The four hu (Chinese: 四呼; pinyin: sì hū) are a traditional way of classifying syllable finals of Mandarin dialects, including Standard Chinese, based on different glides before the central vowel of the final. They are[1][2]

  • kāikǒu (開口, "open mouth"), finals without a medial
  • qíchǐ (齊齒, "even teeth"), finals beginning with [i]
  • hékǒu (合口, "closed mouth"), finals beginning with [u]
  • cuōkǒu (撮口, "round mouth"), finals beginning with [y]

The terms kāikǒu and hékǒu come from the Song dynasty rime tables describing Middle Chinese.[3]The Qing phonologist Pan Lei divided each of these categories in two based on the absence or presence of palatalization, and named the two new categories.[4]

This traditional classification is reflected in the bopomofo notation for the finals, but less directly in the pinyin:[a]

Four hu table
KāikǒuQíchǐHékǒuCuōkǒu
IPABopomofoPinyinIPABopomofoPinyinIPABopomofoPinyinIPABopomofoPinyin
aaiaㄧㄚiauaㄨㄚua
ɤeieㄧㄝieuoㄨㄛuo[b]yeㄩㄝüe[c]
ɨ-iiiuuyü[c]
aiaiuaiㄨㄞuai
eieiueiㄨㄟwei/-ui
auaoiauㄧㄠiao
ououiouㄧㄡyou/-iu
ananiɛnㄧㄢianuanㄨㄢuanyɛnㄩㄢüan[c]
əneninㄧㄣinuənㄨㄣwen/-unynㄩㄣün[c]
angiaŋㄧㄤianguaŋㄨㄤuang
əŋengㄧㄥinguəŋ, ʊŋㄨㄥweng/-ongiʊŋㄩㄥiong
er

Notes

References

Citations
Works cited
  • Lee, Wai-Sum; Zee, Eric (2003). "Standard Chinese (Beijing)". Journal of the International Phonetic Association. 33 (1): 109–112. doi:10.1017/S0025100303001208.
  • Duanmu, San (2007). The Phonology of Standard Chinese (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Lin, Yen-Hwei (2007). The Sounds of Chinese. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.