Citations:Pinyin


 * 2010, Helen Rees, Echoes of History: Naxi Music in Modern China (Oxford University Press, ISBN 9780195351620):
 * Romanization of Naxi terms in this book is according to Naxi Pinyin used in the People's Republic of China.
 * 2010, Helen Rees, Echoes of History: Naxi Music in Modern China (Oxford University Press, ISBN 9780195351620):
 * Romanization of Naxi terms in this book is according to Naxi Pinyin used in the People's Republic of China.


 * 2013, Review: Transforming Nomadic Resource Management and Livelihood Strategies, by Daniel Winkler (reviewer), in Asian Highlands Perspectives 28: Collection of Papers, page 388:
 * Furthermore, a map of Yushu and several tables giving place names in, Chinese characters, Chinese Pinyin, Tibetan Pinyin, and Wylie Tibetan, help to clarify the multitude of names available for each location in the study area. However, the common transcriptions of these place names commonly used in maps, research, and reports before Chinese took control are missing.


 * 2013, Matthias Gerner, A Grammar of Nuosu (ISBN 3110308673), page 21:
 * Nuosu exhibits 43 consonant phonemes, presented below in the Romanized script (Nuosu Pinyin) and in the International Phonetic Alphabet.


 * 2016, Freeman John Dyson, Dear Professor Dyson: Twenty Years of Correspondence Between Freeman Dyson and Undergraduate Students on Science, Technology, Society and Life (ISBN 9789814759090), page 164:
 * The figure on the right shows the Tibetan script for a syllable whose Wylie transliteration ([55]) is 'bsGrond' (zhön in Tibetan Pinyin), where 'G' is the radical consonant.