive from an entering tone (e.g. , , , and all come from entering tones). As such, and are not recognised syllables in Standard Chinese. • If a character has a phonetic component that is known to have an entering tone, other characters that have that phonetic component probably have an entering tone. For example, if one already knows that has entering tone, one can conjecture (correctly) that , , , also have entering tone. However, there are plenty of exceptions, such as and , which lack the entering tone.
Wu Most varieties of
Wu Chinese preserve the entering tone. However, no contemporary Wu varieties preserve the , or distinction, but instead merges them all into a glottal stop . For example, in
Shanghainese, the three lexemes , , , historically ending in , and , all end in a glottal stop, and are pronounced . In some modern Wu varieties such as
Wenzhounese, even the glottal stop has disappeared, and the entering tone is preserved as separate tone, with a falling-rising contour, making it unequivocally a phonemic
tone in modern linguistics. The pitch of the entering tones are divided into two registers, depending on the initials: • "dark entering" (), a high-pitched checked tone, with a voiceless initial. • "light entering" (), a low-pitched checked tone, with a voiced initial. Many terms with grammatical functions also undergo sporadic evolution and gain a checked tone. This process can be considered a form of
lenition, and is sometimes considered a form of
glottalization. Romanization used is
Wugniu. This phenomenon can also be seen in many pronouns, such as Shanghainese (, "we") and
Yuyaonese (, "they").
Cantonese In general, Cantonese
preserves the Middle Chinese finals intact, including the differentiation between -p, -t and -k final consonants.
Standard Cantonese does not use any glottal stops as final consonants; an exception is the sentence suffix (laak). There are a few isolated cases where the final consonant has changed as a result of final
dissimilation, but they remain in the checked tone. Like most other Chinese variants, Cantonese has changed initial voiced stops,
affricates and
fricatives of Middle Chinese to their voiceless counterparts. To compensate for losing that difference, Cantonese has split each Middle Chinese tones into two, one for Middle Chinese voiced initial consonants (
light) and one for Middle Chinese voiceless initial consonants (
dark). In addition, Cantonese has split the dark-entering tone into two, with a higher tone for
short vowels and a lower tone for long vowels. As a result, Cantonese now has three entering tones: • Upper dark entering / short dark entering (/) • Lower dark entering / long middle entering (/) • Light entering () Some variants of
Yue Chinese, notably including that of
Bobai County () in
Guangxi and
Yangjiang () in
Guangdong, have four entering tones: the lower light tone is also differentiated according to vowel length, short vowels for upper light and long vowels for lower light. Thus in such varieties: • Upper dark entering / short dark entering (/) • Lower dark entering / long middle entering (/) • Upper light entering / short light entering (//) • Lower light entering / long
light entering (/)
Hakka Hakka preserves all Middle Chinese entering tones and is split into two registers.
Meixian Hakka dialect often taken as the paradigm gives the following: • "dark entering" () , a low-pitched checked tone • "light entering" () , a high-pitched checked tone Middle Chinese entering tone syllables ending in whose vowel clusters have become front high vowels like and shifts to syllables with finals in some of the modern Hakka, as seen in the following table.
Min Southern Min (
Minnan, including
Taiwanese) has two entering tones: • Upper (
dark, ), also numbered tone 4 • Lower (
light, ), tone 8 A word may switch from one tone to the other by
tone sandhi. Words with entering tones end with a glottal stop ([-ʔ]), [-p], [-t] or [-k] (all unaspirated). There are many words that have different finals in their literary and colloquial forms.
Eastern Min, as exemplified by
Fuzhounese, also has two entering tones: • Upper/dark entering, , which in Fuzhounese has the tonal value and ends in the glottal stop /ʔ/. This tone contour is
not shared with any other tone category. • Lower/light entering, , which in Fuzhounese has the tonal value and also ends in the glottal stop /ʔ/. Within its complex tone sandhi laws, Fuzhounese has a split in sandhi behavior between two separate upper/dark entering tones. This is believed to be a reflex of an earlier stage in its development, where final /k/ was distinguished from final /ʔ/. In the related
Fuqing dialect, a proportion of entering tone lexemes have lost their glottal stop and have merged into the phonetically equivalent tones: • Upper/dark entering, , with value , is merging into upper/dark departing, , with value . • Lower/light entering, , with value , is merging into upper/dark level, , with value . This merger can also affect sandhi environments, but there is the option to use the sandhi pattern of the former checked tone. Although the final glottal stop is still eliminated, the post-sandhi tone differs to that of a non-checked tone. Additionally in Fuqingnese, sandhi environments where the light entering tone is non-final cause the glottal stop to weaken and in some tones to be lost, and where the tone changes to a low sandhi tone , the glottal stop is completely lost. The dark entering tone on the other hand retains its glottal stop in sandhi environments. ==Entering tone in Sino-Xenic==