The alphabet was developed to write both the Hmong Der (White Hmong, RPA:
Hmoob Dawb) and Mong Leng (Green/Blue Mong, RPA:
Moob Leeg) dialects. While these dialects have much in common, each has unique sounds. Consonants and vowels found only in White Hmong (denoted with †) or Green Mong (denoted with ⁂) are color-coded respectively. Some writers make use of variant spellings. Much as with Tosk for
Albanian, White Hmong was arbitrarily chosen to be the "standard" variant.
Consonants and vowels • The
glottal stop is not indicated in the orthography. The few truly vowel-initial words are indicated by an
apostrophe, which thus acts as a
zero consonant.
Tones RPA indicates tone by letters written at the end of a syllable, similarly to
Gwoyeu Romatzyh or
Zhuang, rather than with diacritics like those used in the
Vietnamese alphabet or
Pinyin. Unlike Vietnamese and Chinese, all Hmong syllables end in a vowel, which means that using consonant letters to indicate tone will be neither confusing nor ambiguous. • represents a phrase-final low-rising variant of the creaky tone ==See also==