How do you say 1~ 10 in Cantonese?
Two:? Yi6 (same as Yi, the third tone)?
Three: saam 1(sa, stroking sound)?
Four: sei 3(sei: first sound)?
Five: ng5(ng: Pay attention to the nasal sound, which is a bit like the pronunciation of "en")?
Six: Lu Liu (old: old, second sound)?
Seven: cat 1 (difference: cha, the first sound)?
Eight: baa t3 (eight: ba, stroking sound,)?
Nine: gau2 (high, second sound)?
Ten: sap6 (sa: Sa, the third sound)
Note: brackets are homophonic, which is for the convenience of friends who speak Mandarin.
The phonetic composition of Cantonese is different from that of Mandarin. Cantonese has many pronunciations that Mandarin does not have. The pinyin of Putonghua is formulated for Putonghua, which cannot spell many unique pronunciations of Cantonese, so it is not suitable for Cantonese with its own pinyin system.
Extended data
The main dialects in Guangdong are:
1, Cantonese: When we talk in Cantonese, we will call Cantonese "vernacular", but when we introduce it to non-Cantonese, we may call it "Cantonese". Hong Kong people generally call Cantonese "Cantonese", and Cantonese is generally authentic in Cantonese.
2. Hakka dialect: Hakka dialect is a major dialect in Guangdong, with Meixian dialect in Meizhou City in the northeast corner of Guangdong as the authentic dialect. In addition, Heyuan City, Shaoguan City and Huizhou City are all Hakka dialects. Of course, Huizhou is close to Dongguan and Shenzhen, so its pronunciation may be different from that of Meizhou.
The phonetics of Yuancheng District and Dongyuan County in Heyuan City are closer to Cantonese phonetics than Meixian Hakka dialect. Besides, Hakka dialect is spoken not only in Guangdong, but also in Fujian, Jiangxi, Hunan and Guangxi, Taiwan Province Province and overseas.
3. Chaoshan dialect: Chaoshan dialect is a branch of Minnan dialect (the most difficult dialect, I am from Guangdong, but listening to Chaoshan dialect is almost like listening to a gobbledygook), but Chaoshan dialect may not be able to communicate directly with Fujian people without obstacles, because I once had a classmate from Shantou, Quanzhou, Fujian, who spoke Chaoshan dialect with the locals, but the result was that people did not fully understand it and finally spoke Mandarin.
These three dialects are the main dialects in Guangdong dialect, and the smallest dialects are Yao dialect in Shaoguan, Leizhou dialect in Zhanjiang, Li dialect in Zhanjiang and Maoming. In addition, Cantonese spoken in western Guangdong, such as Maoming, is very different from Guangzhou in pronunciation. I am a Hakka, I can listen and speak standard Cantonese, but I can't understand what Maoming said.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Cantonese (a language in Sino-Tibetan language family)