'Simplified Wade' is a modification of the
Wade-Giles romanization system for writing
Mandarin Chinese. It was devised by the Swedish
linguist Olov Bertil Anderson, who first published the system in 1970. Simplified Wade uses tonal spelling: in other words it modifies the letters in a syllable in order to indicate
tone differences. It is one of only two Chinese romanization systems that indicate tones in such a way (the other being
Gwoyeu Romatzyh). All other systems utilize
diacritics or numbers to indicate tone.
Spelling conventions
One of the important changes that Anderson made to Wade-Giles to was to replace the apostrophe following
aspirated consonants with an
.[1] This modification, previously used in the Legge romanization, was also adopted by Joseph Needham in his ''Science and Civilisation in China'' series.[2] The table below illustrates the spelling difference.
'Wade- Giles' | 'Simplified Wade' | 'Modern Pinyin' | 'IPA form' |
| t' | th | t | tʰ |
| p' | ph | p | pʰ |
| k' | kh | k | kʰ |
| ch' | chh | q/ch | tɕʰ/tʂʰ |
The indication of tones in Simplified Wade is done by adding letters to the end of the syllable. The table below gives an example.
'First tone' | 'Second tone' | 'Third tone' | 'Fourth tone' |
| ma | ma'v' | ma'x' | ma'z' |
Notes
1. The IPA also indicates aspiration with a (superscript) h.
2. Neither of these systems, however, used the tonal letters discussed below.
References
A Concordance to Five Systems of Transcription for Standard Chinese, , Olov Bertil [comp.], Anderson, Lund: Studentlitteratur, ,
External Links
★ A review of Anderson (1970), explaining Simplified Wade with an example