The finals m and ng can only be used as standalone nasal syllables.
When h or k is an initial, om and op are used as the final, instead of am and ap.
When s, ts or ts’ is the initial, and i is the final, the final is written z instead.
When y is an initial, and i, iu, in, ip, it, or iu are used as finals, the y is omitted, resulting in i, iu, in, ip, it, and iu, but yik, and ying.
When y is an initial, and ue, uen, or uet are finals, the y is omitted.
When w is an initial, and oo, ooi, or oon are finals, the w is omitted.
When i is an initial ending with ue begins a rime
Unlike most modern Cantonese romanization systems, a distinction is made between 卅 and 沙. The former is represented by sa while the latter is written as sha.
Tones
Tones are indicated using diacritic marks. Of the entering tones, only the middle entering tone is indicated, while the upper entering and lower entering are merged with the upper even and lower even tones.
Tone description
Diacritic
Example
Upper even
faan
番
Upper rising
faán
反
Upper going
faàn
汎
Lower even
faān
凡
Lower rising
maǎn
猛
Lower going
faân
飯
Middle entering
faat°
法
References
Roy T. Cowles (1999). A Pocket Dictionary of Cantonese 廣東話袖珍字典. Hong Kong University Press (香港大學出版失社). ISBN 962-209-122-9.
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