YinYangiese fengin

Gawudzanyo Fengin (YinYangiese: 陰陽语拼音; Gāwudzányó fēngīn) is the official romanization of the YinYangiese, often known as the YinYangiese counterpart of the. It is used to teach YinYangiese, which is normally written in Chinese characters.

It was created by Andy Faudzau in 1931, and was officially adopted in 1940. However, the fengin is not used in, which uses pinyin instead. The fengin is unofficially used in other Chinese dialects spoken in YinYangia.

History
The Gawudzanyo Fengin was created in 1931 by aforementioned Andy Faudzau, a YinYangian scholar. He realized that the old romanization of YinYangiese was quite complicated, so he created one that is more accurate in terms of pronuncation.

There were many changes made to the old romanization: 'xh', the old way to romanize the /d͡ʑ/ sound, was replaced with 'gy', the diagraph 'th' being replaced with 't' as there is no unaspirated version of the /t/ sound in the language, 'kh' being replaced with 'h', 'rt', used to represent the /c/ sound, replaced with 'z', as it was close to the /z/ sound, 'e', which was used to make the /e/ sound, being replaced with 'ay', and 'ae', used to make the /æ/ sound, being replaced with 'e'.

Initials (声母; shēnmó)
The conventional lexicographical order (excluding w and y), derived from the zhuyin system ("bopomofo"), is:


 * {| cellspacing="0" cellpadding="3"


 * style="background: #ccf;" | b p  m 
 * style="background: #cfc;" | f 
 * style="background: #fcc;" | d t  n 
 * style="background: #fcf;" | dz ts  s  l  r 
 * style="background: #cff;" | j z 
 * style="background: #ffc;" | gy ch  zh  sh 
 * style="background: #ccc;" | g k  ng  h 
 * }

Tones
Like pinyin, the fengin system uses diacritical marks to represent the three tones in YinYangiese.

1. The flat tone uses the (ˉ).


 * ā ē ī ō ū ụ̄ ȳ Ā Ē Ī Ō Ū Ụ̄ Ȳ

2. The rising tone is represented by an (ˊ).


 * á é í ó ú ụ́ ý Á É Í Ó Ú Ụ́ Ý

3. The falling tone is marked by a (`).


 * à è ì ò ù ụ̀ ỳ À È Ì Ò Ù Ụ̀ Ỳ

Schwa sound
The schwa sound (/ə/) is represented by a 'ụ', since e is used to represent the /æ/ sound. It is also occasionally silent.