Tiantai dialect


The Tiantai dialect, also known as Tiantaihua is a regiolect of Wu Chinese in the Taizhou Wu dialect group. It is spoken in Tiantai County, Taizhou, Zhejiang province, China.
Like other dialects in the Wu family, Tiantaihua has a three-way contrast between voiced, unaspirated voiceless, and aspirated initial consonants, preserving an earlier feature of Chinese which Mandarin has collapsed into a two-way distinction.
The Tiantai dialect is the main representative of the northern Taizhou dialect family.

Comparison with Standard Chinese

The meaning of many common words and phrases in the Tiantai dialect differs from that of Standard Chinese. Below is a list of common differences:
Chinese wordOriginal meaningMeaning in the Tiantai dialectReferences
味道TasteComfort, enjoyment
老實好Honestly goodPraise, very good
煞夾Tightly squeezedVery powerful
老官Veteran officialHusband
天亮Sunrise, dawnTomorrow
拔好Properly pulledImmediately
活動ActivitySmart, intelligent
LongevitySilliness, lack of empathy
SloppyBad behaviour
大慧Very intelligentAble person
大吹Big blowStupid person

Proverbs and phrases in the Tiantai dialect can be shorter in comparison with the corresponding phrase in Standard Chinese. For example, the phrase "露出馬腳" is shortened to the phrase "出腳", literally meaning "taking the foot out".
Sentences can be shorter as well; see the example below.

Pronouns

Syllable structure

Initials

Finals

Tones

There are 8 tones in the Tiantai dialect, which are obtained by splitting each of the four tones in Mandarin to yin and yang.
Tone nameTone letters
yin ping
yang ping
yin shang
yang shang
yin qu
yang qu
yin ru
yang ru