Yale Romanization
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Yale Romanization could refer to any of the romanization systems created at Yale University for the following four East Asian languages:
- Yale romanization of Mandarin developed in 1943 by the Yale sinologist George Kennedy.
- Yale romanization of Cantonese was developed by Parker Po-fei Huang and Gerald P. Kok and published in 1970.[1]
- Yale romanization of Korean was developed by Samuel Elmo Martin and his colleagues at Yale University around 1942 about half a decade after McCune–Reischauer. It is the standard romanization of the Korean language in linguistics.
- JSL romanization, a system for Japanese devised by Eleanor Jorden, which is sometimes called "Yale Romanization"
References
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