The
Qieyun contains 12,158 character entries. These were divided into five volumes, two for the many words of the "level"
tone, and one volume for each of the other three tones. The entries were divided into 193 final rhyme groups (each named by its first character, called the
yùnmù 韻目, or "rhyme eye"). Each rhyme group was subdivided into homophone groups (
xiǎoyùn 小韻 "small rhyme"). The first entry in each homophone group gives the pronunciation as a
fanqie formula. For example, the first entry in the
Qieyun, shown at right, describes the character 東
dōng "east". The three characters on the right are a
fanqie pronunciation key, marked by the character 反
fǎn "turn back". This indicates that the word is pronounced with the initial of 德 [tək] and the final of 紅 [ɣuŋ], i.e. [tuŋ]. The word is glossed as 木方
mù fāng, i.e. the direction of wood (one of the
Five Elements), while the numeral 二 "two" indicates that this is the first of two entries in a homophone group. Later rhyme dictionaries had many more entries, with full definitions and a few additional rhyme groups, but kept the same structure. The
Qieyun did not directly record
Middle Chinese as a spoken language, but rather prescribed standard pronunciations for characters to be used when reading the classics. Linguists have disagreed over what variety of Chinese the dictionary recorded. "Much ink has been spilled concerning the nature of the language underlying the
Qieyun," says Norman (1988: 24), who lists three points of view. Some scholars, like
Bernhard Karlgren, "held to the view that the
Qieyun represented the language of Chang'an"; some "others have supposed that it represented an amalgam of regional pronunciations," technically known as a
diasystem. "At the present time, most people in the field accept the views of the Chinese scholar Zhou Zumo" (周祖謨; 1914–1995) that
Qieyun spellings were a north–south regional compromise between literary pronunciations from the
Northern and Southern dynasties. ==See also==