Tone Sandhi in reduplications Advice

tingyun
May 12, 2009, 05:29 PM posted in General Discussion

Hi,

I was hoping for some insight into the 3rd tone sandhi rule (ie, 2 third tones in a row becomes a second tone followed by a third) when dealing with reduplications where the second word becomes neutral.  An example I'm pretty sure about, is that 小姐, which is 3rd tone followed by neutral, is actually pronounced as 2nd tone followed by neutral (so, the 3rd tone rule operates even though the 2nd word has become neutral).  Another example of this is 哪里.

Beyond those 2 examples, I really am not sure about anything, and any knowledge or rules people know of would be welcome.

A few months back I tried using google to resolve this issue, and stumbled upon a post that seemed knowledgable, which I cut and pasted into my word document of notes (but without the authors name, so I cannot give credit).  However, I'm not sure whether or not it is correct - though for lack of a better recourse, I have been following its dictates.  I will include it below, so people can comment on what is correct or not. 

"Prefixes like (xiao3) and (lao3) will always undergo tone sandhi and change to second tone when the original tone of the following syllable is third tone: e.g., 小姐 (xiao2 jie5), 老虎 (lao2 hu5 or lao2 hu3), and 老鼠 (lao2 shu3 and lao2 shu?). When used as prefixes, I think they can belong to Group B or Group C, perhaps depending on the speaker, the circumstances, etc.. When used as adjectives, they always belong to Group C, for example, 小李 (Xiao2 Li3) used to address someone named Li.

Nouns created by reduplication belong to Group A, such as (
)本本 ((xiao2) ben3 ben5) (little booklet) and 寶寶 (bao3 bao5) (baby or "little treasure"). Kinship nouns like 姐姐 (jie3 jie5) (elder sister) and 奶奶 (nai3 nai5) (grandma) belong in this category as well.

Nouns being used as measure words and all adjectives and adverbs used in reduplications belong to Group B, such as
本本書 (ben2 ben5 shu1)(every book), 種種 (zhong2 zhong5)(every kind), 死死 (si2 si5)(tight, tightly), etc.

Verbs created by reduplication belong to Group A, such as
癢癢 (yang3 yang5)(itch) and 捻捻轉 (nian3 nian5 zhuanr4)(top) and are different from already existing volitional verbs that are used in reduplications. These latter belong to Group B, such as 捻捻 (nian2 nian5) (give a little twist with the fingers), 想想 (xiang2 xiang5)(think a little).

One interesting thing to note is that characters
, , and are treated differently depending on which pattern they belong to."

 

Thanks, and I appreciate any insight people have!

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antony73
May 12, 2009, 07:38 PM

Not sure if these will help, but posted these comments on tones last April:

http://chinesepod.com/lessons/intro-6-i-want-to-buy-this-one#comment-117289

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tingyun
May 12, 2009, 07:50 PM

I appreciate the link Antony - but this question really goes beyond those basic rules.  The question is, the circumstances under which the two third tone change rule operates even though the later third tone is neutral.  Sometimes it does, sometimes it doesn't...but I'm interested to see if anyone knows the rules for this (even if its just saying that the thing I quoted above makes seems to make sense, or that it doesn't).

 

 

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tingyun
May 26, 2009, 03:37 PM

Well, after paying close attention to 10 or so CPod dialogues involving it, I'm fairly confident that normal reduplicated third tone verbs like xiang3xiang0 are actually pronounced xiang2xiang0.  Also, from the "Which finger" lesson, I'm fairly confident that yang3yang0 is indeed pronounced yang3yang0, with no tone sandhi change.  This is consistent with the stuff I found on verbs.

Anyone have any thoughts on the other situations?