Dictionary Definition
entering adj : that is going in; "the entering
class"; "the ingoing administration"; "ingoing data" [syn: entering(p),
ingoing]
Noun
1 a movement into or inward [syn: entrance]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- a UK /ˈɛnt.ə(ɹ).ɪŋ/ /"Ent.@(r).IN/
Verb
entering- present participle of enter
Noun
- action of the verb to enter#Verb
Derived terms
Extensive Definition
Entering tone () is one of four syllable types in
the phonology in
Middle
Chinese which are commonly translated as "tone". However, it is
not a tone in the phonetic sense, but rather describes a syllable
which ends in a stop
consonant, such as p, t, k, or glottal
stop. Due to the origin of tone in Chinese, the number of tones
found in such syllables is smaller than the number of tones in
other syllables, and in Chinese phonetics they have traditionally
been counted separately. For instance, in Cantonese,
there are 6 tones in syllables which do not end in stops, but only
three in syllables which do; therefore, although Cantonese only has
6 tones in the sense of 6 contrasting variations in pitch, it is
often said to have 9.
Final stops, and therefore the entering "tone",
have disappeared from most of Mandarin
dialects (a large dialect chain spoken in northern and
southwestern China), but remain preserved in southeastern Chinese
languages such as Cantonese,
Min,
and Hakka.
Tones are an indispensable part of Chinese
literature, as characters
in poetry and prose were chosen according to tones and rhymes for
their euphony. This use
of language helps in reconstructing the pronunciation of Old Chinese
and Middle
Chinese, since the Chinese writing system is logographic.
Phonetics
From a phonetic perspective, the entering tone is simply a syllable ending with a voiceless plosive [p], [t], or [k]. In some variants of Chinese, the final plosive has become the glottal stop [ʔ].History
It is now generally believed that the voiceless plosives that typify the entering tone have existed since Book of Songs in the Zhou Dynasty (1027–771 BC). In addition, there is a hypothesis that before the mid-Han dynasty, there were two kinds of entering tones, a long entering tone (which end in clusters like [ps], [ts], and [ks]) and a short entering tone. The long entering tone became the departing tone after the final consonant cluster was lost, while the short entering tone remained the entering tone.The first Chinese philologists began to describe
the phonology of Chinese during the
Northern and Southern Dynasties, between 400 to 600, under the
influence of Buddhism and the
Sanskrit
language that arrived along with it. There were several
unsuccessful attempts to classify the tones of Chinese, before the
establishment of the traditional four-tone description between 483
and 493. It is based on the Vedic theory of three intonations
(聲明論). The middle intonation, Udātta, maps to
the level tone (平聲); the upwards intonation, Svarita, to the
rising tone (上聲); the downward intonation, Anudātta, to
the departing tone (去聲). The distinctive sound of syllables ending
with a plosive did not fit the three intonations and was
categorised as the entering tone (入聲). The use of four-tone system
flourished in the Sui and
Tang
dynasties. An important rime
dictionary, Qieyun was written
in this period.
It has been hypothesized that the entering tone
was lost due to the influence of invading northern nomads such as
the Mongol
Yuan
dynasty (1279–1368). The Zhongyuan
Yinyun, a rime book of
1324, already
shows signs of the disappearance of the entering tone and the
emergence of the modern Mandarin tone system in its place. The
precise time at which the entering tone was lost is unknown, though
it was likely gone by the time of the Qing
Dynasty.
Example
Entering tone in Chinese
Mandarin
The entering tone is extant in only one dialect of Mandarin, Yangtze Mandarin. In other dialects, the entering tone has been lost, and words that had the tone have been distributed into the four modern tonal categories, depending on the initial consonant of each word. The chart below summarizes the distribution in the different dialects.Cantonese
Like most other variants of Chinese, Cantonese has changed initial voiced plosives, affricates and fricatives of Middle Chinese to their voiceless counterparts. To compensate for the lost of this difference, Cantonese has split each of the Middle Chinese tones into two, one for Middle Chinese voiced initial consonants (Yang) and one for Middle Chinese voiceless initial consonant (Yin). In addition, Cantonese has split the Yin-Entering tone into two, with a higher tone for short vowels and a lower tone for long vowels. As a result, Cantonese now has three entering tones:- Upper (Short Yin, 陰入)
- Middle (Long Yin, 中入), was derived from Upper (陰入)
- Lower (Yang, 陽入)
The entering tone in Cantonese has retained its
short and sharp character.
- Upper (Yin, 陰入), tone number marked as 4
- Lower (Yang, 陽入), tone number marked as 8
Words with entering tones end with either a
glottal stop, [-p], [-t] or [-k] (all unaspirated). There are many
words that have different finals in their literary and colloquial
forms.
Entering tone in Sino-Xenic
Many Chinese words were borrowed into Japanese, Korean and Vietnamese during the Middle Chinese period, so these languages preserve the entering tone to varying degrees.Japanese
Because Japanese does not allow a syllable to end with a consonant, the endings -k, -p, -t were rendered as separate syllables -ku or -ki, -pu, and -ti (-chi) or -tu (-tsu) respectively. Later phonological changes further altered some of the endings:- In some cases where the ending is immediately followed by an
unvoiced consonant in a compound, the ending is lost, and the
consonant becomes geminate.
- Examples: gaku + kou becomes gakkou (school), and shitsu + hai becomes shippai (failure)
- The -pu ending changes into -u. (pu>fu>hu>u)
- Example: jipu (ten) becomes jū
It is possible to recover the original ending by
examining the historical
kana used in spelling a word.
Korean
Korean keeps the -k and -p endings, while the -t ending has changed into -l.Reconstruction of the entering tone from Mandarin
Although it is hard to distinguish words of entering tone origin based on Mandarin pronunciation only, it is possible to do so to an extent with the help of the phonetic component of each Chinese character. For example, if one already knows that 白 (white) is of the entering tone, then one can conjecture that 拍 (beat), 柏 (fir), 帛 (white cloth), 迫 (urgent) are also of entering tone. Although this method is not completely accurate, it is a quick way to identify characters of the entering tone.See also
External links
entering in French: ton d'entrée
entering in Korean: 입성
entering in Japanese: 入声
entering in Chinese: 入聲
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
approaching, arriving, booking, cataloging, chronicling, coming, enlistment, enrollment, entry, homeward, homeward-bound,
impanelment,
in, inbound, incoming, indexing, inflooding, inflowing, ingoing, ingressive, inpouring, inscribing, inscription, insertion, intrusive, invasive, inventorying, inward, inward-bound, irruptive, listing, logging, matriculation, posting, record keeping,
recordation,
recording, register, registration, registry, tabulation