The Huáyàyìyà() refers to a series of vocabularies produced by Ming and Qing dynasty Chinese administration for the study of foreign languages. They are a precious source of phonological information, both for the study of Chinese pronunciation and for the study of the languages in question.
Categorization
The relevant works of the huáyàyìyàfall into four categories:
- A Sino-Mongolian vocabulary compiled by Huo Yuanjie (ç«æºÂæ½Â).
- Vocabularies that were compiled and re-edited in the Siyiguan (Ã¥ÂÂ夷館).
- Vocabularies prepared by the Huitongguan (æÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ館).
- Qing dynasty vocabularies.
Languages covered in the Siyiguan
The languages covered by works in the second class include:
Tatsuo Nishida published a book studying each, the Tibetan, Burmese, Tosu and Lolo languages as recorded in the Hua-yi yiu.
Languages covered in the Huitongguan
The languages covered by works in the third class covered:
- æÂÂé®® Korean
- çÂÂç Ryukyuan
- æÂ¥æÂ¬ Japanese
- å®Âå (Annan) Vietnamese
- æÂ¹ç¾Â
Siamese
- éÂÂé¼ Khitan (the Eastern Mongols)
- çÂÂÃ¥Â
ÂÃ¥Â
Â/å§ÂÃ¥Â
ÂÃ¥Â
 Uighur
- 滿åÂÂå Malaccan Malay
- å å Champa of southern Vietnam
- 西çª ('Western Barbarians') Khams Tibetan
- Ã¥ÂÂå Persian
- 女ç´ Jurchen
- ç¾夷 Bai
See also
References