Despite its alphabetic nature, the Manchu "alphabet" was traditionally taught as a
syllabary to reflect its
phonotactics. Manchu children were taught to memorize the shapes of all the syllables in the language separately as they learned to write and say right away "
la,
lo", etc., instead of saying "
l,
a —
la"; "
l,
o —
lo"; etc. As a result, the syllables contained in their syllabary do not contain all possible combinations that can be formed with their letters. They made, for instance, no such use of the consonants
l,
m,
n and
r as English; hence if the Manchu letters
s,
m,
a,
r and
t were joined in that order, a Manchu would not pronounce them as "smart". Today, it is still divided among experts on whether the Manchu script is alphabetic or syllabic. In China, it is considered syllabic, and Manchu is still taught in this manner, while in the West it is treated like an alphabet. The alphabetic approach is used mainly by foreigners who want to learn the language, as studying the Manchu script as a syllabary takes longer.
Twelve uju The syllables in Manchu are divided into twelve categories called
uju (literally "head") based on their
syllabic codas (final
phonemes). Here lists the names of the twelve
uju in their traditional order:a, ai, ar, an, ang, ak, as, at, ab, ao, al, am.Each
uju contains syllables ending in the coda of its name. Hence, Manchu only allows nine final consonants for its closed syllables, otherwise a syllable is open with a monophthong (
a uju) or a diphthong (
ai uju and
ao uju).The syllables in an
uju are further sorted and grouped into three or two according to their similarities in pronunciation and shape. For example,
a uju arranges its 131 licit syllables in the following order:a, e, i; o, u, ū; na, ne, ni; no, nu, nū; ka, ga, ha; ko, go, ho; kū, gū, hū; ba, be, bi; bo, bu, bū; pa, pe, pi; po, pu, pū; sa, se, si; so, su, sū; ša, še, ši; šo, šu, šū; ta, da; te, de; ti, di; to, do; tu, du; la, le, li; lo, lu, lū; ma, me, mi; mo, mu, mū; ca, ce, ci; co, cu, cū; ja, je, ji; jo, ju, jū; ya, ye; yo, yu, yū; ke, ge, he; ki, gi, hi; ku, gu, hu; k'a, g'a, h'a; k'o, g'o, h'o; ra, re, ri; ro, ru, rū; fa, fe, fi; fo, fu, fū; wa, we; ts'a, ts'e, ts; ts'o, ts'u; dza, dze, dzi, dzo, dzu; ža, že, ži; žo, žu; sy, c'y, jy.In general, while syllables in the same row resemble each other phonetically and visually, syllables in the same group (as the semicolons separate) bear greater similarities. == Punctuation ==