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Google Pinyin IME (simplified Chinese: 谷歌拼音输入法; traditional Chinese: 谷歌拼音輸入法; pinyin: Gǔgē Pīnyīn Shūrùfǎ) is a discontinued input method developed by Google China Labs. The tool was made publicly available on April 4, 2007.
Bimspinyin, pinyin implementation for the xcin input platform on Linux, BSD, and other Unices. OpenVanilla, a cross-platform framework for Chinese and more. Ibus-Pinyin (ibus-pinyin), pinyin implementation for the IBus input platform on Linux, BSD, and other Unices. Ibus-sunpinyin, a statistical language model based pinyin input method for IBus.
Hanyu Pinyin, or simply pinyin, officially the Chinese Phonetic Alphabet, is the most common romanization system for Standard Chinese. Hanyu ( 汉语 ; 漢語 ) literally means ' Han language'—that is, the Chinese language—while pinyin literally means 'spelled sounds'.
The Institute of Language in Education Scheme (Chinese: 教院式拼音方案) also known as the List of Cantonese Pronunciation of Commonly-used Chinese Characters romanization scheme (常用字廣州話讀音表), ILE scheme, and Cantonese Pinyin, [1] is a romanization system for Cantonese developed by Ping-Chiu Thomas Yu (Chinese: 余秉昭) in 1971, [2] [3] and subsequently modified by the ...
The Microsoft pinyin 2003 shuangpin scheme. Shuangpin (双拼; 雙拼), literally dual spell, is a stenographical phonetic input method based on hanyu pinyin that reduces the number of keystrokes for one Chinese character to two by distributing every
This pinyin table is a complete listing of all Hanyu Pinyin syllables used in Standard Chinese. Each syllable in a cell is composed of an initial (columns) and a final (rows). An empty cell indicates that the corresponding syllable does not exist in Standard Chinese.
Additionally, the module converts the convenient shorthand v to ü as in most Chinese pinyin IMEs, and the incorrect nue and lue to nüe and lüe respectively. Otherwise, the module does not check whether the input pinyin is entered correctly or not. Also supports putting the accent on esoteric pinyin like on m, ng, and ê. (e.g. ng4 gives ǹg)
The rules of Sichuanese Pinyin are based on those of Hanyu Pinyin, with some slight modifications: When the final -ong has a zero-initial, it is written ong (as opposed to Hanyu Pinyin weng ). As in Hanyu Pinyin, ü is written u when paired with the series of alveolo-palatal initials ( j- , q- and x- ); however, the rule is not extended to the ...