Hi Sim
SimL wrote:You're welcome! Most of them seem to be *very* small places: a single beach, or a little village, so perhaps Bagansiapiapi is the most important Bagan in the world

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May be, at least for me.

Many Indonesians was told in schools that Bagansiapiapi was the second largest fishing port in the world in term of quantity of fish caught, after Norway, before 1970s. I don't know how true, and think that is strange to compare a town with a country.

Anyway, when I told my Indonesian friends that I was from Bagansiapiapi, many of them spontaneously said: "oh that fishing port?".
Btw I find its statistics confusing. In Indonesian Wikipedia, its population is around 30K. But another source I read says that the population is around 10K and Chinese majority (ard 7K, suprisingly small, I suppose most have moved to Jakarta or elsewhere; cf. vast majority of my relatives have moved out of the town). May be the latter refers to narrower definition of the town. And Bagansiapiapi is the capital of Rokan Hilir Regency which according to Wikipedia has population of more than 400K people. The other towns & villages in the regency are much smaller, so I am really puzzled how over 90% of the population spread across what in my impression seems to be much forested area.
O yes, there is ferry line to Port Dickson, so from one Bagan to another!

I have never tried it, may be next time I should. Before that people needed to go to Dumai to take ferry to Malacca.
... and I used to think that my tone 2 is [51] or [52], but Ah-bin has pointed out to me that it's very level - 55 or 54 or 44.
That is interesting!
If my tone 2 is indeed [44], then perhaps this is more similar to what your Malaysian friends say, when they pronounce Klang with tone 1 (= [33]).
That should be the case. Btw I think I never realized the difference between [44] and [33], most probably I naturally mapped to the tones I was familiar with.
I seem to remember that Andrew once pointed out that the (standard) Mandarin tone 4 - which I tend to think of as "the same" as both Amoy and PgHk tone 2 - "starts higher, and falls more sharply than most Malaysian Mandarin speakers realise" (I put 'standard' in brackets, because of course Malaysian Mandarin speakers are also valid native speakers of Mandarin).]
Oh thank you for pointing this out, I wanted to post something about this but I forgot. I used to think of Standard Mandarin T4 = T8 in my Hokkien (BgHk) variant. Come to examine it more closely, I think Andrew is right. StMd T4 has the same countour as BgHk T8, but the former is or tends to be higher in pitch. Doesn't this make BgHk T8 = Amoy T2? I wonder how your PgHk T8 and Amoy T8 sound like...
