a. I suppose Mr. Leung and Mr. Tung used Wade-Giles Romanization (or system) for their name's spelling, which looks very popular outside China mainland including Hong Kong, and inside China mainland before the year of 1958 when Pinyin (Chinese phonetic alphabet) was published. b. I believe Taiwanese has adopted Pinyin system for Chinese Character now, but they used Wade-Giles system before. c. Pinyin has been employed on the passport of China Mainland, but I don't think they are friendly enough for people speaking English to pronounce. To me, some Pinyin of Chinese character are just for spelling in English, and are not feasible for the correct pronunciation. d. Pinyin uses roman (or roughly English) characters to denote the sounds of Chinese Character, but in the Chinese style, which always causes confusion in pronunciation. Though the beginning lessons on Chinese language in the preliminary school is on the Pinyin (or Phonetic alphabet of Chinese Character), but the foreigner seldom gets chance to learn it. :-( Best Regards, Leaf -----Original Message----- From: ietf-bounces@xxxxxxxx [mailto:ietf-bounces@xxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Cao, Zhen Sent: Tuesday, July 16, 2013 4:35 PM To: Ted Hardie Cc: IETF Discussion Subject: Re: Regarding call Chinese names On Tue, Jul 16, 2013 at 12:04 AM, Ted Hardie <ted.ietf@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Sun, Jul 14, 2013 at 5:26 PM, Hui Deng <denghui02@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> >> Hi Ted, >> >> I did explain them in the 1st paragraph about minorities (not >> mentioned that they could have two kids in mainland) anyway, I will >> revise the title by adding "Chinese "Han" people", hope that will be >> ok >> >> -Hui >> >> > > While it is always valuable to note national minorities, I believe you > missed the point. In some territories, there are dialects of Chinese > other than Mandarin and romanizations other than pinyin which are > common and normatively correct. For those Chinese people, your > document does not apply. As an example, the current chief executive > of Hong Kong is properly called Leung Chun Ying (梁振英); his > predecessor in that role was Tung Chee Hwa (董建?). Similar situations > arise in Taiwan and in many territories where Chinese people are > themselves national minorities. That's not Pinyin system. I have a question for you, do you think these spellings are self pronounciable? > > Clarifying that your document is specific to the pinyin romanization > is likely enough (since that romanization is based on Mandarin). We actually clarify that in pinyin draft, http://tools.ietf.org/id/draft-zcao-chinese-pronounce-01 Thanks, caozhen