gpinyin(1) — Linux manual page
gpinyin(1) General Commands Manual gpinyin(1)
Name
gpinyin - use Hanyu Pinyin Chinese in groff documents
Synopsis
gpinyin [file ...]
gpinyin -h
gpinyin --help
gpinyin -v
gpinyin --version
Description
gpinyin is a preprocessor for groff(1) that facilitates use of
Hanyu Pinyin in groff(7) files. Pinyin is a method for writing
the Mandarin Chinese language with the Latin alphabet. Mandarin
consists of more than four hundred base syllables, each spoken
with one of five different tones. Changing the tone applied to
the syllable generally alters the meaning of the word it forms.
In Pinyin, a syllable is written in the Latin alphabet and a
numeric tone indicator can be appended to each syllable.
Each input-file is a file name or the character “-” to indicate
that the standard input stream should be read. As usual, the
argument “--” can be used in order to force interpretation of all
remaining arguments as file names, even if an input-file argument
begins with a “-”. -h and --help display a usage message, while
-v and --version show version information; all exit afterward.
Pinyin sections
Pinyin sections in groff files are enclosed by two .pinyin
requests with different arguments. The starting request is
.pinyin start
or
.pinyin begin
and the ending request is
.pinyin stop
or
.pinyin end
.
Syllables
In Pinyin, each syllable is represented by one to six letters
drawn from the fifty-two upper- and lowercase letters of the
Unicode basic Latin character set, plus the letter “U” with
dieresis (umlaut) in both cases—in other words, the members of
the set “[a–zA–ZüÜ]”.
In groff input, all basic Latin letters are written as
themselves. The “u with dieresis” can be written as “\[:u]” in
lowercase or “\[:U]” in uppercase. Within .pinyin sections,
gpinyin supports the form “ue” for lowercase and the forms “Ue”
and “UE” for uppercase.
Tones
Each syllable has exactly one of five tones. The fifth tone is
not explicitly written at all, but each of the first through
fourth tones is indicated with a diacritic above a specific vowel
within the syllable.
In a gpinyin source file, these tones are written by adding a
numeral in the range 0 to 5 after the syllable. The tone numbers
1 to 4 are transformed into accents above vowels in the output.
The tone numbers 0 and 5 are synonymous.
The tones are written as follows.
Tone Description Diacritic Example Input Example Output
─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
first flat ¯ ma1 mā
second rising ´ ma2 má
third falling-rising ˇ ma3 mǎ
fourth falling ` ma4 mà
fifth neutral (none) ma0 ma
ma5
The neutral tone number can be omitted from a word-final
syllable, but not otherwise.
Authors
gpinyin was written by Bernd Warken ⟨groff-bernd.warken-72@web
.de⟩.
See also
Useful documents on the World Wide Web related to Pinyin include
Pinyin to Unicode
⟨http://www.foolsworkshop.com/ptou/index.html⟩,
On-line Chinese Tools ⟨http://www.mandarintools.com/⟩,
Pinyin.info: a guide to the writing of Mandarin Chinese in
romanization ⟨http://www.pinyin.info/index.html⟩,
“Where do the tone marks go?”
⟨http://www.pinyin.info/rules/where.html⟩,
pinyin.txt from the CJK macro package for TeX
⟨http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=cjk.git;a=blob_plain
;f=doc/pinyin.txt;hb=HEAD⟩,
and
pinyin.sty from the CJK macro package for TeX
⟨http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=cjk.git;a=blob_plain
;f=texinput/pinyin.sty;hb=HEAD⟩.
groff(1) and grog(1) explain how to view roff documents.
groff(7) and groff_char(7) are comprehensive references covering
the language elements of GNU troff and the available glyph
repertoire, respectively.
COLOPHON
This page is part of the groff (GNU troff) project. Information
about the project can be found at
⟨http://www.gnu.org/software/groff/⟩. If you have a bug report
for this manual page, see ⟨http://www.gnu.org/software/groff/⟩.
This page was obtained from the project's upstream Git repository
⟨https://git.savannah.gnu.org/git/groff.git⟩ on 2024-06-14. (At
that time, the date of the most recent commit that was found in
the repository was 2024-06-10.) If you discover any rendering
problems in this HTML version of the page, or you believe there
is a better or more up-to-date source for the page, or you have
corrections or improvements to the information in this COLOPHON
(which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail to
man-pages@man7.org