The following pages link to Northern Wu phonology
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View (previous 50 | next 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)- Chinese bronze inscriptions (links | edit)
- Wu Chinese (links | edit)
- Suzhou dialect (links | edit)
- Shanghainese (links | edit)
- Voiced glottal fricative (links | edit)
- Classical Arabic (links | edit)
- Penang Hokkien (links | edit)
- Irish phonology (links | edit)
- High rising terminal (links | edit)
- Jin Chinese (links | edit)
- Portuguese phonology (links | edit)
- Huizhou Chinese (links | edit)
- Catalan phonology (links | edit)
- Cant (language) (links | edit)
- Arabic phonology (links | edit)
- Spanish phonology (links | edit)
- English phonology (links | edit)
- Tianjin dialect (links | edit)
- Hungarian phonology (links | edit)
- Beijing dialect (links | edit)
- Manjiang dialect (links | edit)
- Cantonese (links | edit)
- Teochew Min (links | edit)
- Awadhi language (links | edit)
- Gan Chinese (links | edit)
- French phonology (links | edit)
- Romanian phonology (links | edit)
- Vietnamese phonology (links | edit)
- Written Cantonese (links | edit)
- Xiang Chinese (links | edit)
- Pinghua (links | edit)
- Swedish phonology (links | edit)
- Norwegian phonology (links | edit)
- Italian phonology (links | edit)
- Synthetic phonics (links | edit)
- Esperanto phonology (links | edit)
- Japanese phonology (links | edit)
- Hainanese (links | edit)
- Semi-cursive script (links | edit)
- Clerical script (links | edit)
- Cursive script (East Asia) (links | edit)
- Thieves' cant (links | edit)
- Eastern Min (links | edit)
- Bernese German phonology (links | edit)
- Fuzhou dialect (links | edit)
- Persian phonology (links | edit)
- Australian English phonology (links | edit)
- Weitou dialect (links | edit)
- Xiao'erjing (links | edit)
- Shaozhou Tuhua (links | edit)