Middle Chinese

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Middle Chinese
中古漢語
Spoken in: China 
Region: Medieval China
Language extinction: Evolved into Proto-Mandarin and Chinese dialects
Language family: Sino-Tibetan
 Middle Chinese
 
Writing system: Seal Script, Clerical Script, Kaishu, Semi-cursive script, Grass script, Phagspa, Hangul 
Official status
Official language in: Southern and Northern Dynasties, Sui Dynasty, Tang Dynasty, Song Dynasty
Regulated by: no official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2:
ISO 639-3:

Middle Chinese (traditional Chinese: 中古漢語; pinyin: zhōnggǔ Hànyǔ), or Ancient Chinese as used by linguist Bernhard Karlgren, refers to the Chinese language spoken during Southern and Northern Dynasties and the Sui, Tang, and Song dynasties (6th century - 10th century). The term "Middle Chinese", in contrast to Old Chinese and Modern Chinese, is usually used in the context of historical Chinese phonology, which seeks to reconstruct the pronunciation of Chinese used during these times.

Middle Chinese can be divided into an early period, generally called Early Middle Chinese, and a later period, Late Middle Chinese. The transition point between Early and Later Middle Chinese is thought to be during the Mid-Tang Dynasty and is indicated by phonological developments. For example, in the rime book Qieyun, bilabial initials [p pʰ b m] characters are shown, but there were no labiodental initials like f and v, which can be found in Jiyun. This indicates that a sound change in the pronunciation of Chinese occurred in the four centuries after the appearance of Qieyun.

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Reconstruction

The reconstruction of Middle Chinese by different modern linguists varies slightly, but the differences are minor and fairly uncontroversial, indicating that Middle Chinese phonology is now fairly well understood and accepted. (Middle) Chinese is not written using an alphabetic script, therefore, sounds cannot be derived directly from writing. The sounds of Middle Chinese must therefore be inferred from a number of sources:

Reconstructed phonology

Middle Chinese had three types of stops: voiced, voiceless, and voiceless aspirated. Syllables could end with stops. Middle Chinese had more vowels than its descendants, such as /æ/, which merged into similar phonemes later on. Affricate and fricative sibilants had three levels of distinction as they do in Mandarin. Some Sinologists[who?] believe that Old Chinese or an early state of Middle Chinese originally had consonant clusters such as /dɹ/ which became retroflex sounds.

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