1st Edition

The Chinese Rhyme Tables Volume I

By Pan Wenguo Copyright 2023
232 Pages 31 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

232 Pages 31 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

232 Pages 31 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

As the first volume of a two- volume set that studies Chinese rhyme tables, this book focuses on their emergence, development, structure, and patterns. Rhyme tables are a tabulated tool constituted by phonological properties, which help indicate the pronunciation of sinograms or Chinese characters, marking a precise and systematic account of the Chinese phonological system. This volume first... Read more

List of Figures

List of Tables

List of Abbreviations

Foreward to the Chinese Edition

Introduction 

Part I: When Was the Rhyme Table Born?  

1. Traditional Views on the Issue 

2. The Debate on This Issue in Recent Years and Its Progress 

3. Views that the Yùnjìng Originated from the Sòng dynasty According to “Yùnjìng yánjiū”

4. Determining the Era in Which Rhyme Tables were Produced 

5. Analysis of the Development of Rhyme Dictionaries in the Suí and Táng Dynasties 

6. Problems in the Qièyùn and the Understanding of It in the Táng dynasty  

7. The Historical Process of the Generation of Rhyme Tables 

8. The Relationship Between Ryme Tbles, Buddhism and Snogram Initials

9. Rhyme tables and the Shǒuwēn yùnxué cánjuàn 

Part II: The methods with which rhyme tables were arranged 

10. How was the question proposed? 

11. The Concept of Division and the Birth of Rhyme Tables 

12. The Nature of the Phonology of the Qièyùn 

13. The Conditions Satisfied when Rhyme Tables were Arranged 

14. The Method of Arranging the Rhyme Tables 

15. A New View of Ménfǎ Rules

Bibliography

Index

Biography

Pan Wenguo is a tenured professor and doctoral supervisor at East China Normal University and the honorary president of the Chinese Association for Comparative Studies between English and Chinese. He is a renowned linguist and has a significant impact on fields of Chinese linguistics, including sinogram ontology, word formation, rhyme divisions, and Chinese-English comparative studies, translation theory and practice, and linguistic philosophy.