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Varieties of Chinese

There are hundreds of local Chinese language varieties[b] forming a branch of the Sino-Tibetan language family, many of which are not mutually intelligible. Variation is particularly strong in the more mountainous southeast part of mainland China. The varieties are typically classified into several groups: Mandarin, Wu, Min, Xiang, Gan, Jin, Hakka and Yue, though some varieties remain unclassified. These groups are neither clades nor individual languages defined by mutual intelligibility, but reflect common phonological developments from Middle Chinese.

Chinese
Sinitic
Geographic
distribution
China, Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia
Linguistic classificationSino-Tibetan
Early forms
Subdivisions
ISO 639-5zhx
Linguasphere79-AAA
Glottologsini1245
Primary branches of Chinese according to the Language Atlas of China.[3] The Mandarin area extends into Yunnan and Xinjiang (not shown).
Chinese name
Simplified Chinese汉语
Traditional Chinese漢語
Hanyu PinyinHànyǔ
Literal meaningHan language

Chinese varieties have the greatest differences in their phonology, and to a lesser extent in vocabulary and syntax. Southern varieties tend to have fewer initial consonants than northern and central varieties, but more often preserve the Middle Chinese final consonants. All have phonemic tones, with northern varieties tending to have fewer distinctions than southern ones. Many have tone sandhi, with the most complex patterns in the coastal area from Zhejiang to eastern Guangdong.

Standard Chinese takes its phonology from the Beijing dialect, with vocabulary from the Mandarin group and grammar based on literature in the modern written vernacular. It is one of the official languages of China and one of the four official languages of Singapore. It has become a pluricentric language, with differences in pronunciation and vocabulary between the three forms. It is also one of the six official languages of the United Nations.

History edit

At the end of the 2nd millennium BC, a form of Chinese was spoken in a compact area along the lower Wei River and middle Yellow River. Use of this language expanded eastwards across the North China Plain into Shandong, and then southwards into the Yangtze River valley and the hills of south China. Chinese eventually replaced many of the languages previously dominant in these areas, and forms of the language spoken in different regions began to diverge.[7] During periods of political unity there was a tendency for states to promote the use of a standard language across the territory they controlled, in order to facilitate communication between people from different regions.[8]

The first evidence of dialectal variation is found in the texts of the Spring and Autumn period (771–476 BC). Although the Zhou royal domain was no longer politically powerful, its speech still represented a model for communication across China.[7] The Fangyan (early 1st century AD) is devoted to differences in vocabulary between regions.[9] Commentaries from the Eastern Han (25–220 AD) provide significant evidence of local differences in pronunciation. The Qieyun, a rime dictionary published in 601, noted wide variations in pronunciation between regions, and was created with the goal of defining a standard system of pronunciation for reading the classics.[10] This standard is known as Middle Chinese, and is believed to be a diasystem, based on a compromise between the reading traditions of the northern and southern capitals.[11]

The North China Plain provided few barriers to migration, which resulted in relative linguistic homogeneity over a wide area. Contrastingly, the mountains and rivers of southern China contain all six of the other major Chinese dialect groups, with each in turn featuring great internal diversity, particularly in Fujian.[12][13]

Standard Chinese edit

Until the mid-20th century, most Chinese people spoke only their local language. As a practical measure, officials of the Ming and Qing dynasties carried out the administration of the empire using a common language based on Mandarin varieties, known as Guānhuà (官話/官话 'officer speech'). While never formally defined, knowledge of this language was essential for a career in the imperial bureaucracy.[14]

In the early years of the Republic of China, Literary Chinese was replaced as the written standard by written vernacular Chinese, which was based on northern dialects. In the 1930s, a standard national language with pronunciation based on the Beijing dialect was adopted, but with vocabulary drawn from a range of Mandarin varieties, and grammar based on literature in the modern written vernacular.[15] Standard Chinese is the official spoken language of the People's Republic of China and Taiwan, and is one of the official languages of Singapore.[16] It has become a pluricentric language, with differences in pronunciation and vocabulary between the three forms.[17][18]

Standard Chinese is much more widely studied than any other variety of Chinese, and its use is now dominant in public life on the mainland.[19] Outside of China and Taiwan, the only varieties of Chinese commonly taught in university courses are Standard Chinese and Cantonese.[20]

Comparison with Romance edit

Chinese has been likened to the Romance languages that descended from Latin. In both cases, the ancestral language was spread by imperial expansion over substrate languages 2000 years ago, by the Qin and Han empires in China, and the Roman Empire in Europe. Medieval Latin remained the standard for scholarly and administrative writing in Western Europe for centuries, influencing local varieties much like Literary Chinese did in China. In both cases, local forms of speech diverged from both the literary standard and each other, producing dialect continua with mutually unintelligible varieties separated by long distances.[20][21]

However, a major difference between China and Western Europe is the historical reestablishment of political unity in 6th century China by the Sui dynasty, a unity that has persisted with relatively brief interludes until the present day. Meanwhile, Europe remained politically decentralized, and developed numerous independent states. Vernacular writing using the Latin alphabet supplanted Latin itself, and states eventually developed their own standard languages. In China, Literary Chinese was predominantly used in formal writing until the early 20th century. Written Chinese, read with different local pronunciations, continued to serve as a source of vocabulary for the local varieties. The new standard written vernacular Chinese, the counterpart of spoken Standard Chinese, is similarly used as a literary form by speakers of all varieties.[22][23]

Classification edit

Dialectologist Jerry Norman estimated that there are hundreds of mutually unintelligible varieties of Chinese.[24] These varieties form a dialect continuum, in which differences in speech generally become more pronounced as distances increase, although there are also some sharp boundaries.[25]

However, the rate of change in mutual intelligibility varies immensely depending on region. For example, the varieties of Mandarin spoken in all three northeastern Chinese provinces are mutually intelligible, but in the province of Fujian, where Min varieties predominate, the speech of neighbouring counties or even villages may be mutually unintelligible.[26]

Dialect groups edit

Proportions of first-language speakers[27]

  Mandarin (65.7%)
  Min (6.2%)
  Wu (6.1%)
  Yue (5.6%)
  Jin (5.2%)
  Gan (3.9%)
  Hakka (3.5%)
  Xiang (3.0%)
  Huizhou (0.3%)
  Pinghua, others (0.6%)

Classifications of Chinese varieties in the late 19th century and early 20th century were based on impressionistic criteria. They often followed river systems, which were historically the main routes of migration and communication in southern China.[28] The first scientific classifications, based primarily on the evolution of Middle Chinese voiced initials, were produced by Wang Li in 1936 and Li Fang-Kuei in 1937, with minor modifications by other linguists since.[29] The conventionally accepted set of seven dialect groups first appeared in the second edition (1980) of Yuan Jiahua's dialectology handbook:[30][31]

Mandarin
This is the group spoken in northern and southwestern China and has by far the most speakers. This group includes the Beijing dialect, which forms the basis for Standard Chinese, called Putonghua or Guoyu in Chinese, and often also translated as "Mandarin" or simply "Chinese". In addition, the Dungan language of Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan is a Mandarin variety written in the Cyrillic script.
Wu
These varieties are spoken in Shanghai, most of Zhejiang and the southern parts of Jiangsu and Anhui. The group comprises hundreds of distinct spoken forms, many of which are not mutually intelligible. The Suzhou dialect is usually taken as representative, because Shanghainese features several atypical innovations.[32] Wu varieties are distinguished by their retention of voiced or murmured obstruent initials (stops, affricates and fricatives).[33]
Gan
These varieties are spoken in Jiangxi and neighbouring areas. The Nanchang dialect is taken as representative. In the past, Gan was viewed as closely related to Hakka because of the way Middle Chinese voiced initials became voiceless aspirated initials as in Hakka, and were hence called by the umbrella term "Hakka–Gan dialects".[34][35]
Xiang
The Xiang varieties are spoken in Hunan and southern Hubei. The New Xiang varieties, represented by the Changsha dialect, have been significantly influenced by Southwest Mandarin, whereas Old Xiang varieties, represented by the Shuangfeng dialect, retain features such as voiced initials.[36]
Min
These varieties originated in the mountainous terrain of Fujian and eastern Guangdong, and form the only branch of Chinese that cannot be directly derived from Middle Chinese. It is also the most diverse, with many of the varieties used in neighbouring counties—and, in the mountains of western Fujian, even in adjacent villages—being mutually unintelligible.[26] Early classifications divided Min into Northern and Southern subgroups, but a survey in the early 1960s found that the primary split was between inland and coastal groups.[37][38] Varieties from the coastal region around Xiamen have spread to Southeast Asia, where they are known as Hokkien (named from a dialectical pronunciation of "Fujian"), and Taiwan, where they are known as Taiwanese.[39] Other offshoots of Min are found in Hainan and the Leizhou Peninsula, with smaller communities throughout southern China.[38]
Hakka
The Hakka (literally "guest families") are a group of Han Chinese living in the hills of northeastern Guangdong, southwestern Fujian and many other parts of southern China, as well as Taiwan and parts of Southeast Asia such as Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia. The Meixian dialect is the prestige form.[40] Most Hakka varieties retain the full complement of nasal endings, -m -n and stop endings -p -t -k, though there is a tendency for Middle Chinese velar codas -ŋ and -k to yield dental codas -n and -t after front vowels.[41]
Yue
These varieties are spoken in Guangdong, Guangxi, Hong Kong and Macau, and have been carried by immigrants to Southeast Asia and many other parts of the world. The prestige variety and by far most commonly spoken variety is Cantonese, from the city of Guangzhou (historically called "Canton"), which is also the native language of the majority in Hong Kong and Macau.[42] Taishanese, from the coastal area of Jiangmen southwest of Guangzhou, was historically the most common Yue variety among overseas communities in the West until the late 20th century.[43] Not all Yue varieties are mutually intelligible. Most Yue varieties retain the full complement of Middle Chinese word-final consonants (/p/, /t/, /k/, /m/, /n/ and /ŋ/) and have rich inventories of tones.[41]

The Language Atlas of China (1987) follows a classification of Li Rong, distinguishing three further groups:[44][45]

Jin
These varieties, spoken in Shanxi and adjacent areas, were formerly included in Mandarin. They are distinguished by their retention of the Middle Chinese entering tone category.[46]
Huizhou
The Hui dialects, spoken in southern Anhui, share different features with Wu, Gan and Mandarin, making them difficult to classify. Earlier scholars had assigned to them one or other of these groups, or to a group of their own.[47][48]
Pinghua
These varieties are descended from the speech of the earliest Chinese migrants to Guangxi, predating the later influx of Yue and Southwest Mandarin speakers. Some linguists treat them as a mixture of Yue and Xiang.[49]

Some varieties remain unclassified, including the Danzhou dialect (northwestern Hainan), Waxiang (northwestern Hunan), Xiangnan Tuhua (southern Hunan), Shaozhou Tuhua (northern Guangdong), and the forms of Chinese spoken by the She people (She Chinese) and the Miao people.[50]

Most of the vocabulary of the Bai language of Yunnan appears to be related to Chinese words, though many are clearly loans from the last few centuries. Some scholars have suggested that it represents a very early branching from Chinese, while others argue that it is a more distantly related Sino-Tibetan language overlaid with two millennia of loans.[51][52][53]

Dialect geography edit

 
Map of the spread of 16 features identified by Norman as characteristic of northern dialects. Areas with all these features are shown in darkest blue; those with none in darkest red. The central dialects lie in between.[54][55][56][57][58]

Jerry Norman classified the traditional seven dialect groups into three zones: Northern (Mandarin), Central (Wu, Gan, and Xiang) and Southern (Hakka, Yue, and Min).[59] He argued that the dialects of the Southern zone are derived from a standard used in the Yangtze valley during the Han dynasty (206 BC – 220 AD), which he called Old Southern Chinese, while the Central zone was a transitional area of dialects that were originally of southern type, but overlain with centuries of Northern influence.[59][55] Hilary Chappell proposed a refined model, dividing Norman's Northern zone into Northern and Southwestern areas, and his Southern zone into Southeastern (Min) and Far Southern (Yue and Hakka) areas, with Pinghua transitional between Southwestern and Far Southern areas.[60]

The long history of migration of peoples and interaction between speakers of different dialects makes it difficult to apply the tree model to Chinese.[61] Scholars account for the transitional nature of the central varieties in terms of wave models. Iwata argues that innovations have been transmitted from the north across the Huai River to the Lower Yangtze Mandarin area and from there southeast to the Wu area and westwards along the Yangtze River valley and thence to southwestern areas, leaving the hills of the southeast largely untouched.[62]

Some dialect boundaries, such as between Wu and Min, are particularly abrupt, while others, such as between Mandarin and Xiang or between Min and Hakka, are much less clearly defined.[25] Several east-west isoglosses run along the Huai and Yangtze Rivers.[63] A north-south barrier is formed by the Tianmu and Wuyi Mountains.[64]

Intelligibility testing edit

Most assessments of mutual intelligibility of varieties of Chinese in the literature are impressionistic.[65] Functional intelligibility testing is time-consuming in any language family, and usually not done when more than 10 varieties are to be compared.[66] However, one 2009 study aimed to measure intelligibility between 15 Chinese provinces. In each province, 15 university students were recruited as speakers and 15 older rural inhabitants recruited as listeners. The listeners were then tested on their comprehension of isolated words and of particular words in the context of sentences spoken by speakers from all 15 of the provinces surveyed.[67] The results demonstrated significant levels of unintelligibility between areas, even within the Mandarin group. In a few cases, listeners understood fewer than 70% of words spoken by speakers from the same province, indicating significant differences between urban and rural varieties. As expected from the wide use of Standard Chinese, speakers from Beijing were understood more than speakers from elsewhere.[68] The scores supported a primary division between northern groups (Mandarin and Jin) and all others, with Min as an identifiable branch.[69]

Terminology edit

Local varieties from different areas of China are often mutually unintelligible, differing at least as much as different Romance languages and perhaps even as much as Indo-European languages as a whole.[70][71][72] These varieties form the Sinitic branch of the Sino-Tibetan language family (with Bai sometimes being included in this grouping).[73] Because speakers share a standard written form, and have a common cultural heritage with long periods of political unity, the varieties are popularly perceived among native speakers as variants of a single Chinese language,[74] and this is also the official position.[75] Conventional English-language usage in Chinese linguistics is to use dialect for the speech of a particular place (regardless of status) while regional groupings like Mandarin and Wu are called dialect groups.[24] Other linguists choose to refer to the major groups as languages.[71] However, each of these groups contains mutually unintelligible varieties.[24] ISO 639-3 and the Ethnologue assign language codes to each of the top-level groups listed above except Min and Pinghua, whose subdivisions are assigned five and two codes respectively.[76]

The Chinese term fāngyán 方言, composed of characters meaning 'place' and 'speech', was the title of the first work of Chinese dialectology in the Han dynasty, and has had a range of meanings in the millennia since.[77] It is used for any regional subdivision of Chinese, from the speech of a village to major branches such as Mandarin and Wu.[78] Linguists writing in Chinese often qualify the term to distinguish different levels of classification.[79] All these terms have customarily been translated into English as dialect, a practice that has been criticized as confusing.[80] The neologisms regionalect and topolect have been proposed as alternative renderings of fangyan.[80][c]

Phonology edit

 
Traditional Chinese syllable structure

The usual unit of analysis is the syllable, traditionally analysed as consisting of an initial consonant, a final and a tone.[82] In general, southern varieties have fewer initial consonants than northern and central varieties, but more often preserve the Middle Chinese final consonants.[83] Some varieties, such as Cantonese, Hokkien and Shanghainese, include syllabic nasals as independent syllables.[84]

Initials edit

In the 42 varieties surveyed in the Great Dictionary of Modern Chinese Dialects, the number of initials (including a zero initial) ranges from 15 in some southern dialects to a high of 35 in Chongming dialect, spoken in Chongming Island, Shanghai.[85]

Initials of selected varieties[86][87]
Fuzhou (Min) Suzhou (Wu) Beijing (Mandarin)
Stops and
affricates
voiceless aspirated tsʰ tsʰ tɕʰ tsʰ tɕʰ tʂʰ
voiceless unaspirated p t ts k p t ts k p t ts k
voiced b d ɡ
Fricatives voiceless s x f s ɕ h f s ɕ ʂ x
voiced v z ʑ ɦ ɻ/ʐ
Sonorants l l l
Nasals m n ŋ m n ɲ ŋ m n
 
Map of the extent of the palatal merger in the core Chinese-speaking area[88]

The initial system of the Fuzhou dialect of northern Fujian is a minimal example.[89] With the exception of /ŋ/, which is often merged with the zero initial, the initials of this dialect are present in all Chinese varieties, although several varieties do not distinguish /n/ from /l/. However, most varieties have additional initials, due to a combination of innovations and retention of distinctions from Middle Chinese:

  • Most non-Min varieties have a labiodental fricative /f/, which developed from Middle Chinese bilabial stops in certain environments.[90]
  • The voiced initials of Middle Chinese are retained in Wu dialects such as Suzhou and Shanghai, as well as Old Xiang dialects and a few Gan dialects, but have merged with voiceless initials elsewhere.[91][92] Southern Min varieties have an unrelated series of voiced initials resulting from devoicing of nasal initials in syllables without nasal finals.[93]
  • The Middle Chinese retroflex initials are retained in many Mandarin dialects, including Beijing but not southwestern and southeastern Mandarin varieties.[94]
  • In many northern and central varieties there is palatalization of dental affricates, velars (as in Suzhou), or both. In many places, including Beijing, palatalized dental affricates and palatalized velars have merged to form a new palatal series.[95]

Finals edit

 
Map of the distribution of stop codas in local Chinese dialects in the core Chinese-speaking area[101]

Chinese finals may be analysed as an optional medial glide, a main vowel and an optional coda.[102]

Conservative vowel systems, such as those of Gan dialects, have high vowels /i/, /u/ and /y/, which also function as medials, mid vowels /e/ and /o/, and a low /a/-like vowel.[103] In other dialects, including Mandarin dialects, /o/ has merged with /a/, leaving a single mid vowel with a wide range of allophones.[104] Many dialects, particularly in northern and central China, have apical or retroflex vowels, which are syllabic fricatives derived from high vowels following sibilant initials.[105] In many Wu dialects, vowels and final glides have monophthongized, producing a rich inventory of vowels in open syllables.[106] Reduction of medials is common in Yue dialects.[107]

The Middle Chinese codas, consisting of glides /j/ and /w/, nasals /m/, /n/ and /ŋ/, and stops /p/, /t/ and /k/, are best preserved in southern dialects, particularly Yue dialects such as Cantonese.[41] In some Min dialects, nasals and stops following open vowels have shifted to nasalization and glottal stops respectively.[108] In Jin, Lower Yangtze Mandarin and Wu dialects, the stops have merged as a final glottal stop, while in most northern varieties they have disappeared.[109] In Mandarin dialects final /m/ has merged with /n/, while some central dialects have a single nasal coda, in some cases realized as a nasalization of the vowel.[110]

Tones edit

 
Map of the variation in the number of tone categories in local Chinese dialects in the core Chinese-speaking area[111]

All varieties of Chinese, like neighbouring languages in the Mainland Southeast Asia linguistic area, have phonemic tones. Each syllable may be pronounced with between three and seven distinct pitch contours, denoting different morphemes. For example, the Beijing dialect distinguishes (/ 'mother'), ( 'hemp'), (/ 'horse) and (/ 'to scold'). The number of tonal contrasts varies between dialects, with Northern dialects tending to have fewer distinctions than Southern ones.[112] Many dialects have tone sandhi, in which the pitch contour of a syllable is affected by the tones of adjacent syllables in a compound word or phrase.[113] This process is so extensive in Shanghainese that the tone system is reduced to a pitch accent system much like modern Japanese.

The tonal categories of modern varieties can be related by considering their derivation from the four tones of Middle Chinese, though cognate tonal categories in different dialects are often realized as quite different pitch contours.[114] Middle Chinese had a three-way tonal contrast in syllables with vocalic or nasal endings. The traditional names of the tonal categories are 'level'/'even' ( píng), 'rising' ( shǎng) and 'departing'/'going' ( ). Syllables ending in a stop consonant /p/, /t/ or /k/ (checked syllables) had no tonal contrasts but were traditionally treated as a fourth tone category, 'entering' ( ), corresponding to syllables ending in nasals /m/, /n/, or /ŋ/.[115]

The tones of Middle Chinese, as well as similar systems in neighbouring languages, experienced a tone split conditioned by syllabic onsets. Syllables with voiced initials tended to be pronounced with a lower pitch, and by the late Tang dynasty, each of the tones had split into two registers conditioned by the initials, known as "upper" (/ yīn) and "lower" (/ yáng).[116] When voicing was lost in all dialects except the Wu and Old Xiang groups, this distinction became phonemic, yielding eight tonal categories, with a six-way contrast in unchecked syllables and a two-way contrast in checked syllables.[117] Cantonese maintains these eight tonal categories and has developed an additional distinction in checked syllables.[118] (The latter distinction has disappeared again in many varieties.)

However, most Chinese varieties have reduced the number of tonal distinctions.[114] For example, in Mandarin, the tones resulting from the split of Middle Chinese rising and departing tones merged, leaving four tones. Furthermore, final stop consonants disappeared in most Mandarin dialects, and such syllables were distributed amongst the four remaining tones, seemingly at random.[119]

Tonal categories and pitch contours in colloquial layers
Middle Chinese tone and initial
level rising departing entering
vl. n. vd. vl. n. vd. vl. n. vd. vl. n. vd.
Jin[120] Taiyuan 1 ˩ 3 ˥˧ 5 ˥ 7 ˨˩ 8 ˥˦
Mandarin[120] Xi'an 1 ˧˩ 2 ˨˦ 3 ˦˨ 5 ˥ 1 2
Beijing 1 ˥ 2 ˧˥ 3 ˨˩˦ 5 ˥˩ 1,2,3,5 5 2
Chengdu 1 ˦ 2 ˧˩ 3 ˥˧ 5 ˩˧ 2
Yangzhou 1 ˨˩ 2 ˧˥ 3 ˧˩ 5 ˥ 7 ˦
Xiang[121] Changsha 1 ˧ 2 ˩˧ 3 ˦˩ 6 5 ˥ 6 ˨˩ 7 ˨˦
Shuangfeng 1 ˦ 2 ˨˧ 3 ˨˩ 6 5 ˧˥ 6 ˧ 2, 5
Gan[122] Nanchang 1 ˦˨ 2 ˨˦ 3 ˨˩˧ 6 5 ˦˥ 6 ˨˩ 7 ˥ 8 ˨˩
Wu[123] Suzhou 1 ˦ 2 ˨˦ 3 ˦˩ 6 5 ˥˩˧ 6 ˧˩ 7 ˦ 8 ˨˧
Shanghai 1 ˦˨ 2 ˨˦ 3 ˧˥ 2 3 2 7 ˥ 8 ˨˧
Wenzhou 1 ˦ 2 ˧˩ 3 ˦˥ 4 ˨˦ 5 ˦˨ 6 ˩ 7 ˨˧ 8 ˩˨
Min[124] Xiamen 1 ˥ 2 ˨˦ 3 ˥˩ 6 5 ˩ 6 ˧ 7 ˧˨ 8 ˥
Hakka[125] Meixian 1 ˦ 2 ˩˨ 3 ˧˩ 1,3 1 5 ˦˨ 7 ˨˩ 8 ˦
Yue[126] Guangzhou 1 ˥˧,˥ 2 ˨˩ 3 ˧˥ 4 ˨˧[d] 5 ˧ 6 ˨ 7a ˥ 7b ˧ 8 ˨

In Wu, voiced obstruents were retained, and the tone split never became phonemic: the higher-pitched allophones occur with initial voiceless consonants, and the lower-pitched allophones occur with initial voiced consonants.[123] (Traditional Chinese classification nonetheless counts these as different tones.) Most Wu dialects retain the tone categories of Middle Chinese, but in Shanghainese several of these have merged.

Many Chinese varieties exhibit tone sandhi, in which the realization of a tone varies depending on the context of the syllable. For example, in Standard Chinese a third tone changes to a second tone when followed by another third tone.[128] Particularly complex sandhi patterns are found in Wu dialects and coastal Min dialects.[129] In Shanghainese, the tone of all syllables in a word is determined by the tone of the first, so that Shanghainese has word rather than syllable tone.

Vocabulary edit

Most morphemes in Chinese varieties are monosyllables descended from Old Chinese words, and have cognates in all varieties:

Colloquial pronunciations of cognate morphemes[130][e]
Word Jin Mandarin Xiang Gan Wu Min Hakka Yue
Taiyuan Xi'an Beijing Chengdu Yangzhou Changsha Shuangfeng Nanchang Suzhou Wenzhou Fuzhou Xiamen Meixian Guangzhou
人 'person' zəŋ1 ʐẽ2 ʐən2 zən2 lən2 ʐən2 ɲiɛn2 ɲin5 ɲin2 ɲiaŋ2 nøyŋ2 laŋ2 ɲin2 jɐn2
男 'man' næ̃1 næ̃2 nan2 nan2 liæ̃2 lan2 læ̃2 lan5 2 2 naŋ2 lam2 nam2 nam2
女 'woman' ny3 mi3 ny3 ɲy3 ly3 ɲy3 ɲy3 ɲy3 ɲy6 ɲy4 ny3 lu3 ŋ3 nøy4
魚 'fish' y1 y2 y2 y2 y2 y2 y2 ɲiɛ5 ŋ2 ŋøy2 ŋy2 hi2 ŋ2 jy2
蛇 'snake' 1 ʂɤ2 ʂɤ2 se2 ɕɪ2 sa2 ɣio2 sa5 zo2 zei2 sie2 tsua2 sa2 ʃɛ2
肉 'meat' zuəʔ7 ʐou5 ʐou5 zəu2 ləʔ7 ʐəu7 ɲu5 ɲiuk8 ɲioʔ8 ɲiəu8 nyʔ8 hɪk8 ɲiuk7 juk8
骨 'bone' kuəʔ7 ku1 ku3 ku2 kuəʔ7 ku7 kəu2 kut7 kuɤʔ7 ky7 kauʔ7 kut7 kut7 kuɐt7a
眼 'eye' nie3 ɲiã3 iɛn3 iɛn3 iæ̃3 ŋan3 ŋæ̃3 ŋan3 ŋɛ6 ŋa4 ŋiaŋ3 gɪŋ3 ɲian3 ŋan4
耳 'ear' ɚ3 ɚ3 ɚ3 ɚ3 a3 ɤ3 e3 ə3 ɲi6 ŋ4 ŋei5 hi6 ɲi3 ji4
鼻 'nose' pieʔ8 pi2 pi2 pi2 pieʔ7 pi2 bi6 pʰit8 bɤʔ8 bei6 pei6 pʰi6 pʰi5 pei6
日 "sun", 'day' zəʔ7 ɚ1 ʐʅ5 zɿ2 ləʔ7 ɲʅ7 i2 ɲit8 ɲɪʔ8 ɲiai8 niʔ8 lit8 ɲit7 jat8
月 "moon", 'month' yəʔ7 ye1 ye5 ye2 yəʔ7 ye7 ya5 ɲyɔt8 ŋɤʔ8 ɲy8 ŋuɔʔ8 geʔ8 ɲiat8 jyt8
年 'year' nie1 ɲiæ̃2 niɛn2 ɲiɛn2 liẽ2 ɲiẽ2 ɲɪ̃2 ɲiɛn5 ɲiɪ2 ɲi2 nieŋ2 2 ɲian2 nin2
山 'mountain' sæ̃1 sæ̃1 ʂan1 san1 sæ̃1 san1 sæ̃1 san1 1 sa1 saŋ1 suã1 san1 ʃan1
水 'water' suei3 fei3 ʂuei3 suei3 suəi3 ɕyei3 ɕy3 sui3 3 sɿ3 tsy3 tsui3 sui3 ʃøy3
紅 'red' xuŋ1 xuoŋ2 xuŋ2 xoŋ2 xoŋ2 xən2 ɣən2 fuŋ5 ɦoŋ2 ɦoŋ2 øyŋ2 2 fuŋ2 huŋ2
綠 'green' luəʔ7 lou1 ly5 nu2 lɔʔ7 lou7 ləu2 liuk8 loʔ7 lo8 luɔʔ8 lɪk8 liuk8 luk8
黃 'yellow' xuɒ̃1 xuaŋ2 xuaŋ2 xuaŋ2 xuɑŋ2 uan2 ɒŋ2 uɔŋ5 ɦuɒŋ2 ɦuɔ2 uɔŋ2 hɔŋ2 vɔŋ2 wɔŋ2
白 'white' piəʔ7 pei2 pai2 pe2 pɔʔ7 7 pia2 pʰak7 bɒʔ8 ba8 paʔ8 peʔ8 pʰak8 pak8
黑 'black' xəʔ7 xei1 xei1 xe2 xəʔ7 xa7 ɕia2 hɛt8 hɤʔ7 xe7 xaiʔ7 hɪk7 hɛt7 hɐk7a
上 'above' sɒ̃5 ʂaŋ5 ʂaŋ5 saŋ5 sɑŋ5 san6 ɣiaŋ6 sɔŋ6 zɒŋ6 ji6 suɔŋ6 tsiũ6 sɔŋ5 ʃœŋ6
下 'below' ɕia5 xa5 ɕia5 ɕia5 5 xa6 ɣo6 ha6 ɦo6 ɦo4 a6 e6 ha2 ha6
中 'middle' tsuŋ1 pfəŋ1 tʂuŋ1 tsoŋ1 tsoŋ1 tʂən1 tan1 tsuŋ1 tsoŋ1 tɕyoŋ1 touŋ1 taŋ1 tuŋ1 tʃuŋ1
大 'big' ta5 tuo5 ta5 ta5 tai5 tai6 du6 tʰɔ6 dəu6 dəu6 tuai6 tua6 tʰai5 tai6
小 'small' ɕiau3 ɕiau3 ɕiau3 ɕiau3 ɕiɔ3 ɕiau3 ɕiɤ3 ɕiɛu3 siæ3 sai3 sieu3 sio3 siau3 ʃiu3

Southern varieties also include distinctive substrata of vocabulary of non-Chinese origin. Some of these words may have come from Tai–Kadai and Austroasiatic languages.[131]

Grammar edit

Chinese varieties generally lack inflectional morphology and instead express grammatical categories using analytic means such as particles and prepositions.[132] There are major differences between northern and southern varieties, but often some northern areas share features found in the south, and vice versa.[133]

Constituent order edit

 
Map of the variation in the placement of animal gender markers in local Chinese dialects in the core Chinese-speaking area[134]

The usual unmarked word order in Chinese varieties is subject–verb–object, with other orders used for emphasis or contrast.[135] Modifiers usually precede the word they modify, so that adjectives precede nouns.[136] Instances in which the modifier follows the head are mainly found in the south, and are attributed to substrate influences from languages formerly dominant in the area, especially Kra–Dai languages.[137]

  • Adverbs generally precede verbs, but in some southern varieties certain kinds of adverb follow the verb.[138]
  • In the north, animal gender markers are prefixed to the noun, as in Beijing mǔjī (母鸡/母雞) 'hen' and gōngjī (公鸡/公雞) 'rooster', but most southern varieties use the reverse order, while others use different orders for different words.[139]
  • Compounds consisting of an attributive following a noun are less common, but some are found in the south as well as a few northern areas.[140]

Nominals edit

Nouns in Chinese varieties are generally not marked for number.[133] As in languages of the Mainland Southeast Asia linguistic area, Chinese varieties require an intervening classifier when a noun is preceded by a demonstrative or numeral.[141] The inventory of classifiers tends to be larger in the south than in the north, where some varieties use only the general classifier cognate with ge /.[142]

First- and second-person pronouns are cognate across all varieties. For third-person pronouns, Jin, Mandarin, and Xiang varieties have cognate forms, but other varieties generally use forms that originally had a velar or glottal initial:[143]

Personal pronouns[e]
Jin[130] Mandarin[144] Xiang[145] Gan[146] Wu[147] Min[148] Hakka[149] Yue[150]
Taiyuan Xi'an Beijing Chengdu Yangzhou Changsha Shuangfeng Nanchang Suzhou Wenzhou Fuzhou Xiamen Meixian Guangzhou
'I' ɣɤ3 ŋə3 uo3 ŋo3 o3 ŋo3 3 ŋɔ3 ŋəu6 ŋ4 ŋuai3 gua3 ŋai2 ŋo4
'you' ni3 ni3 ni3 ni3 liɪ3 n3, ɲi3 n3 li3, n3 ne6 ɲi4 ny3 li3 ɲi2, n2 nei4
'he/she' tʰa1 tʰa1 tʰa1 tʰa1 tʰa1 tʰa1 tʰo1 tɕʰiɛ3 li1 gi2 i1 i1 ki2 kʰøy4

Plural personal pronouns may be marked with a suffix, noun or phrase in different varieties. The suffix men / is common in the north, but several different suffixes are use elsewhere.[142] In some varieties, especially in the Wu area, different suffixes are used for first, second and third person pronouns.[151] Case is not marked, except in varieties in the Qinghai–Gansu sprachbund.[151]

The forms of demonstratives vary greatly, with few cognates between different areas.[152] A two-way distinction between proximal and distal is most common, but some varieties have a single neutral demonstrative, while others distinguish three or more on the basis of distance, visibility or other properties.[153] An extreme example is found in a variety spoken in Yongxin County, Jiangxi, where five grades of distance are distinguished.[154]

Attributive constructions typically have the form NP/VP + ATTR + NP, where the last noun phrase is the head and the attributive marker is usually a cognate of de in the north or a classifier in the south.[155] The latter pattern is also common in the languages of Southeast Asia.[156] A few varieties in the Jiang–Huai, Wu, southern Min and Yue areas feature the old southern pattern of a zero attributive marker.[155] Nominalization of verb phrases or predicates is achieved by following them with a marker, usually the same as the attributive marker, though some varieties use a different marker.[157]

Major sentence types edit

All varieties have transitive and intransitive verbs. Instead of adjectives, Chinese varieties use stative verbs, which can function as predicates but differ from intransitive verbs in being modifiable by degree adverbs.[158] Ditransitive sentences vary, with northern varieties placing the indirect object before the direct object and southern varieties using the reverse order.[159]

All varieties have copular sentences of the form NP1 + COP + NP2, though the copula varies.[160] Most Yue and Hakka varieties use a form cognate with 'to connect'.[161] All other varieties use a form cognate with shì , which was a demonstrative in Classical Chinese but began to be used as a copula from the Han period.[162][163]

All varieties form existential sentences with a verb cognate with yǒu , which can also be used as a transitive verb indicating possession.[164] Most varieties use a locative verb cognate to zài , but Min, Wu and Yue varieties use several different forms.[165]

All varieties allow sentences of the form NP + VP1 + COMP + VP2, with a verbal complement VP2 containing a stative verb describing the manner or extent of the main verb.[166] In northern varieties, the marker is a cognate of de , but many southern varieties distinguish between manner and extent complements using different markers.[167] Standard Chinese does not allow an object to co-occur with a verbal complement, but other varieties permit an object between the marker and the complement.[168]

A characteristic feature of Chinese varieties is in situ questions:[169]

This particle is a cognate of ma / in the north, but varies between other varieties.[171] Other question forms are also common:

  • Most varieties have neutral questions employing the form V + NEG + V, repeating the same verb.[172] When the verb takes an object, some northwestern Mandarin varieties tend to place it after the first occurrence of the verb, while other Mandarin varieties and most southern varieties place it after the second occurrence.[173]
  • Most varieties form disjunctive questions by placing a conjunction between the alternatives, though some also use particles to mark the disjuncts.[174] Standard Chinese is unusual in allowing a form with no conjunction.[171]

Verb phrases edit

A sentence is negated by placing a marker before the verb. Old Chinese had two families of negation markers starting with *p- and *m-, respectively.[175] Northern and Central varieties tend to use a word from the first family, cognate with Beijing , as the ordinary negator.[54] A word from the second family is used as an existential negator 'have not', as in Beijing méi and Shanghai m2.[176] In Mandarin varieties this word is also used for 'not yet', whereas in Wu and other groups a different form is typically used.[177] In Southern varieties, negators tend to come from the second family. The ordinary negators in these varieties are all derived from a syllabic nasal *m̩, though it has a level tone in Hakka and Yue and a rising tone in Min. Existential negators derive from a proto-form *mau, though again the tonal category varies between groups.[178]

Chinese varieties generally indicate the roles of nouns with respect to verbs using prepositions derived from grammaticalized verbs.[179][180] Varieties differ in the set of prepositions used, with northern varieties tending to use a substantially larger inventory, including disyllabic and trisyllabic prepositions.[181] In northern varieties, the preposition may be used to move the object before the verb (the "disposal" construction).[182] Similar structures using several different prepositions are used in the south, but tend to be avoided in more colloquial speech.[183] Comparative constructions are expressed with a prepositional phrase before the stative verb in most northern and central varieties, as well as Northern Min and Hakka, while other southern varieties retain the older form in which the prepositional phrase follows the stative verb.[184] The preposition is usually in the north, with other forms used elsewhere.[185]

Chinese varieties tend to indicate aspect using markers following the main verb.[186] The markers, usually derived from verbs, vary widely in both their forms and their degree of grammaticalization, from independent verbs, through complements to bound suffixes.[186] Southern varieties tend to have richer aspect systems making more distinctions than corthern ones.[187]

Sociolinguistics edit

Bilingualism and code-switching edit

In southern China (not including Hong Kong and Macau), where the difference between Standard Chinese and local dialects is particularly pronounced, well-educated Chinese are generally fluent in Standard Chinese, and most people have at least a good passive knowledge of it, in addition to being native speakers of the local dialect. The choice of dialect varies based on the social situation. Standard Chinese is usually considered more formal and is required when speaking to a person who does not understand the local dialect. The local dialect (be it non-Standard Chinese or non-Mandarin altogether) is generally considered more intimate and is used among close family members and friends and in everyday conversation within the local area. Chinese speakers will frequently code switch between Standard Chinese and the local dialect. Parents will generally speak to their children in the local variety, and the relationship between dialect and Mandarin appears to be mostly stable, even a diglossia. Local dialects are valued as symbols of regional cultures.[188]

People generally are tied to the hometown and therefore the hometown dialect, instead of a broad linguistic classification. For example, a person from Wuxi may claim that he speaks Wuxi dialect, even though it is similar to Shanghainese (another Wu dialect). Likewise, a person from Xiaogan may claim that he speaks Xiaogan dialect. Linguistically, Xiaogan dialect is a dialect of Mandarin, but the pronunciation and diction are quite different from spoken Standard Chinese.

Knowing the local dialect is of considerable social benefit, and most Chinese who permanently move to a new area will attempt to pick up the local dialect. Learning a new dialect is usually done informally through a process of immersion and recognizing sound shifts. Generally the differences are more pronounced lexically than grammatically. Typically, a speaker of one dialect of Chinese will need about a year of immersion to understand the local dialect and about three to five years to become fluent in speaking it. Because of the variety of dialects spoken, there are usually few formal methods for learning a local dialect.

Due to the variety in Chinese speech, Mandarin speakers from each area of China are very often prone to fuse or "translate" words from their local language into their Mandarin conversations. In addition, each area of China has its recognizable accents while speaking Mandarin. Generally, the nationalized standard form of Mandarin pronunciation is only heard on news and radio broadcasts. Even in the streets of Beijing, the flavor of Mandarin varies in pronunciation from the Mandarin heard on the media.

Language policy edit

 
A school in Guangdong with writing "Please speak Standard Chinese. Please write standard characters" on the wall.

Mainland China edit

Within mainland China, there has been a persistent Promotion of Putonghua drive; for instance, the education system is entirely Mandarin-medium from the second year onward. However, usage of local dialect is tolerated and socially preferred in many informal situations. In Hong Kong, written Cantonese is not used in formal documents, and within the PRC a character set closer to Mandarin tends to be used. At the national level, differences in dialect generally do not correspond to political divisions or categories, and this has for the most part prevented dialect from becoming the basis of identity politics.

Historically, many of the people who promoted Chinese nationalism were from southern China and did not natively speak Mandarin, and even leaders from northern China rarely spoke with the standard accent. For example, Mao Zedong often emphasized his origins in Hunan in speaking, rendering much of what he said incomprehensible to many Chinese.[citation needed] Chiang Kai-shek and Sun Yat-sen were also from southern China, and this is reflected in their conventional English names reflecting Cantonese pronunciations for their given names, and differing from their pinyin spellings Jiǎng Jièshí and Sūn Yìxiān. One consequence of this is that China does not have a well-developed tradition of spoken political rhetoric, and most Chinese political works are intended primarily as written works rather than spoken works. Another factor that limits the political implications of dialect is that it is very common within an extended family for different people to know and use different dialects.

Taiwan edit

Before 1945, other than a small Japanese-speaking population, most of the population of Taiwan were Han Chinese, who spoke Taiwanese Hokkien or Hakka, with a minority of Taiwanese aborigines, who spoke Formosan languages.[189] When the Kuomintang retreated to the island after losing the Chinese Civil War in 1949, they brought a substantial influx of speakers of Northern Chinese (and other dialects from across China), and viewed the use of Mandarin as part of their claim to be a legitimate government of the whole of China.[190] Education policy promoted the use of Mandarin over the local languages, and was implemented especially rigidly in elementary schools, with punishments and public humiliation for children using other languages at school.[190]

From the 1970s, the government promoted adult education in Mandarin, required Mandarin for official purposes, and encouraged its increased use in broadcasting.[191] Over a 40-year period, these policies succeeded in spreading the use and prestige of Mandarin through society at the expense of the other languages.[192] They also aggravated social divisions, as Mandarin speakers found it difficult to find jobs in private companies but were favored for government positions.[192] From the 1990s, Taiwanese native languages (Taiwanese Hokkien, Taiwanese Hakka and the Formosan languages) were offered in elementary and middle schools, first in Yilan county, then in other areas governed by elected Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) politicians, and finally throughout the island.[193]

Singapore edit

In 1966, the Singaporean government implemented a policy of bilingual education, where Singaporean students learn both English and their designated native language, which was Mandarin for Chinese Singaporeans (even though Singaporean Hokkien had previously been their lingua franca). The Goh Report, an evaluation of Singapore's education system by Goh Keng Swee, showed that less than 40% of the student population managed to attain minimum levels of competency in two languages.[194] It was later determined that the learning of Mandarin among Singaporean Chinese was hindered by home use of other Chinese varieties, such as Hokkien, Teochew, Cantonese, and Hakka.[195][196] Hence, the government decided to rectify problems facing implementation of the bilingual education policy, by launching a campaign to promote Mandarin as a common language among the Chinese population, and to discourage use of other Chinese varieties.

Launched in 1979 by then Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew,[197] the campaign aimed to simplify the language environment for Chinese Singaporeans, improve communication between them, and create a Mandarin-speaking environment conducive to the successful implementation of the bilingual education program. The initial goal of the campaign was for all young Chinese to stop speaking dialects in five years, and to establish Mandarin as the language of choice in public places within 10 years.[198][199] According to the government, for the bilingual policy to be effective, Mandarin should be spoken at home and should serve as the lingua franca among Chinese Singaporeans.[200] They also argued that Mandarin was more economically valuable, and speaking Mandarin would help Chinese Singaporeans retain their heritage, as Mandarin contains a cultural repository of values and traditions that are identifiable to all Chinese, regardless of dialect group.[201]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The colloquial layers of many varieties, particularly Min varieties, reflect features that predate Middle Chinese.[1][2]
  2. ^ Also known as the Sinitic languages, from Late Latin Sīnae, "the Chinese". In 1982, Paul K. Benedict proposed a subgroup of Sino-Tibetan called "Sinitic" comprising Bai and Chinese.[4] The precise affiliation of Bai remains uncertain,[5] but the term "Sinitic" is usually used as a synonym for Chinese, especially when viewed as a language family.[6]
  3. ^ John DeFrancis proposed the neologism regionalect to serve as a translation for fāngyán when referring to mutually unintelligible divisions.[80] Victor Mair coined the term topolect as a translation for all uses of fāngyán.[81] The latter term appears in The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language.
  4. ^ Some words of literary origin with voiced initials shifted to category 6.[127]
  5. ^ a b The tone numbers of § Tones are used to facilitate comparison between dialects.

References edit

Citations edit

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  2. ^ Pulleyblank (1984), p. 3.
  3. ^ Wurm et al. (1987), Map A2.
  4. ^ Wang (2005), p. 107.
  5. ^ Wang (2005), p. 122.
  6. ^ Mair (1991), p. 3.
  7. ^ a b Norman (1988), p. 183.
  8. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 183, 185.
  9. ^ Norman (1988), p. 185.
  10. ^ Ramsey (1987), pp. 116–117.
  11. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 24–25.
  12. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 183–190.
  13. ^ Ramsey (1987), p. 22.
  14. ^ Norman (1988), p. 136.
  15. ^ Ramsey (1987), pp. 3–15.
  16. ^ Bradley (1992), pp. 309–312.
  17. ^ Bradley (1992), pp. 313–318.
  18. ^ Chen (1999), pp. 46–49.
  19. ^ Norman (1988), p. 247.
  20. ^ a b Norman (1988), p. 187.
  21. ^ Ramsey (1987), p. 7.
  22. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 2–3.
  23. ^ Ramsey (1987), pp. 16–18.
  24. ^ a b c Norman (2003), p. 72.
  25. ^ a b Norman (1988), pp. 189–190.
  26. ^ a b Norman (1988), p. 188.
  27. ^ Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (2012), pp. 3, 125.
  28. ^ Kurpaska (2010), pp. 36–41.
  29. ^ Kurpaska (2010), pp. 41–53.
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  31. ^ Kurpaska (2010), pp. 53–55, 61, 215.
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  33. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 199–200.
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  43. ^ Ramsey (1987), p. 98.
  44. ^ Wurm et al. (1987).
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  53. ^ Wang (2005).
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  55. ^ a b Norman (2003), pp. 73, 76.
  56. ^ Cao (2008a), Maps 4, 52, 66, 73.
  57. ^ Cao (2008b), Maps 5, 52, 79, 109, 134, 138.
  58. ^ Cao (2008c), Maps 3, 28, 38, 41, 76.
  59. ^ a b Norman (1988), pp. 182–183.
  60. ^ Chappell (2015), pp. 45–51.
  61. ^ Norman (2003), p. 76.
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  67. ^ Tang & van Heuven (2009), pp. 715–717.
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  70. ^ Norman (1988), p. 1.
  71. ^ a b Mair (2013).
  72. ^ Yan (2006), p. 2.
  73. ^ Norman (2003), p. 73.
  74. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 1–2.
  75. ^ Liang (2014), p. 14.
  76. ^ Eberhard, Simons & Fennig (2024).
  77. ^ Mair (1991), pp. 3–6.
  78. ^ Kurpaska (2010), p. 2.
  79. ^ Kurpaska (2010), p. 63.
  80. ^ a b c DeFrancis (1984), p. 57.
  81. ^ Mair (1991), p. 7.
  82. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 138–139.
  83. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 212–213.
  84. ^ Ramsey (1987), p. 101.
  85. ^ Kurpaska (2010), pp. 186–188.
  86. ^ Yan (2006), pp. 69, 90, 127.
  87. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 139, 236.
  88. ^ Cao (2008a), Map 66.
  89. ^ Yan (2006), p. 127.
  90. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 211, 233.
  91. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 199–200, 207.
  92. ^ Yan (2006), pp. 91, 108–109, 152.
  93. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 235–236.
  94. ^ Norman (1988), p. 193.
  95. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 182, 193, 200, 205.
  96. ^ Cao (2008a), Map 040.
  97. ^ Cao (2008a), Map 045.
  98. ^ Cao (2008a), Map 043.
  99. ^ Cao (2008a), Map 052.
  100. ^ Cao (2008a), Map 073.
  101. ^ Cao (2008a), Map 124.
  102. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 28, 141.
  103. ^ Yan (2006), pp. 150–151.
  104. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 141, 198.
  105. ^ Norman (1988), p. 194.
  106. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 200–201.
  107. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 216–217.
  108. ^ Norman (1988), p. 237.
  109. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 193, 201–202.
  110. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 193, 201.
  111. ^ Cao (2008a), Map 001.
  112. ^ Norman (1988), p. 9.
  113. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 147, 202, 239.
  114. ^ a b Norman (1988), p. 54.
  115. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 34–36.
  116. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 53–54.
  117. ^ Norman (1988), p. 53.
  118. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 217–218.
  119. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 194–195.
  120. ^ a b Norman (1988), pp. 195–196, 272.
  121. ^ Yan (2006), pp. 108, 116–117.
  122. ^ Yan (2006), pp. 162–163.
  123. ^ a b Norman (1988), p. 202.
  124. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 238–239.
  125. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 225–226.
  126. ^ Yan (2006), p. 198.
  127. ^ Norman (1988), p. 218.
  128. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 146–147.
  129. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 202, 239.
  130. ^ a b Beijing University (1989).
  131. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 17–19, 213–214, 219, 231–232.
  132. ^ Chappell & Li (2016), pp. 606–607.
  133. ^ a b Yue (2017), p. 114.
  134. ^ Cao (2008c), Map 076.
  135. ^ Yue (2017), p. 130.
  136. ^ Chappell & Li (2016), p. 606.
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  138. ^ Yue-Hashimoto (1993), pp. 1–2.
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  144. ^ Norman (1988), p. 196.
  145. ^ Norman (1988), p. 208.
  146. ^ Norman (1988), p. 205.
  147. ^ Norman (1988), p. 203.
  148. ^ Norman (1988), p. 234.
  149. ^ Norman (1988), p. 227.
  150. ^ Norman (1988), p. 220.
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  152. ^ Yue (2017), p. 117.
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  154. ^ Chen (2015), p. 106.
  155. ^ a b Yue (2017), p. 150.
  156. ^ Chappell & Li (2016), p. 623.
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  158. ^ Yue (2017), p. 121.
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  179. ^ Chappell & Li (2016), p. 607.
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  185. ^ Yue-Hashimoto (1993), p. 159.
  186. ^ a b Yue (2017), p. 124.
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Works cited edit

  • Beijing University (1989), 汉语方音字汇 [Dictionary of Dialect Pronunciations of Chinese Characters] (in Chinese) (2nd ed.), Beijing: Wenzi gaige chubanshe, ISBN 978-7-80029-000-8.
  • Bradley, David (1992), "Chinese as a Pluricentric Language", in Clyne, Michael G. (ed.), Pluricentric Languages: Differing Norms in Different Nations, Walter de Gruyter, pp. 305–324, ISBN 978-3-11-012855-0.
  • Cao, Zhiyun, ed. (2008a), 汉语方言地图集 [Linguistic Atlas of Chinese Dialects] (in Chinese), vol. 1 (Phonetics), Beijing: Commercial Press, ISBN 978-7-100-05774-5.
  • ———, ed. (2008b), 汉语方言地图集 [Linguistic Atlas of Chinese Dialects] (in Chinese), vol. 2 (Lexicon), Beijing: Commercial Press, ISBN 978-7-100-05784-4.
  • ———, ed. (2008c), 汉语方言地图集 [Linguistic Atlas of Chinese Dialects] (in Chinese), vol. 3 (Grammar), Beijing: Commercial Press, ISBN 978-7-100-05785-1.
  • Chappell, Hilary M. (2015), "Linguistic areas in China for differential object marking, passive, and comparative constructions", in Chappell, Hilary M. (ed.), Diversity in Sinitic Languages, Oxford University Press, pp. 13–52, ISBN 978-0-19-872379-0.
  • ———; Li, Lan (2016), "Mandarin and other Sinitic languages", in Chan, Sin-wai (ed.), The Routledge Encyclopedia of the Chinese Language, Routledge, pp. 606–628, ISBN 978-0-415-53970-8.
  • Chen, Ping (1999), Modern Chinese: History and sociolinguistics, New York: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-64572-0.
  • Chen, Yujie (2015), "The semantic differentiation of demonstratives in Sinitic languages", in Chappell, Hilary M. (ed.), Diversity in Sinitic Languages, Oxford University Press, pp. 81–109, ISBN 978-0-19-872379-0.
  • Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (2012), 中国语言地图集:汉语方言卷 [Language Atlas of China: Chinese dialects] (in Chinese) (2nd ed.), Beijing: The Commercial Press, ISBN 978-7-100-07054-6.
  • DeFrancis, John (1984), The Chinese Language: Fact and Fantasy, Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press, ISBN 978-0-8248-1068-9.
  • Eberhard, David M.; Simons, Gary F.; Fennig, Charles D., eds. (2024), Ethnologue: Languages of the World (27th ed.), Dallas, TX: SIL International.
  • Hsieh, Hsiu-Mei (2007), Exploring teachers' views about native language instruction and education in Taiwanese elementary schools (PhD thesis), University of Texas at Austin, hdl:2152/3598.
  • Iwata, Ray (1995), "Linguistic geography of Chinese dialects: Project on Han dialects (PHD)", Cahiers de linguistique – Asie orientale, 24 (2): 195–227, doi:10.3406/clao.1995.1475.
  • ——— (2010), "Chinese Geolinguistics: History, Current Trend and Theoretical Issues", Dialectologia, Special issue I: 97–121.
  • Kurpaska, Maria (2010), Chinese Language(s): A Look Through the Prism of "The Great Dictionary of Modern Chinese Dialects", Walter de Gruyter, ISBN 978-3-11-021914-2.
  • Li, Ying-Che (2001), "Aspects of historical-comparative syntax: functions of prepositions in Taiwanese and Mandarin", in Chappell, Hilary M. (ed.), Sinitic grammar: synchronic and diachronic perspectives, Oxford University Press, pp. 340–368, ISBN 978-0-19-829977-6.
  • Liang, Sihua (2014), Language Attitudes and Identities in Multilingual China: A Linguistic Ethnography, Springer, ISBN 978-3-319-12618-0.
  • Mair, Victor H. (1991), "What Is a Chinese 'Dialect/Topolect'? Reflections on Some Key Sino-English Linguistic terms" (PDF), Sino-Platonic Papers, 29: 1–31.
  • ——— (2013), (PDF), in Cao, Guangshun; Djamouri, Redouane; Chappell, Hilary; Wiebusch, Thekla (eds.), Breaking Down the Barriers: Interdisciplinary Studies in Chinese Linguistics and Beyond, Taipei: Institute of Linguistics, Academia Sinica, pp. 735–754, ISBN 978-986-03-7678-4, archived from the original (PDF) on 16 April 2018, retrieved 15 April 2018.
  • Norman, Jerry (1988), Chinese, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-29653-3.
  • ——— (2003), "The Chinese dialects: phonology", in Thurgood, Graham; LaPolla, Randy J. (eds.), The Sino-Tibetan languages, Routledge, pp. 72–83, ISBN 978-0-7007-1129-1.
  • Pulleyblank, Edwin George (1984), Middle Chinese: A Study in Historical Phonology, Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, ISBN 978-0-7748-0192-8.
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  • Tang, Chaoju; van Heuven, Vincent J. (2009), "Mutual intelligibility of Chinese dialects experimentally tested", Lingua, 119 (5): 709–732, doi:10.1016/j.lingua.2008.10.001, hdl:1887/14919.
  • Wang, Feng (2005), "On the genetic position of the Bai language", Cahiers de Linguistique Asie Orientale, 34 (1): 101–127, doi:10.3406/clao.2005.1728.
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  • Yan, Margaret Mian (2006), Introduction to Chinese Dialectology, LINCOM Europa, ISBN 978-3-89586-629-6.
  • Yue-Hashimoto, Anne (1993), Comparative Chinese Dialectal Grammar: Handbook for Investigators, Paris: École des hautes études en sciences sociales, Centre de recherches linguistiques sur l'Asie orientale, ISBN 978-2-910216-00-9.
  • Yue, Anne O. (2017), "The Sinitic languages: grammar", in Thurgood, Graham; LaPolla, Randy J. (eds.), The Sino-Tibetan Languages (2nd ed.), Routledge, pp. 114–163, ISBN 978-1-138-78332-4.

Further reading edit

  • Ao, Benjamin (1991), "Comparative reconstruction of proto-Chinese revisited", Language Sciences, 13 (3/4): 335–379, doi:10.1016/0388-0001(91)90022-S.
  • Baron, Stephen P. (1983), "Chain shifts in Chinese historical phonology: problems of motivation and functionality", Cahiers de Linguistique Asie Orientale, 12 (1): 43–63, doi:10.3406/clao.1983.1125.
  • Ben Hamed, Mahé (2005), "Neighbour-nets portray the Chinese dialect continuum and the linguistic legacy of China's demic history", Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 272 (1567): 1015–1022, doi:10.1098/rspb.2004.3015, JSTOR 30047639, PMC 1599877, PMID 16024359.
  • ———; Wang, Feng (2006), "Stuck in the forest: Trees, networks and Chinese dialects", Diachronica, 23 (1): 29–60, doi:10.1075/dia.23.1.04ham.
  • Branner, David Prager (2000), Problems in Comparative Chinese Dialectology – the Classification of Miin and Hakka, Trends in Linguistics series, vol. 123, Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, ISBN 978-3-11-015831-1.
  • Chappell, Hilary (2001), "Synchrony and diachrony of Sinitic languages: A brief history of Chinese dialects" (PDF), in Chappell, Hilary (ed.), Sinitic grammar: synchronic and diachronic perspectives, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 3–28, ISBN 978-0-19-829977-6.
  • ———; Li, Ming; Peyraube, Alain (2007), "Chinese linguistics and typology: the state of the art", Linguistic Typology, 11 (1): 187–211, doi:10.1515/LINGTY.2007.014, S2CID 123103670.
  • Escure, Geneviève (1997), Creole and Dialect Continua: standard acquisition processes in Belize and China (PRC), John Benjamins, ISBN 978-90-272-5240-1.
  • Francis, Norbert (2016), "Language and dialect in China", Chinese Language and Discourse, 7 (1): 136–149, doi:10.1075/cld.7.1.05fra.
  • Groves, Julie M. (2008), "Language or Dialect – or Topolect? A Comparison of the Attitudes of Hong Kongers and Mainland Chinese towards the Status of Cantonese" (PDF), Sino-Platonic Papers, 179: 1–103.
  • Handel, Zev (2015), "The Classification of Chinese: Sinitic (The Chinese Language Family)", in Wang, William S. Y.; Sun, Chaofen (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Chinese Linguistics, Oxford University Press, pp. 34–44, ISBN 978-0-19-985633-6.
  • Hannas, William C. (1997), Asia's Orthographic Dilemma, University of Hawaiʻi Press, ISBN 978-0-8248-1892-0.
  • Norman, Jerry (2006), "Common Dialectal Chinese", in Branner, David Prager (ed.), The Chinese Rime Tables: Linguistic Philosophy and Historical-Comparative Phonology, Studies in the Theory and History of Linguistic Science, Series IV: Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, vol. 271, Amsterdam: John Benjamins, pp. 233–254, ISBN 978-90-272-4785-8.
  • Sagart, Laurent (1998), "On distinguishing Hakka and non-Hakka dialects", Journal of Chinese Linguistics, 26 (2): 281–302, JSTOR 23756757.
  • Simmons, Richard VanNess (1999), Chinese Dialect Classification: A comparative approach to Harngjou, Old Jintarn, and Common Northern Wu, John Benjamins, ISBN 978-90-272-8433-4.
  • ———, ed. (2022), Studies in Colloquial Chinese and Its History : Dialect and Text, Hong Kong University Press, ISBN 978-988-8754-09-0.
  • Tam, Gina Anne (2020), Dialect and Nationalism in China, 1860–1960, Cambridge University Press, doi:10.1017/9781108776400, ISBN 978-1-108-77640-0.
  • Hatano Tarō (波多野太郎) (1966), 中国方志所錄方言滙編 [Compilation of Chinese dialects in local chronicles] (in Japanese), Yokohama shiritsu daigaku kiyō, OCLC 50634504
  • Chen Xiaojin (陈晓锦) Gan Yu'en (甘于恩) (2010), 东南亚华人社区汉语方言概要 [Summary of Local Chinese Dialects in Southeast Asian Overseas Communities] (in Chinese), Guangzhou: World Publishing, ISBN 978-7-510-08769-1.

External links edit

  • Hànyǔ Fāngyīn Zìhuì 汉語方音字汇 [Dictionary of Chinese dialect pronunciations], Beijing University, 1962.
    • at the Wayback Machine (archived 18 October 2005), compiled by William Wang and Chin-Chuan Cheng (archived from the originals at City University of Hong Kong)
    • at the Wayback Machine (archived 27 June 2015) compiled by Dylan W.H. Sung
    • Chinese Dialects: search interface to the DOC database, at StarLing
  • Hànyǔ Fāngyīn Cíhuì 汉語方音词汇 [Chinese dialect vocabularies], Beijing University, 1964.
    • CLDF dataset (Version v4.0). Zenodo. doi:10.5281/zenodo.3534942
  • Institute of Linguistics, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (1981), Fāngyán diàochá zìbiǎo 方言调查字表 [Dialect survey character table] (PDF) (revised ed.), Beijing: Commercial Press.
  • Chinese Dialect Geography – linguistic maps and commentaries from Iwata, Ray, ed. (2009), Interpretive maps of Chinese dialects, Tokyo: Hakuteisha Press.
  • Technical Notes on the Chinese Language Dialects, by Dylan W.H. Sung (Phonology and Official Romanization Schemes)

varieties, chinese, varieties, chinese, people, chinese, subgroups, spoken, chinese, redirects, here, other, languages, spoken, china, languages, china, there, hundreds, local, chinese, language, varieties, forming, branch, sino, tibetan, language, family, man. For the varieties of Han Chinese people see Han Chinese subgroups Spoken Chinese redirects here For other languages spoken in China see Languages of China There are hundreds of local Chinese language varieties b forming a branch of the Sino Tibetan language family many of which are not mutually intelligible Variation is particularly strong in the more mountainous southeast part of mainland China The varieties are typically classified into several groups Mandarin Wu Min Xiang Gan Jin Hakka and Yue though some varieties remain unclassified These groups are neither clades nor individual languages defined by mutual intelligibility but reflect common phonological developments from Middle Chinese ChineseSiniticGeographicdistributionChina Taiwan Singapore MalaysiaLinguistic classificationSino TibetanSiniticChineseEarly formsOld Chinese Eastern Han Chinese Middle Chinese a SubdivisionsMandarin Jin Wu Hui Gan Xiang Min Hakka Yue PingISO 639 5zhxLinguasphere79 AAAGlottologsini1245Primary branches of Chinese according to the Language Atlas of China 3 The Mandarin area extends into Yunnan and Xinjiang not shown Chinese nameSimplified Chinese汉语Traditional Chinese漢語Hanyu PinyinHanyǔLiteral meaningHan languageTranscriptionsStandard MandarinHanyu PinyinHanyǔBopomofoㄏㄢˋ ㄩˇGwoyeu RomatzyhHannyeuWade GilesHan4 yu3Tongyong PinyinHan yǔYale RomanizationHan yǔIPA xa n y WuRomanizationhoe3 nyiu2HakkaRomanizationHon NgiYue CantoneseYale Romanizationhon yuhJyutpinghon3 jyu5Canton Romanizationhon3 yu5IPA hɔ ːn jy ː Southern MinHokkien POJHan gi Han guEastern MinFuzhou BUCHang ngṳ Chinese varieties have the greatest differences in their phonology and to a lesser extent in vocabulary and syntax Southern varieties tend to have fewer initial consonants than northern and central varieties but more often preserve the Middle Chinese final consonants All have phonemic tones with northern varieties tending to have fewer distinctions than southern ones Many have tone sandhi with the most complex patterns in the coastal area from Zhejiang to eastern Guangdong Standard Chinese takes its phonology from the Beijing dialect with vocabulary from the Mandarin group and grammar based on literature in the modern written vernacular It is one of the official languages of China and one of the four official languages of Singapore It has become a pluricentric language with differences in pronunciation and vocabulary between the three forms It is also one of the six official languages of the United Nations Contents 1 History 1 1 Standard Chinese 1 2 Comparison with Romance 2 Classification 2 1 Dialect groups 2 2 Dialect geography 2 3 Intelligibility testing 2 4 Terminology 3 Phonology 3 1 Initials 3 2 Finals 3 3 Tones 4 Vocabulary 5 Grammar 5 1 Constituent order 5 2 Nominals 5 3 Major sentence types 5 4 Verb phrases 6 Sociolinguistics 6 1 Bilingualism and code switching 6 2 Language policy 6 2 1 Mainland China 6 2 2 Taiwan 6 2 3 Singapore 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Works cited 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory editAt the end of the 2nd millennium BC a form of Chinese was spoken in a compact area along the lower Wei River and middle Yellow River Use of this language expanded eastwards across the North China Plain into Shandong and then southwards into the Yangtze River valley and the hills of south China Chinese eventually replaced many of the languages previously dominant in these areas and forms of the language spoken in different regions began to diverge 7 During periods of political unity there was a tendency for states to promote the use of a standard language across the territory they controlled in order to facilitate communication between people from different regions 8 The first evidence of dialectal variation is found in the texts of the Spring and Autumn period 771 476 BC Although the Zhou royal domain was no longer politically powerful its speech still represented a model for communication across China 7 The Fangyan early 1st century AD is devoted to differences in vocabulary between regions 9 Commentaries from the Eastern Han 25 220 AD provide significant evidence of local differences in pronunciation The Qieyun a rime dictionary published in 601 noted wide variations in pronunciation between regions and was created with the goal of defining a standard system of pronunciation for reading the classics 10 This standard is known as Middle Chinese and is believed to be a diasystem based on a compromise between the reading traditions of the northern and southern capitals 11 The North China Plain provided few barriers to migration which resulted in relative linguistic homogeneity over a wide area Contrastingly the mountains and rivers of southern China contain all six of the other major Chinese dialect groups with each in turn featuring great internal diversity particularly in Fujian 12 13 Standard Chinese edit Main article Standard Chinese Until the mid 20th century most Chinese people spoke only their local language As a practical measure officials of the Ming and Qing dynasties carried out the administration of the empire using a common language based on Mandarin varieties known as Guanhua 官話 官话 officer speech While never formally defined knowledge of this language was essential for a career in the imperial bureaucracy 14 In the early years of the Republic of China Literary Chinese was replaced as the written standard by written vernacular Chinese which was based on northern dialects In the 1930s a standard national language with pronunciation based on the Beijing dialect was adopted but with vocabulary drawn from a range of Mandarin varieties and grammar based on literature in the modern written vernacular 15 Standard Chinese is the official spoken language of the People s Republic of China and Taiwan and is one of the official languages of Singapore 16 It has become a pluricentric language with differences in pronunciation and vocabulary between the three forms 17 18 Standard Chinese is much more widely studied than any other variety of Chinese and its use is now dominant in public life on the mainland 19 Outside of China and Taiwan the only varieties of Chinese commonly taught in university courses are Standard Chinese and Cantonese 20 Comparison with Romance edit Chinese has been likened to the Romance languages that descended from Latin In both cases the ancestral language was spread by imperial expansion over substrate languages 2000 years ago by the Qin and Han empires in China and the Roman Empire in Europe Medieval Latin remained the standard for scholarly and administrative writing in Western Europe for centuries influencing local varieties much like Literary Chinese did in China In both cases local forms of speech diverged from both the literary standard and each other producing dialect continua with mutually unintelligible varieties separated by long distances 20 21 However a major difference between China and Western Europe is the historical reestablishment of political unity in 6th century China by the Sui dynasty a unity that has persisted with relatively brief interludes until the present day Meanwhile Europe remained politically decentralized and developed numerous independent states Vernacular writing using the Latin alphabet supplanted Latin itself and states eventually developed their own standard languages In China Literary Chinese was predominantly used in formal writing until the early 20th century Written Chinese read with different local pronunciations continued to serve as a source of vocabulary for the local varieties The new standard written vernacular Chinese the counterpart of spoken Standard Chinese is similarly used as a literary form by speakers of all varieties 22 23 Classification editFurther information List of varieties of Chinese Dialectologist Jerry Norman estimated that there are hundreds of mutually unintelligible varieties of Chinese 24 These varieties form a dialect continuum in which differences in speech generally become more pronounced as distances increase although there are also some sharp boundaries 25 However the rate of change in mutual intelligibility varies immensely depending on region For example the varieties of Mandarin spoken in all three northeastern Chinese provinces are mutually intelligible but in the province of Fujian where Min varieties predominate the speech of neighbouring counties or even villages may be mutually unintelligible 26 Dialect groups edit Proportions of first language speakers 27 Mandarin 65 7 Min 6 2 Wu 6 1 Yue 5 6 Jin 5 2 Gan 3 9 Hakka 3 5 Xiang 3 0 Huizhou 0 3 Pinghua others 0 6 Classifications of Chinese varieties in the late 19th century and early 20th century were based on impressionistic criteria They often followed river systems which were historically the main routes of migration and communication in southern China 28 The first scientific classifications based primarily on the evolution of Middle Chinese voiced initials were produced by Wang Li in 1936 and Li Fang Kuei in 1937 with minor modifications by other linguists since 29 The conventionally accepted set of seven dialect groups first appeared in the second edition 1980 of Yuan Jiahua s dialectology handbook 30 31 Mandarin This is the group spoken in northern and southwestern China and has by far the most speakers This group includes the Beijing dialect which forms the basis for Standard Chinese called Putonghua or Guoyu in Chinese and often also translated as Mandarin or simply Chinese In addition the Dungan language of Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan is a Mandarin variety written in the Cyrillic script Wu These varieties are spoken in Shanghai most of Zhejiang and the southern parts of Jiangsu and Anhui The group comprises hundreds of distinct spoken forms many of which are not mutually intelligible The Suzhou dialect is usually taken as representative because Shanghainese features several atypical innovations 32 Wu varieties are distinguished by their retention of voiced or murmured obstruent initials stops affricates and fricatives 33 Gan These varieties are spoken in Jiangxi and neighbouring areas The Nanchang dialect is taken as representative In the past Gan was viewed as closely related to Hakka because of the way Middle Chinese voiced initials became voiceless aspirated initials as in Hakka and were hence called by the umbrella term Hakka Gan dialects 34 35 Xiang The Xiang varieties are spoken in Hunan and southern Hubei The New Xiang varieties represented by the Changsha dialect have been significantly influenced by Southwest Mandarin whereas Old Xiang varieties represented by the Shuangfeng dialect retain features such as voiced initials 36 Min These varieties originated in the mountainous terrain of Fujian and eastern Guangdong and form the only branch of Chinese that cannot be directly derived from Middle Chinese It is also the most diverse with many of the varieties used in neighbouring counties and in the mountains of western Fujian even in adjacent villages being mutually unintelligible 26 Early classifications divided Min into Northern and Southern subgroups but a survey in the early 1960s found that the primary split was between inland and coastal groups 37 38 Varieties from the coastal region around Xiamen have spread to Southeast Asia where they are known as Hokkien named from a dialectical pronunciation of Fujian and Taiwan where they are known as Taiwanese 39 Other offshoots of Min are found in Hainan and the Leizhou Peninsula with smaller communities throughout southern China 38 Hakka The Hakka literally guest families are a group of Han Chinese living in the hills of northeastern Guangdong southwestern Fujian and many other parts of southern China as well as Taiwan and parts of Southeast Asia such as Singapore Malaysia and Indonesia The Meixian dialect is the prestige form 40 Most Hakka varieties retain the full complement of nasal endings m n ŋ and stop endings p t k though there is a tendency for Middle Chinese velar codas ŋ and k to yield dental codas n and t after front vowels 41 Yue These varieties are spoken in Guangdong Guangxi Hong Kong and Macau and have been carried by immigrants to Southeast Asia and many other parts of the world The prestige variety and by far most commonly spoken variety is Cantonese from the city of Guangzhou historically called Canton which is also the native language of the majority in Hong Kong and Macau 42 Taishanese from the coastal area of Jiangmen southwest of Guangzhou was historically the most common Yue variety among overseas communities in the West until the late 20th century 43 Not all Yue varieties are mutually intelligible Most Yue varieties retain the full complement of Middle Chinese word final consonants p t k m n and ŋ and have rich inventories of tones 41 The Language Atlas of China 1987 follows a classification of Li Rong distinguishing three further groups 44 45 Jin These varieties spoken in Shanxi and adjacent areas were formerly included in Mandarin They are distinguished by their retention of the Middle Chinese entering tone category 46 Huizhou The Hui dialects spoken in southern Anhui share different features with Wu Gan and Mandarin making them difficult to classify Earlier scholars had assigned to them one or other of these groups or to a group of their own 47 48 Pinghua These varieties are descended from the speech of the earliest Chinese migrants to Guangxi predating the later influx of Yue and Southwest Mandarin speakers Some linguists treat them as a mixture of Yue and Xiang 49 Some varieties remain unclassified including the Danzhou dialect northwestern Hainan Waxiang northwestern Hunan Xiangnan Tuhua southern Hunan Shaozhou Tuhua northern Guangdong and the forms of Chinese spoken by the She people She Chinese and the Miao people 50 Most of the vocabulary of the Bai language of Yunnan appears to be related to Chinese words though many are clearly loans from the last few centuries Some scholars have suggested that it represents a very early branching from Chinese while others argue that it is a more distantly related Sino Tibetan language overlaid with two millennia of loans 51 52 53 Dialect geography edit nbsp Map of the spread of 16 features identified by Norman as characteristic of northern dialects Areas with all these features are shown in darkest blue those with none in darkest red The central dialects lie in between 54 55 56 57 58 Jerry Norman classified the traditional seven dialect groups into three zones Northern Mandarin Central Wu Gan and Xiang and Southern Hakka Yue and Min 59 He argued that the dialects of the Southern zone are derived from a standard used in the Yangtze valley during the Han dynasty 206 BC 220 AD which he called Old Southern Chinese while the Central zone was a transitional area of dialects that were originally of southern type but overlain with centuries of Northern influence 59 55 Hilary Chappell proposed a refined model dividing Norman s Northern zone into Northern and Southwestern areas and his Southern zone into Southeastern Min and Far Southern Yue and Hakka areas with Pinghua transitional between Southwestern and Far Southern areas 60 The long history of migration of peoples and interaction between speakers of different dialects makes it difficult to apply the tree model to Chinese 61 Scholars account for the transitional nature of the central varieties in terms of wave models Iwata argues that innovations have been transmitted from the north across the Huai River to the Lower Yangtze Mandarin area and from there southeast to the Wu area and westwards along the Yangtze River valley and thence to southwestern areas leaving the hills of the southeast largely untouched 62 Some dialect boundaries such as between Wu and Min are particularly abrupt while others such as between Mandarin and Xiang or between Min and Hakka are much less clearly defined 25 Several east west isoglosses run along the Huai and Yangtze Rivers 63 A north south barrier is formed by the Tianmu and Wuyi Mountains 64 Intelligibility testing edit Most assessments of mutual intelligibility of varieties of Chinese in the literature are impressionistic 65 Functional intelligibility testing is time consuming in any language family and usually not done when more than 10 varieties are to be compared 66 However one 2009 study aimed to measure intelligibility between 15 Chinese provinces In each province 15 university students were recruited as speakers and 15 older rural inhabitants recruited as listeners The listeners were then tested on their comprehension of isolated words and of particular words in the context of sentences spoken by speakers from all 15 of the provinces surveyed 67 The results demonstrated significant levels of unintelligibility between areas even within the Mandarin group In a few cases listeners understood fewer than 70 of words spoken by speakers from the same province indicating significant differences between urban and rural varieties As expected from the wide use of Standard Chinese speakers from Beijing were understood more than speakers from elsewhere 68 The scores supported a primary division between northern groups Mandarin and Jin and all others with Min as an identifiable branch 69 Terminology edit Local varieties from different areas of China are often mutually unintelligible differing at least as much as different Romance languages and perhaps even as much as Indo European languages as a whole 70 71 72 These varieties form the Sinitic branch of the Sino Tibetan language family with Bai sometimes being included in this grouping 73 Because speakers share a standard written form and have a common cultural heritage with long periods of political unity the varieties are popularly perceived among native speakers as variants of a single Chinese language 74 and this is also the official position 75 Conventional English language usage in Chinese linguistics is to use dialect for the speech of a particular place regardless of status while regional groupings like Mandarin and Wu are called dialect groups 24 Other linguists choose to refer to the major groups as languages 71 However each of these groups contains mutually unintelligible varieties 24 ISO 639 3 and the Ethnologue assign language codes to each of the top level groups listed above except Min and Pinghua whose subdivisions are assigned five and two codes respectively 76 The Chinese term fangyan 方言 composed of characters meaning place and speech was the title of the first work of Chinese dialectology in the Han dynasty and has had a range of meanings in the millennia since 77 It is used for any regional subdivision of Chinese from the speech of a village to major branches such as Mandarin and Wu 78 Linguists writing in Chinese often qualify the term to distinguish different levels of classification 79 All these terms have customarily been translated into English as dialect a practice that has been criticized as confusing 80 The neologisms regionalect and topolect have been proposed as alternative renderings of fangyan 80 c Phonology edit nbsp Traditional Chinese syllable structure The usual unit of analysis is the syllable traditionally analysed as consisting of an initial consonant a final and a tone 82 In general southern varieties have fewer initial consonants than northern and central varieties but more often preserve the Middle Chinese final consonants 83 Some varieties such as Cantonese Hokkien and Shanghainese include syllabic nasals as independent syllables 84 Initials edit In the 42 varieties surveyed in the Great Dictionary of Modern Chinese Dialects the number of initials including a zero initial ranges from 15 in some southern dialects to a high of 35 in Chongming dialect spoken in Chongming Island Shanghai 85 Initials of selected varieties 86 87 Fuzhou Min Suzhou Wu Beijing Mandarin Stops andaffricates voiceless aspirated pʰ tʰ tsʰ kʰ pʰ tʰ tsʰ tɕʰ kʰ pʰ tʰ tsʰ tɕʰ tʂʰ kʰ voiceless unaspirated p t ts k p t ts tɕ k p t ts tɕ tʂ k voiced b d dʑ ɡ Fricatives voiceless s x f s ɕ h f s ɕ ʂ x voiced v z ʑ ɦ ɻ ʐ Sonorants l l l Nasals m n ŋ m n ɲ ŋ m n nbsp Map of the extent of the palatal merger in the core Chinese speaking area 88 The initial system of the Fuzhou dialect of northern Fujian is a minimal example 89 With the exception of ŋ which is often merged with the zero initial the initials of this dialect are present in all Chinese varieties although several varieties do not distinguish n from l However most varieties have additional initials due to a combination of innovations and retention of distinctions from Middle Chinese Most non Min varieties have a labiodental fricative f which developed from Middle Chinese bilabial stops in certain environments 90 The voiced initials of Middle Chinese are retained in Wu dialects such as Suzhou and Shanghai as well as Old Xiang dialects and a few Gan dialects but have merged with voiceless initials elsewhere 91 92 Southern Min varieties have an unrelated series of voiced initials resulting from devoicing of nasal initials in syllables without nasal finals 93 The Middle Chinese retroflex initials are retained in many Mandarin dialects including Beijing but not southwestern and southeastern Mandarin varieties 94 In many northern and central varieties there is palatalization of dental affricates velars as in Suzhou or both In many places including Beijing palatalized dental affricates and palatalized velars have merged to form a new palatal series 95 Maps of the distributions of various initial consonants in the core Chinese speaking area nbsp voiced obstruent initials 96 nbsp retroflex initials 97 nbsp velar nasal initial ŋ 98 nbsp retained m where Beijing has w 99 nbsp retained n where Beijing has r 100 Finals edit nbsp Map of the distribution of stop codas in local Chinese dialects in the core Chinese speaking area 101 Chinese finals may be analysed as an optional medial glide a main vowel and an optional coda 102 Conservative vowel systems such as those of Gan dialects have high vowels i u and y which also function as medials mid vowels e and o and a low a like vowel 103 In other dialects including Mandarin dialects o has merged with a leaving a single mid vowel with a wide range of allophones 104 Many dialects particularly in northern and central China have apical or retroflex vowels which are syllabic fricatives derived from high vowels following sibilant initials 105 In many Wu dialects vowels and final glides have monophthongized producing a rich inventory of vowels in open syllables 106 Reduction of medials is common in Yue dialects 107 The Middle Chinese codas consisting of glides j and w nasals m n and ŋ and stops p t and k are best preserved in southern dialects particularly Yue dialects such as Cantonese 41 In some Min dialects nasals and stops following open vowels have shifted to nasalization and glottal stops respectively 108 In Jin Lower Yangtze Mandarin and Wu dialects the stops have merged as a final glottal stop while in most northern varieties they have disappeared 109 In Mandarin dialects final m has merged with n while some central dialects have a single nasal coda in some cases realized as a nasalization of the vowel 110 Tones edit nbsp Map of the variation in the number of tone categories in local Chinese dialects in the core Chinese speaking area 111 All varieties of Chinese like neighbouring languages in the Mainland Southeast Asia linguistic area have phonemic tones Each syllable may be pronounced with between three and seven distinct pitch contours denoting different morphemes For example the Beijing dialect distinguishes ma 妈 媽 mother ma 麻 hemp mǎ 马 馬 horse and ma 骂 罵 to scold The number of tonal contrasts varies between dialects with Northern dialects tending to have fewer distinctions than Southern ones 112 Many dialects have tone sandhi in which the pitch contour of a syllable is affected by the tones of adjacent syllables in a compound word or phrase 113 This process is so extensive in Shanghainese that the tone system is reduced to a pitch accent system much like modern Japanese The tonal categories of modern varieties can be related by considering their derivation from the four tones of Middle Chinese though cognate tonal categories in different dialects are often realized as quite different pitch contours 114 Middle Chinese had a three way tonal contrast in syllables with vocalic or nasal endings The traditional names of the tonal categories are level even 平 ping rising 上 shǎng and departing going 去 qu Syllables ending in a stop consonant p t or k checked syllables had no tonal contrasts but were traditionally treated as a fourth tone category entering 入 ru corresponding to syllables ending in nasals m n or ŋ 115 The tones of Middle Chinese as well as similar systems in neighbouring languages experienced a tone split conditioned by syllabic onsets Syllables with voiced initials tended to be pronounced with a lower pitch and by the late Tang dynasty each of the tones had split into two registers conditioned by the initials known as upper 阴 陰 yin and lower 阳 陽 yang 116 When voicing was lost in all dialects except the Wu and Old Xiang groups this distinction became phonemic yielding eight tonal categories with a six way contrast in unchecked syllables and a two way contrast in checked syllables 117 Cantonese maintains these eight tonal categories and has developed an additional distinction in checked syllables 118 The latter distinction has disappeared again in many varieties However most Chinese varieties have reduced the number of tonal distinctions 114 For example in Mandarin the tones resulting from the split of Middle Chinese rising and departing tones merged leaving four tones Furthermore final stop consonants disappeared in most Mandarin dialects and such syllables were distributed amongst the four remaining tones seemingly at random 119 Tonal categories and pitch contours in colloquial layers Middle Chinese tone and initial level rising departing entering vl n vd vl n vd vl n vd vl n vd Jin 120 Taiyuan 1 3 5 7 8 Mandarin 120 Xi an 1 2 3 5 1 2 Beijing 1 2 3 5 1 2 3 5 5 2 Chengdu 1 2 3 5 2 Yangzhou 1 2 3 5 7 Xiang 121 Changsha 1 2 3 6 5 6 7 Shuangfeng 1 2 3 6 5 6 2 5 Gan 122 Nanchang 1 2 3 6 5 6 7 8 Wu 123 Suzhou 1 2 3 6 5 6 7 8 Shanghai 1 2 3 2 3 2 7 8 Wenzhou 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Min 124 Xiamen 1 2 3 6 5 6 7 8 Hakka 125 Meixian 1 2 3 1 3 1 5 7 8 Yue 126 Guangzhou 1 2 3 4 d 5 6 7a 7b 8 In Wu voiced obstruents were retained and the tone split never became phonemic the higher pitched allophones occur with initial voiceless consonants and the lower pitched allophones occur with initial voiced consonants 123 Traditional Chinese classification nonetheless counts these as different tones Most Wu dialects retain the tone categories of Middle Chinese but in Shanghainese several of these have merged Many Chinese varieties exhibit tone sandhi in which the realization of a tone varies depending on the context of the syllable For example in Standard Chinese a third tone changes to a second tone when followed by another third tone 128 Particularly complex sandhi patterns are found in Wu dialects and coastal Min dialects 129 In Shanghainese the tone of all syllables in a word is determined by the tone of the first so that Shanghainese has word rather than syllable tone Vocabulary editMost morphemes in Chinese varieties are monosyllables descended from Old Chinese words and have cognates in all varieties Colloquial pronunciations of cognate morphemes 130 e Word Jin Mandarin Xiang Gan Wu Min Hakka Yue Taiyuan Xi an Beijing Chengdu Yangzhou Changsha Shuangfeng Nanchang Suzhou Wenzhou Fuzhou Xiamen Meixian Guangzhou 人 person zeŋ 1 ʐẽ 2 ʐen 2 zen 2 len 2 ʐen 2 ɲiɛn 2 ɲin 5 ɲin 2 ɲiaŋ 2 noyŋ 2 laŋ 2 ɲin 2 jɐn 2 男 man nae 1 nae 2 nan 2 nan 2 liae 2 lan 2 lae 2 lan 5 no 2 no 2 naŋ 2 lam 2 nam 2 nam 2 女 woman ny 3 mi 3 ny 3 ɲy 3 ly 3 ɲy 3 ɲy 3 ɲy 3 ɲy 6 ɲy 4 ny 3 lu 3 ŋ 3 noy 4 魚 fish y 1 y 2 y 2 y 2 y 2 y 2 y 2 ɲiɛ 5 ŋ 2 ŋoy 2 ŋy 2 hi 2 ŋ 2 jy 2 蛇 snake sɤ 1 ʂɤ 2 ʂɤ 2 se 2 ɕɪ 2 sa 2 ɣio 2 sa 5 zo 2 zei 2 sie 2 tsua 2 sa 2 ʃɛ 2 肉 meat zueʔ 7 ʐou 5 ʐou 5 zeu 2 leʔ 7 ʐeu 7 ɲu 5 ɲiuk 8 ɲioʔ 8 ɲieu 8 nyʔ 8 hɪk 8 ɲiuk 7 juk 8 骨 bone kueʔ 7 ku 1 ku 3 ku 2 kueʔ 7 ku 7 keu 2 kut 7 kuɤʔ 7 ky 7 kauʔ 7 kut 7 kut 7 kuɐt 7a 眼 eye nie 3 ɲia 3 iɛn 3 iɛn 3 iae 3 ŋan 3 ŋae 3 ŋan 3 ŋɛ 6 ŋa 4 ŋiaŋ 3 gɪŋ 3 ɲian 3 ŋan 4 耳 ear ɚ 3 ɚ 3 ɚ 3 ɚ 3 a 3 ɤ 3 e 3 e 3 ɲi 6 ŋ 4 ŋei 5 hi 6 ɲi 3 ji 4 鼻 nose pieʔ 8 pi 2 pi 2 pi 2 pieʔ 7 pi 2 bi 6 pʰit 8 bɤʔ 8 bei 6 pei 6 pʰi 6 pʰi 5 pei 6 日 sun day zeʔ 7 ɚ 1 ʐʅ 5 zɿ 2 leʔ 7 ɲʅ 7 i 2 ɲit 8 ɲɪʔ 8 ɲiai 8 niʔ 8 lit 8 ɲit 7 jat 8 月 moon month yeʔ 7 ye 1 ye 5 ye 2 yeʔ 7 ye 7 ya 5 ɲyɔt 8 ŋɤʔ 8 ɲy 8 ŋuɔʔ 8 geʔ 8 ɲiat 8 jyt 8 年 year nie 1 ɲiae 2 niɛn 2 ɲiɛn 2 liẽ 2 ɲiẽ 2 ɲɪ 2 ɲiɛn 5 ɲiɪ 2 ɲi 2 nieŋ 2 nĩ 2 ɲian 2 nin 2 山 mountain sae 1 sae 1 ʂan 1 san 1 sae 1 san 1 sae 1 san 1 sɛ 1 sa 1 saŋ 1 sua 1 san 1 ʃan 1 水 water suei 3 fei 3 ʂuei 3 suei 3 suei 3 ɕyei 3 ɕy 3 sui 3 sɥ 3 sɿ 3 tsy 3 tsui 3 sui 3 ʃoy 3 紅 red xuŋ 1 xuoŋ 2 xuŋ 2 xoŋ 2 xoŋ 2 xen 2 ɣen 2 fuŋ 5 ɦoŋ 2 ɦoŋ 2 oyŋ 2 aŋ 2 fuŋ 2 huŋ 2 綠 green lueʔ 7 lou 1 ly 5 nu 2 lɔʔ 7 lou 7 leu 2 liuk 8 loʔ 7 lo 8 luɔʔ 8 lɪk 8 liuk 8 luk 8 黃 yellow xuɒ 1 xuaŋ 2 xuaŋ 2 xuaŋ 2 xuɑŋ 2 uan 2 ɒŋ 2 uɔŋ 5 ɦuɒŋ 2 ɦuɔ 2 uɔŋ 2 hɔŋ 2 vɔŋ 2 wɔŋ 2 白 white pieʔ 7 pei 2 pai 2 pe 2 pɔʔ 7 pɤ 7 pia 2 pʰak 7 bɒʔ 8 ba 8 paʔ 8 peʔ 8 pʰak 8 pak 8 黑 black xeʔ 7 xei 1 xei 1 xe 2 xeʔ 7 xa 7 ɕia 2 hɛt 8 hɤʔ 7 xe 7 xaiʔ 7 hɪk 7 hɛt 7 hɐk 7a 上 above sɒ 5 ʂaŋ 5 ʂaŋ 5 saŋ 5 sɑŋ 5 san 6 ɣiaŋ 6 sɔŋ 6 zɒŋ 6 ji 6 suɔŋ 6 tsiũ 6 sɔŋ 5 ʃœŋ 6 下 below ɕia 5 xa 5 ɕia 5 ɕia 5 xɑ 5 xa 6 ɣo 6 ha 6 ɦo 6 ɦo 4 a 6 e 6 ha 2 ha 6 中 middle tsuŋ 1 pfeŋ 1 tʂuŋ 1 tsoŋ 1 tsoŋ 1 tʂen 1 tan 1 tsuŋ 1 tsoŋ 1 tɕyoŋ 1 touŋ 1 taŋ 1 tuŋ 1 tʃuŋ 1 大 big ta 5 tuo 5 ta 5 ta 5 tai 5 tai 6 du 6 tʰɔ 6 deu 6 deu 6 tuai 6 tua 6 tʰai 5 tai 6 小 small ɕiau 3 ɕiau 3 ɕiau 3 ɕiau 3 ɕiɔ 3 ɕiau 3 ɕiɤ 3 ɕiɛu 3 siae 3 sai 3 sieu 3 sio 3 siau 3 ʃiu 3 Southern varieties also include distinctive substrata of vocabulary of non Chinese origin Some of these words may have come from Tai Kadai and Austroasiatic languages 131 Grammar editChinese varieties generally lack inflectional morphology and instead express grammatical categories using analytic means such as particles and prepositions 132 There are major differences between northern and southern varieties but often some northern areas share features found in the south and vice versa 133 Constituent order edit nbsp Map of the variation in the placement of animal gender markers in local Chinese dialects in the core Chinese speaking area 134 The usual unmarked word order in Chinese varieties is subject verb object with other orders used for emphasis or contrast 135 Modifiers usually precede the word they modify so that adjectives precede nouns 136 Instances in which the modifier follows the head are mainly found in the south and are attributed to substrate influences from languages formerly dominant in the area especially Kra Dai languages 137 Adverbs generally precede verbs but in some southern varieties certain kinds of adverb follow the verb 138 In the north animal gender markers are prefixed to the noun as in Beijing mǔji 母鸡 母雞 hen and gōngji 公鸡 公雞 rooster but most southern varieties use the reverse order while others use different orders for different words 139 Compounds consisting of an attributive following a noun are less common but some are found in the south as well as a few northern areas 140 Nominals edit Nouns in Chinese varieties are generally not marked for number 133 As in languages of the Mainland Southeast Asia linguistic area Chinese varieties require an intervening classifier when a noun is preceded by a demonstrative or numeral 141 The inventory of classifiers tends to be larger in the south than in the north where some varieties use only the general classifier cognate with ge 个 個 142 First and second person pronouns are cognate across all varieties For third person pronouns Jin Mandarin and Xiang varieties have cognate forms but other varieties generally use forms that originally had a velar or glottal initial 143 Personal pronouns e Jin 130 Mandarin 144 Xiang 145 Gan 146 Wu 147 Min 148 Hakka 149 Yue 150 Taiyuan Xi an Beijing Chengdu Yangzhou Changsha Shuangfeng Nanchang Suzhou Wenzhou Fuzhou Xiamen Meixian Guangzhou I ɣɤ 3 ŋe 3 uo 3 ŋo 3 o 3 ŋo 3 aŋ 3 ŋɔ 3 ŋeu 6 ŋ 4 ŋuai 3 gua 3 ŋai 2 ŋo 4 you ni 3 ni 3 ni 3 ni 3 liɪ 3 n 3 ɲi 3 n 3 li 3 n 3 ne 6 ɲi 4 ny 3 li 3 ɲi 2 n 2 nei 4 he she tʰa 1 tʰa 1 tʰa 1 tʰa 1 tʰa 1 tʰa 1 tʰo 1 tɕʰiɛ 3 li 1 gi 2 i 1 i 1 ki 2 kʰoy 4 Plural personal pronouns may be marked with a suffix noun or phrase in different varieties The suffix men 们 們 is common in the north but several different suffixes are use elsewhere 142 In some varieties especially in the Wu area different suffixes are used for first second and third person pronouns 151 Case is not marked except in varieties in the Qinghai Gansu sprachbund 151 The forms of demonstratives vary greatly with few cognates between different areas 152 A two way distinction between proximal and distal is most common but some varieties have a single neutral demonstrative while others distinguish three or more on the basis of distance visibility or other properties 153 An extreme example is found in a variety spoken in Yongxin County Jiangxi where five grades of distance are distinguished 154 Attributive constructions typically have the form NP VP ATTR NP where the last noun phrase is the head and the attributive marker is usually a cognate of de 的 in the north or a classifier in the south 155 The latter pattern is also common in the languages of Southeast Asia 156 A few varieties in the Jiang Huai Wu southern Min and Yue areas feature the old southern pattern of a zero attributive marker 155 Nominalization of verb phrases or predicates is achieved by following them with a marker usually the same as the attributive marker though some varieties use a different marker 157 Major sentence types edit All varieties have transitive and intransitive verbs Instead of adjectives Chinese varieties use stative verbs which can function as predicates but differ from intransitive verbs in being modifiable by degree adverbs 158 Ditransitive sentences vary with northern varieties placing the indirect object before the direct object and southern varieties using the reverse order 159 All varieties have copular sentences of the form NP1 COP NP2 though the copula varies 160 Most Yue and Hakka varieties use a form cognate with xi 係 to connect 161 All other varieties use a form cognate with shi 是 which was a demonstrative in Classical Chinese but began to be used as a copula from the Han period 162 163 All varieties form existential sentences with a verb cognate with yǒu 有 which can also be used as a transitive verb indicating possession 164 Most varieties use a locative verb cognate to zai 在 but Min Wu and Yue varieties use several different forms 165 All varieties allow sentences of the form NP VP1 COMP VP2 with a verbal complement VP2 containing a stative verb describing the manner or extent of the main verb 166 In northern varieties the marker is a cognate of de 得 but many southern varieties distinguish between manner and extent complements using different markers 167 Standard Chinese does not allow an object to co occur with a verbal complement but other varieties permit an object between the marker and the complement 168 A characteristic feature of Chinese varieties is in situ questions 169 Open questions are formed by replacing the desired information with an interrogative word though the words vary between different areas 170 Yes no questions are formed by appending a particle to the sentence This particle is a cognate of ma 吗 嗎 in the north but varies between other varieties 171 Other question forms are also common Most varieties have neutral questions employing the form V NEG V repeating the same verb 172 When the verb takes an object some northwestern Mandarin varieties tend to place it after the first occurrence of the verb while other Mandarin varieties and most southern varieties place it after the second occurrence 173 Most varieties form disjunctive questions by placing a conjunction between the alternatives though some also use particles to mark the disjuncts 174 Standard Chinese is unusual in allowing a form with no conjunction 171 Verb phrases edit A sentence is negated by placing a marker before the verb Old Chinese had two families of negation markers starting with p and m respectively 175 Northern and Central varieties tend to use a word from the first family cognate with Beijing bu 不 as the ordinary negator 54 A word from the second family is used as an existential negator have not as in Beijing mei 沒 and Shanghai m2 176 In Mandarin varieties this word is also used for not yet whereas in Wu and other groups a different form is typically used 177 In Southern varieties negators tend to come from the second family The ordinary negators in these varieties are all derived from a syllabic nasal m though it has a level tone in Hakka and Yue and a rising tone in Min Existential negators derive from a proto form mau though again the tonal category varies between groups 178 Chinese varieties generally indicate the roles of nouns with respect to verbs using prepositions derived from grammaticalized verbs 179 180 Varieties differ in the set of prepositions used with northern varieties tending to use a substantially larger inventory including disyllabic and trisyllabic prepositions 181 In northern varieties the preposition bǎ 把 may be used to move the object before the verb the disposal construction 182 Similar structures using several different prepositions are used in the south but tend to be avoided in more colloquial speech 183 Comparative constructions are expressed with a prepositional phrase before the stative verb in most northern and central varieties as well as Northern Min and Hakka while other southern varieties retain the older form in which the prepositional phrase follows the stative verb 184 The preposition is usually bǐ 比 in the north with other forms used elsewhere 185 Chinese varieties tend to indicate aspect using markers following the main verb 186 The markers usually derived from verbs vary widely in both their forms and their degree of grammaticalization from independent verbs through complements to bound suffixes 186 Southern varieties tend to have richer aspect systems making more distinctions than corthern ones 187 Sociolinguistics editBilingualism and code switching edit This section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message This section needs expansion with Info on Taiwan e g for Hakka Mandarin and Hokkien Mandarin You can help by adding to it December 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message In southern China not including Hong Kong and Macau where the difference between Standard Chinese and local dialects is particularly pronounced well educated Chinese are generally fluent in Standard Chinese and most people have at least a good passive knowledge of it in addition to being native speakers of the local dialect The choice of dialect varies based on the social situation Standard Chinese is usually considered more formal and is required when speaking to a person who does not understand the local dialect The local dialect be it non Standard Chinese or non Mandarin altogether is generally considered more intimate and is used among close family members and friends and in everyday conversation within the local area Chinese speakers will frequently code switch between Standard Chinese and the local dialect Parents will generally speak to their children in the local variety and the relationship between dialect and Mandarin appears to be mostly stable even a diglossia Local dialects are valued as symbols of regional cultures 188 People generally are tied to the hometown and therefore the hometown dialect instead of a broad linguistic classification For example a person from Wuxi may claim that he speaks Wuxi dialect even though it is similar to Shanghainese another Wu dialect Likewise a person from Xiaogan may claim that he speaks Xiaogan dialect Linguistically Xiaogan dialect is a dialect of Mandarin but the pronunciation and diction are quite different from spoken Standard Chinese Knowing the local dialect is of considerable social benefit and most Chinese who permanently move to a new area will attempt to pick up the local dialect Learning a new dialect is usually done informally through a process of immersion and recognizing sound shifts Generally the differences are more pronounced lexically than grammatically Typically a speaker of one dialect of Chinese will need about a year of immersion to understand the local dialect and about three to five years to become fluent in speaking it Because of the variety of dialects spoken there are usually few formal methods for learning a local dialect Due to the variety in Chinese speech Mandarin speakers from each area of China are very often prone to fuse or translate words from their local language into their Mandarin conversations In addition each area of China has its recognizable accents while speaking Mandarin Generally the nationalized standard form of Mandarin pronunciation is only heard on news and radio broadcasts Even in the streets of Beijing the flavor of Mandarin varies in pronunciation from the Mandarin heard on the media Language policy edit nbsp A school in Guangdong with writing Please speak Standard Chinese Please write standard characters on the wall Mainland China edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2008 Learn how and when to remove this message Within mainland China there has been a persistent Promotion of Putonghua drive for instance the education system is entirely Mandarin medium from the second year onward However usage of local dialect is tolerated and socially preferred in many informal situations In Hong Kong written Cantonese is not used in formal documents and within the PRC a character set closer to Mandarin tends to be used At the national level differences in dialect generally do not correspond to political divisions or categories and this has for the most part prevented dialect from becoming the basis of identity politics Historically many of the people who promoted Chinese nationalism were from southern China and did not natively speak Mandarin and even leaders from northern China rarely spoke with the standard accent For example Mao Zedong often emphasized his origins in Hunan in speaking rendering much of what he said incomprehensible to many Chinese citation needed Chiang Kai shek and Sun Yat sen were also from southern China and this is reflected in their conventional English names reflecting Cantonese pronunciations for their given names and differing from their pinyin spellings Jiǎng Jieshi and Sun Yixian One consequence of this is that China does not have a well developed tradition of spoken political rhetoric and most Chinese political works are intended primarily as written works rather than spoken works Another factor that limits the political implications of dialect is that it is very common within an extended family for different people to know and use different dialects Taiwan edit Further information Languages of Taiwan Before 1945 other than a small Japanese speaking population most of the population of Taiwan were Han Chinese who spoke Taiwanese Hokkien or Hakka with a minority of Taiwanese aborigines who spoke Formosan languages 189 When the Kuomintang retreated to the island after losing the Chinese Civil War in 1949 they brought a substantial influx of speakers of Northern Chinese and other dialects from across China and viewed the use of Mandarin as part of their claim to be a legitimate government of the whole of China 190 Education policy promoted the use of Mandarin over the local languages and was implemented especially rigidly in elementary schools with punishments and public humiliation for children using other languages at school 190 From the 1970s the government promoted adult education in Mandarin required Mandarin for official purposes and encouraged its increased use in broadcasting 191 Over a 40 year period these policies succeeded in spreading the use and prestige of Mandarin through society at the expense of the other languages 192 They also aggravated social divisions as Mandarin speakers found it difficult to find jobs in private companies but were favored for government positions 192 From the 1990s Taiwanese native languages Taiwanese Hokkien Taiwanese Hakka and the Formosan languages were offered in elementary and middle schools first in Yilan county then in other areas governed by elected Democratic Progressive Party DPP politicians and finally throughout the island 193 Singapore edit Further information Languages of SingaporeThis section needs expansion with How did dialect speakers react to Mandarinization You can help by adding to it December 2018 In 1966 the Singaporean government implemented a policy of bilingual education where Singaporean students learn both English and their designated native language which was Mandarin for Chinese Singaporeans even though Singaporean Hokkien had previously been their lingua franca The Goh Report an evaluation of Singapore s education system by Goh Keng Swee showed that less than 40 of the student population managed to attain minimum levels of competency in two languages 194 It was later determined that the learning of Mandarin among Singaporean Chinese was hindered by home use of other Chinese varieties such as Hokkien Teochew Cantonese and Hakka 195 196 Hence the government decided to rectify problems facing implementation of the bilingual education policy by launching a campaign to promote Mandarin as a common language among the Chinese population and to discourage use of other Chinese varieties Launched in 1979 by then Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew 197 the campaign aimed to simplify the language environment for Chinese Singaporeans improve communication between them and create a Mandarin speaking environment conducive to the successful implementation of the bilingual education program The initial goal of the campaign was for all young Chinese to stop speaking dialects in five years and to establish Mandarin as the language of choice in public places within 10 years 198 199 According to the government for the bilingual policy to be effective Mandarin should be spoken at home and should serve as the lingua franca among Chinese Singaporeans 200 They also argued that Mandarin was more economically valuable and speaking Mandarin would help Chinese Singaporeans retain their heritage as Mandarin contains a cultural repository of values and traditions that are identifiable to all Chinese regardless of dialect group 201 See also editLanguages of China List of varieties of Chinese Linguistic Atlas of Chinese Dialects Protection of the Varieties of ChineseNotes edit The colloquial layers of many varieties particularly Min varieties reflect features that predate Middle Chinese 1 2 Also known as the Sinitic languages from Late Latin Sinae the Chinese In 1982 Paul K Benedict proposed a subgroup of Sino Tibetan called Sinitic comprising Bai and Chinese 4 The precise affiliation of Bai remains uncertain 5 but the term Sinitic is usually used as a synonym for Chinese especially when viewed as a language family 6 John DeFrancis proposed the neologism regionalect to serve as a translation for fangyan when referring to mutually unintelligible divisions 80 Victor Mair coined the term topolect as a translation for all uses of fangyan 81 The latter term appears in The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language Some words of literary origin with voiced initials shifted to category 6 127 a b The tone numbers of Tones are used to facilitate comparison between dialects References editCitations edit Norman 1988 pp 211 214 Pulleyblank 1984 p 3 Wurm et al 1987 Map A2 Wang 2005 p 107 Wang 2005 p 122 Mair 1991 p 3 a b Norman 1988 p 183 Norman 1988 pp 183 185 Norman 1988 p 185 Ramsey 1987 pp 116 117 Norman 1988 pp 24 25 Norman 1988 pp 183 190 Ramsey 1987 p 22 Norman 1988 p 136 Ramsey 1987 pp 3 15 Bradley 1992 pp 309 312 Bradley 1992 pp 313 318 Chen 1999 pp 46 49 Norman 1988 p 247 a b Norman 1988 p 187 Ramsey 1987 p 7 Norman 1988 pp 2 3 Ramsey 1987 pp 16 18 a b c Norman 2003 p 72 a b Norman 1988 pp 189 190 a b Norman 1988 p 188 Chinese Academy of Social Sciences 2012 pp 3 125 Kurpaska 2010 pp 36 41 Kurpaska 2010 pp 41 53 Norman 1988 p 181 Kurpaska 2010 pp 53 55 61 215 Yan 2006 p 90 Norman 1988 pp 199 200 Kurpaska 2010 pp 46 49 50 Yan 2006 p 148 Norman 1988 pp 207 209 Kurpaska 2010 p 49 a b Norman 1988 p 233 Norman 1988 pp 232 233 Norman 1988 p 224 a b c Norman 1988 p 217 Norman 1988 p 215 Ramsey 1987 p 98 Wurm et al 1987 Kurpaska 2010 pp 55 56 Yan 2006 pp 60 61 Yan 2006 pp 222 223 Kurpaska 2010 pp 43 44 48 69 75 76 Yan 2006 p 235 Kurpaska 2010 pp 72 73 Ramsey 1987 pp 290 291 Norman 2003 pp 73 75 Wang 2005 a b Norman 1988 p 182 a b Norman 2003 pp 73 76 Cao 2008a Maps 4 52 66 73 Cao 2008b Maps 5 52 79 109 134 138 Cao 2008c Maps 3 28 38 41 76 a b Norman 1988 pp 182 183 Chappell 2015 pp 45 51 Norman 2003 p 76 Iwata 2010 pp 102 108 Iwata 1995 pp 211 212 Iwata 1995 pp 215 216 218 Tang amp van Heuven 2009 pp 713 714 Tang amp van Heuven 2009 p 712 Tang amp van Heuven 2009 pp 715 717 Tang amp van Heuven 2009 pp 718 722 Tang amp van Heuven 2009 pp 721 722 Norman 1988 p 1 a b Mair 2013 Yan 2006 p 2 Norman 2003 p 73 Norman 1988 pp 1 2 Liang 2014 p 14 Eberhard Simons amp Fennig 2024 Mair 1991 pp 3 6 Kurpaska 2010 p 2 Kurpaska 2010 p 63 a b c DeFrancis 1984 p 57 Mair 1991 p 7 Norman 1988 pp 138 139 Norman 1988 pp 212 213 Ramsey 1987 p 101 Kurpaska 2010 pp 186 188 Yan 2006 pp 69 90 127 Norman 1988 pp 139 236 Cao 2008a Map 66 Yan 2006 p 127 Norman 1988 pp 211 233 Norman 1988 pp 199 200 207 Yan 2006 pp 91 108 109 152 Norman 1988 pp 235 236 Norman 1988 p 193 Norman 1988 pp 182 193 200 205 Cao 2008a Map 040 Cao 2008a Map 045 Cao 2008a Map 043 Cao 2008a Map 052 Cao 2008a Map 073 Cao 2008a Map 124 Norman 1988 pp 28 141 Yan 2006 pp 150 151 Norman 1988 pp 141 198 Norman 1988 p 194 Norman 1988 pp 200 201 Norman 1988 pp 216 217 Norman 1988 p 237 Norman 1988 pp 193 201 202 Norman 1988 pp 193 201 Cao 2008a Map 001 Norman 1988 p 9 Norman 1988 pp 147 202 239 a b Norman 1988 p 54 Norman 1988 pp 34 36 Norman 1988 pp 53 54 Norman 1988 p 53 Norman 1988 pp 217 218 Norman 1988 pp 194 195 a b Norman 1988 pp 195 196 272 Yan 2006 pp 108 116 117 Yan 2006 pp 162 163 a b Norman 1988 p 202 Norman 1988 pp 238 239 Norman 1988 pp 225 226 Yan 2006 p 198 Norman 1988 p 218 Norman 1988 pp 146 147 Norman 1988 pp 202 239 a b Beijing University 1989 Norman 1988 pp 17 19 213 214 219 231 232 Chappell amp Li 2016 pp 606 607 a b Yue 2017 p 114 Cao 2008c Map 076 Yue 2017 p 130 Chappell amp Li 2016 p 606 Yue Hashimoto 1993 p 1 Yue Hashimoto 1993 pp 1 2 Yue Hashimoto 1993 pp 2 4 Yue Hashimoto 1993 pp 4 5 Chappell amp Li 2016 pp 607 608 a b Yue 2017 p 115 Norman 1988 pp 182 214 Norman 1988 p 196 Norman 1988 p 208 Norman 1988 p 205 Norman 1988 p 203 Norman 1988 p 234 Norman 1988 p 227 Norman 1988 p 220 a b Yue 2017 p 116 Yue 2017 p 117 Chen 2015 p 81 Chen 2015 p 106 a b Yue 2017 p 150 Chappell amp Li 2016 p 623 Yue Hashimoto 1993 pp 227 232 Yue 2017 p 121 Yue Hashimoto 1993 p 111 Yue Hashimoto 1993 p 23 Norman 1988 p 223 Yue 2017 p 131 Norman 1988 p 125 Yue Hashimoto 1993 p 31 Yue Hashimoto 1993 pp 32 33 Yue 2017 pp 153 154 Yue Hashimoto 1993 pp 173 178 Yue Hashimoto 1993 pp 173 174 Chappell amp Li 2016 p 608 Yue 2017 pp 135 136 a b Yue Hashimoto 1993 p 49 Yue Hashimoto 1993 p 42 Yue Hashimoto 1993 pp 44 47 Yue 2017 pp 136 137 Norman 1988 pp 97 98 Norman 1988 pp 196 200 204 Norman 1988 pp 196 197 203 204 Norman 1988 p 213 Chappell amp Li 2016 p 607 Norman 1988 p 92 Li 2001 pp 341 343 Yue 2017 pp 141 142 Yue Hashimoto 1993 pp 143 146 Yue 2017 pp 147 148 Yue Hashimoto 1993 p 159 a b Yue 2017 p 124 Yue Hashimoto 1993 p 69 Chen 1999 p 57 Hsieh 2007 pp 12 13 a b Hsieh 2007 p 15 Hsieh 2007 pp 16 17 a b Hsieh 2007 p 17 Hsieh 2007 pp 20 21 The Goh Report Archived from the original on 2 October 2013 Manfred Whoa Man Fat A Critical Evaluation of Singapore s Language Policy and its Implications for English Teaching Karen s Linguistics Issues Retrieved on 4 November 2010 Bokhorst Heng W D 1998 Unpacking the Nation In Allison D et al Ed Text in Education and Society pp 202 204 Singapore Singapore University Press Lee Kuan Yew 2000 From Third World to First The Singapore Story 1965 2000 HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 019776 6 Lim Siew Yeen Yak Jessie 4 July 2013 Speak Mandarin Campaign Singapore Infopedia National Library Board Singapore Retrieved 16 March 2024 in Chinese 讲华语运动30年 对象随大环境改变 Hua Sheng Bao 17 March 2009 Bokhorst Heng Wendy 1999 Singapore s Speak Mandarin Campaign Language ideological debates and the imagining of the nation In Blommaert Jan ed Language Ideological Debates Walter de Gruyter pp 235 265 ISBN 978 3 11 016350 6 Wee Lionel 2006 The semiotics of language ideologies in Singapore Journal of Sociolinguistics 10 3 344 361 doi 10 1111 j 1360 6441 2006 00331 x Works cited edit Beijing University 1989 汉语方音字汇 Dictionary of Dialect Pronunciations of Chinese Characters in Chinese 2nd ed Beijing Wenzi gaige chubanshe ISBN 978 7 80029 000 8 Bradley David 1992 Chinese as a Pluricentric Language in Clyne Michael G ed Pluricentric Languages Differing Norms in Different Nations Walter de Gruyter pp 305 324 ISBN 978 3 11 012855 0 Cao Zhiyun ed 2008a 汉语方言地图集 Linguistic Atlas of Chinese Dialects in Chinese vol 1 Phonetics Beijing Commercial Press ISBN 978 7 100 05774 5 ed 2008b 汉语方言地图集 Linguistic Atlas of Chinese Dialects in Chinese vol 2 Lexicon Beijing Commercial Press ISBN 978 7 100 05784 4 ed 2008c 汉语方言地图集 Linguistic Atlas of Chinese Dialects in Chinese vol 3 Grammar Beijing Commercial Press ISBN 978 7 100 05785 1 Chappell Hilary M 2015 Linguistic areas in China for differential object marking passive and comparative constructions in Chappell Hilary M ed Diversity in Sinitic Languages Oxford University Press pp 13 52 ISBN 978 0 19 872379 0 Li Lan 2016 Mandarin and other Sinitic languages in Chan Sin wai ed The Routledge Encyclopedia of the Chinese Language Routledge pp 606 628 ISBN 978 0 415 53970 8 Chen Ping 1999 Modern Chinese History and sociolinguistics New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 64572 0 Chen Yujie 2015 The semantic differentiation of demonstratives in Sinitic languages in Chappell Hilary M ed Diversity in Sinitic Languages Oxford University Press pp 81 109 ISBN 978 0 19 872379 0 Chinese Academy of Social Sciences 2012 中国语言地图集 汉语方言卷 Language Atlas of China Chinese dialects in Chinese 2nd ed Beijing The Commercial Press ISBN 978 7 100 07054 6 DeFrancis John 1984 The Chinese Language Fact and Fantasy Honolulu University of Hawaiʻi Press ISBN 978 0 8248 1068 9 Eberhard David M Simons Gary F Fennig Charles D eds 2024 Ethnologue Languages of the World 27th ed Dallas TX SIL International Hsieh Hsiu Mei 2007 Exploring teachers views about native language instruction and education in Taiwanese elementary schools PhD thesis University of Texas at Austin hdl 2152 3598 Iwata Ray 1995 Linguistic geography of Chinese dialects Project on Han dialects PHD Cahiers de linguistique Asie orientale 24 2 195 227 doi 10 3406 clao 1995 1475 2010 Chinese Geolinguistics History Current Trend and Theoretical Issues Dialectologia Special issue I 97 121 Kurpaska Maria 2010 Chinese Language s A Look Through the Prism of The Great Dictionary of Modern Chinese Dialects Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 021914 2 Li Ying Che 2001 Aspects of historical comparative syntax functions of prepositions in Taiwanese and Mandarin in Chappell Hilary M ed Sinitic grammar synchronic and diachronic perspectives Oxford University Press pp 340 368 ISBN 978 0 19 829977 6 Liang Sihua 2014 Language Attitudes and Identities in Multilingual China A Linguistic Ethnography Springer ISBN 978 3 319 12618 0 Mair Victor H 1991 What Is a Chinese Dialect Topolect Reflections on Some Key Sino English Linguistic terms PDF Sino Platonic Papers 29 1 31 2013 The Classification of Sinitic Languages What Is Chinese PDF in Cao Guangshun Djamouri Redouane Chappell Hilary Wiebusch Thekla eds Breaking Down the Barriers Interdisciplinary Studies in Chinese Linguistics and Beyond Taipei Institute of Linguistics Academia Sinica pp 735 754 ISBN 978 986 03 7678 4 archived from the original PDF on 16 April 2018 retrieved 15 April 2018 Norman Jerry 1988 Chinese Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 29653 3 2003 The Chinese dialects phonology in Thurgood Graham LaPolla Randy J eds The Sino Tibetan languages Routledge pp 72 83 ISBN 978 0 7007 1129 1 Pulleyblank Edwin George 1984 Middle Chinese A Study in Historical Phonology Vancouver University of British Columbia Press ISBN 978 0 7748 0192 8 Ramsey S Robert 1987 The Languages of China Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 01468 5 Tang Chaoju van Heuven Vincent J 2009 Mutual intelligibility of Chinese dialects experimentally tested Lingua 119 5 709 732 doi 10 1016 j lingua 2008 10 001 hdl 1887 14919 Wang Feng 2005 On the genetic position of the Bai language Cahiers de Linguistique Asie Orientale 34 1 101 127 doi 10 3406 clao 2005 1728 Wurm Stephen Adolphe Li Rong Baumann Theo Lee Mei W 1987 Language Atlas of China Longman ISBN 978 962 359 085 3 Yan Margaret Mian 2006 Introduction to Chinese Dialectology LINCOM Europa ISBN 978 3 89586 629 6 Yue Hashimoto Anne 1993 Comparative Chinese Dialectal Grammar Handbook for Investigators Paris Ecole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales Centre de recherches linguistiques sur l Asie orientale ISBN 978 2 910216 00 9 Yue Anne O 2017 The Sinitic languages grammar in Thurgood Graham LaPolla Randy J eds The Sino Tibetan Languages 2nd ed Routledge pp 114 163 ISBN 978 1 138 78332 4 Further reading editAo Benjamin 1991 Comparative reconstruction of proto Chinese revisited Language Sciences 13 3 4 335 379 doi 10 1016 0388 0001 91 90022 S Baron Stephen P 1983 Chain shifts in Chinese historical phonology problems of motivation and functionality Cahiers de Linguistique Asie Orientale 12 1 43 63 doi 10 3406 clao 1983 1125 Ben Hamed Mahe 2005 Neighbour nets portray the Chinese dialect continuum and the linguistic legacy of China s demic history Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 272 1567 1015 1022 doi 10 1098 rspb 2004 3015 JSTOR 30047639 PMC 1599877 PMID 16024359 Wang Feng 2006 Stuck in the forest Trees networks and Chinese dialects Diachronica 23 1 29 60 doi 10 1075 dia 23 1 04ham Branner David Prager 2000 Problems in Comparative Chinese Dialectology the Classification of Miin and Hakka Trends in Linguistics series vol 123 Berlin Mouton de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 015831 1 Chappell Hilary 2001 Synchrony and diachrony of Sinitic languages A brief history of Chinese dialects PDF in Chappell Hilary ed Sinitic grammar synchronic and diachronic perspectives Oxford Oxford University Press pp 3 28 ISBN 978 0 19 829977 6 Li Ming Peyraube Alain 2007 Chinese linguistics and typology the state of the art Linguistic Typology 11 1 187 211 doi 10 1515 LINGTY 2007 014 S2CID 123103670 Escure Genevieve 1997 Creole and Dialect Continua standard acquisition processes in Belize and China PRC John Benjamins ISBN 978 90 272 5240 1 Francis Norbert 2016 Language and dialect in China Chinese Language and Discourse 7 1 136 149 doi 10 1075 cld 7 1 05fra Groves Julie M 2008 Language or Dialect or Topolect A Comparison of the Attitudes of Hong Kongers and Mainland Chinese towards the Status of Cantonese PDF Sino Platonic Papers 179 1 103 Handel Zev 2015 The Classification of Chinese Sinitic The Chinese Language Family in Wang William S Y Sun Chaofen eds The Oxford Handbook of Chinese Linguistics Oxford University Press pp 34 44 ISBN 978 0 19 985633 6 Hannas William C 1997 Asia s Orthographic Dilemma University of Hawaiʻi Press ISBN 978 0 8248 1892 0 Norman Jerry 2006 Common Dialectal Chinese in Branner David Prager ed The Chinese Rime Tables Linguistic Philosophy and Historical Comparative Phonology Studies in the Theory and History of Linguistic Science Series IV Current Issues in Linguistic Theory vol 271 Amsterdam John Benjamins pp 233 254 ISBN 978 90 272 4785 8 Sagart Laurent 1998 On distinguishing Hakka and non Hakka dialects Journal of Chinese Linguistics 26 2 281 302 JSTOR 23756757 Simmons Richard VanNess 1999 Chinese Dialect Classification A comparative approach to Harngjou Old Jintarn and Common Northern Wu John Benjamins ISBN 978 90 272 8433 4 ed 2022 Studies in Colloquial Chinese and Its History Dialect and Text Hong Kong University Press ISBN 978 988 8754 09 0 Tam Gina Anne 2020 Dialect and Nationalism in China 1860 1960 Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781108776400 ISBN 978 1 108 77640 0 Hatano Tarō 波多野太郎 1966 中国方志所錄方言滙編 Compilation of Chinese dialects in local chronicles in Japanese Yokohama shiritsu daigaku kiyō OCLC 50634504 Chen Xiaojin 陈晓锦 Gan Yu en 甘于恩 2010 东南亚华人社区汉语方言概要 Summary of Local Chinese Dialects in Southeast Asian Overseas Communities in Chinese Guangzhou World Publishing ISBN 978 7 510 08769 1 External links editHanyǔ Fangyin Zihui 汉語方音字汇 Dictionary of Chinese dialect pronunciations Beijing University 1962 DOC Dialects of China or Dictionary on Computer files at the Wayback Machine archived 18 October 2005 compiled by William Wang and Chin Chuan Cheng archived from the originals at City University of Hong Kong HTML version at the Wayback Machine archived 27 June 2015 compiled by Dylan W H Sung Chinese Dialects search interface to the DOC database at StarLing Hanyǔ Fangyin Cihui 汉語方音词汇 Chinese dialect vocabularies Beijing University 1964 CLDF dataset Version v4 0 Zenodo doi 10 5281 zenodo 3534942 Institute of Linguistics Chinese Academy of Social Sciences 1981 Fangyan diaocha zibiǎo 方言调查字表 Dialect survey character table PDF revised ed Beijing Commercial Press Chinese Dialect Geography linguistic maps and commentaries from Iwata Ray ed 2009 Interpretive maps of Chinese dialects Tokyo Hakuteisha Press Technical Notes on the Chinese Language Dialects by Dylan W H Sung Phonology and Official Romanization Schemes Portals nbsp Language nbsp China Retrieved from https en 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