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Eastern Min

Eastern Min or Min Dong (traditional Chinese: 閩東語; simplified Chinese: 闽东语; pinyin: Mǐndōngyǔ, Foochow Romanized: Mìng-dĕ̤ng-ngṳ̄), is a branch of the Min group of Sinitic languages of China. The prestige form and most-cited representative form is the Fuzhou dialect, the speech of the capital of Fujian.[5]

Eastern Min
Min Dong (閩東語)
Foochowese (福州話)
平話
Pronunciation
"Bàng-uâ" in different dialects
[paŋ˨˩ŋuɑ˨˦˨] (Fuzhou)
[paŋ˥ŋuɑ˦˨] (Fuqing)
[paŋ˥˦˦ŋua˧˨˦] (Gutian)
[paŋ˧˩ŋuɑ˩˧˩] (Matsu)
[paŋ˨ɰo˧˧˨] (Ningde)
[paŋ˨ɰo˨˧] (Fu'an)
[paŋ˨ŋua˨˩˨] (Xiapu)
[paŋ˨˩ŋua˨˩˧] (Zherong)
Native toSoutheast China, Taiwan, Southeast Asia, United States (chiefly New York City)
RegionEastern Fujian (Fuzhou and Ningde), Matsu; parts of Taishun and Cangnan, Wenzhou, Zhejiang
Native speakers
9.5 million (2007)[1]
Dialects
Chinese characters and Foochow Romanized
Official status
Official language in
Matsu Islands, Taiwan (as local language[2])[3]
Recognised minority
language in
one of the statutory languages for public transport announcements in the Matsu Islands, Taiwan[4]
Language codes
ISO 639-3cdo
Glottologmind1253
  Eastern Min

Geographic distribution

Fujian and vicinity

Eastern Min varieties are mainly spoken in the eastern part of Fujian Province (闽东) of the People's Republic of China, in and near the cities of Fuzhou and Ningde. They are also widely encountered as the mother tongue on the Matsu Islands controlled by the Republic of China. Additionally, the inhabitants of Taishun and Cangnan to the north of Fujian in Zhejiang also speak Eastern Min varieties. Eastern Min generally coexists with the official standard Chinese in all these areas.

United States

As the coastal area of Fujian has been the historical homeland of a large worldwide diaspora of overseas Chinese, varieties of Eastern Min can also be found across the world, especially in their respective Chinatowns. Cities with high concentrations of such immigrants include New York City,[6] especially Little Fuzhou, Manhattan, Sunset Park, Brooklyn and Flushing, Queens.

Europe

They are also found in various Chinatown communities in Europe, including London, Paris and Prato in Italy.[7]

Japan and Malaysia

Chinese communities within Ikebukuro, Tokyo[8] as well as Sibu, Sarawak, Malaysia have significant populations of Eastern Min speakers. Fuzhou communities can also be found in Sitiawan, Perak and Yong Peng, Johor in West Malaysia.[citation needed]

Classification

Eastern Min is descended from Proto-Min, which split from the transition from Old Chinese into Middle Chinese during the Han Dynasty.[9] It has been classified by Pan Maoding and Jerry Norman as belonging to the Coastal Min branch, and is thus closely related to Northern Min.[10][9]

Norman lists four distinctive features in the development of Eastern Min:[9]

  • Eastern Min varieties have an upper register tone for words which correspond to voiceless nasal initials in Proto-Min, e.g. 妹 "younger sister" in Fuzhou is pronounced with an upper departing tone muói (IPA: /mui²¹³/) rather than a lower departing tone.
  • There are some lexemes that descend from Old Chinese which have been conserved in Eastern Min but replaced in other Min varieties. For example, 犬 instead of 狗 for "dog".

Branches

 
the branches of Eastern Min

Eastern Min is conventionally divided into three branches:[11]

  1. Houguan dialect group (侯官片), also called the Southern subgroup, including the Fuzhou dialect, Fuqing dialect, Changle dialect, Lianjiang dialect and the dialect of the Matsu Islands.
  2. Funing dialect group (福寧片), also called the Northern subgroup, including the Ningde dialect and the Fu'an dialect.
  3. Manjiang dialect (蠻講), spoken in parts of Taishun and Cangnan, Wenzhou, Zhejiang.

Besides these three branches, some dialect islands in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong were classified as Eastern Min.[12][13]Zhongshan Min is a group of Min varieties spoken in the Zhongshan county of Guangdong, divided into three branches: the Longdu dialect and Nanlang dialect belong to the Eastern Min group, while the Sanxiang dialect belongs to Southern Min.[14][15]

Phonology

The Eastern Min group has a phonology which is particularly divergent from other varieties of Chinese. Aside from the Manjiang dialect, both Houguan and Funing groups are similar in the number of initials, with the Fu'an dialect having 17 initials, two more than the Fuzhou dialect, the additions being /w/ and /j/ or /ɰ/ as separate phonemes (the glottal stop is common to both but excluded from this count). The Manjiang dialect on the other hand has been influenced by the Wu dialects of Zhejiang, and hence has significantly more initials than the varieties of Fujian.

The finals vary significantly between varieties, with the extremes being represented by Manjiang dialects at a low of 39 separate finals, and the Ningde dialect representing the high at 69 finals.

Comparison of numbers of Eastern Min initials and finals
Types Houguan subgroup (侯官片) Funing subgroup (福寧片) Manjiang (蠻講)
City Fuzhou (福州) Fuqing (福清) Gutian (古田) Ningde (宁德) Fuding (福鼎) Fu'an (福安) Qianku, Cangnan, Zhejiang (蒼南錢庫)
Number of Initials 15 15 15 15 15 17 29
Number of Finals 46 42 51 69 41 56 39
Number of Tones 7 7 7 7 7 7 7

Eastern Min varieties generally have seven tones, by the traditional count (based on the four tones of Middle Chinese, including the entering tone as a separate entity). In the middle of the Qing dynasty, eight tones were attested, but the historical rising tones (上聲) re-merged.[16]

Comparison of tones across Eastern Min varieties
Dark level 陰平 Light level 陽平 Rising 上聲 Dark departing 陰去 Light departing 陽去 Dark entering 陰入 Light entering 陽入
Fuzhou
福州話
˦ 44 ˥˧ 53 ˧˩ 31 ˨˩˧ 213 ˨˦˨ 242 ˨˧ 23 ˥ 5
Fu'an
福安話
˧˧˨ 332 ˨ 22 ˦˨ 42 ˨˩ 21 ˧˨˦ 324 ˨ 2 ˥ 5
Ningde
寧德話
˦ 44 ˩ 11 ˦˨ 42 ˧˥ 35 ˥˨ 52 ˦ 4 ˥ 5
Fuding
福鼎話
˦˦˥ 445 ˨˩˨ 212 ˥ 55 ˥˧ 53 ˨ 22 ˥ 5 ˨˧ 23
Taishun, Zhejiang
泰順
˨˩˧ 213 ˧ 33 ˦˥˥ 455 ˥˧ 53 ˦˨ 42 ˥ 5 ˦˧ 43
Qianku, Cangnan, Zhejiang
蒼南錢庫蠻講
˦ 44 ˨˩˦ 214 ˦˥ 45 ˦˩ 41 ˨˩ 21 ˥ 5 ˨˩ 21
Miaojiaqiao, Cangnan, Zhejiang
蒼南繆家橋蠻講
˧ 33 ˨˩˧ 213 ˦˥ 45 ˦˩ 41 ˩ 11 ˥ 5 ˩ 1

Sandhi phenomena

The Eastern Min varieties have a wide of range of sandhi phenomena. As well as tone sandhi, common to many varieties of Chinese, there is also the assimilation of consonants[17] and vowel alternations (such as rime tensing).

Tone sandhi across Eastern Min varieties can be regressive (where the last syllable affects the pronunciation of those before), progressive (where earlier syllables affect the later ones) or mutual (where both or all syllables change). The rules are generally quite complicated.

Initial assimilation of consonants is usually progressive, and may create new phonemes that are not phonemically contrastive in initial position but do contrast in medial position.[18] A few varieties exhibit regressive assimilation too.

See also

References

  1. ^ Mikael Parkvall, "Världens 100 största språk 2007" (The World's 100 Largest Languages in 2007), in Nationalencyklopedin
  2. ^ 本土語言納中小學必修 潘文忠:將按語發法實施 (in Chinese)
  3. ^ "國家語言發展法 第二條".
  4. ^ 大眾運輸工具播音語言平等保障法
  5. ^ 李如龙 Li Rulong (1994). 福州方言词典 (Rev. 1st ed.). Fuzhou: Fujian People's Press (福建人民出版社). p. 1. ISBN 7211023546.
  6. ^ Guest, Kenneth J. (2003). God in Chinatown: Religion and Survival in New York's Evolving Immigrant Community ([Online-Ausg.]. ed.). New York: New York University Press. p. 48. ISBN 0814731546.
  7. ^ Pieke, Frank. (PDF). Transnational Communities Programme, Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, Oxford. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 2 March 2015.
  8. ^ Wong, Bernard P.; Chee-Beng, Tan, eds. (2013). Chinatowns around the world gilded ghetto, ethnopolis, and cultural diaspora. Leiden [etc.]: Brill. p. 251. ISBN 978-9004255906.
  9. ^ a b c d Norman, Jerry (1991). "The Mǐn Dialects in Historical Perspective". Journal of Chinese Linguistics Monograph Series (3): 323–358. ISSN 2409-2878.
  10. ^ Pan 潘, Maoding 茂鼎; 李, 如龍; 梁, 玉璋; 張, 盛裕; 陳, 章太 (1963). "福建漢語方言分區略說". 中國語文 (6): 475–495.
  11. ^ Kurpaska, Maria (2010). Chinese language(s) : a look through the prism of the great dictionary of modern Chinese dialects ([Online-Ausg.]. ed.). Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. p. 71. ISBN 9783110219142.
  12. ^ Bodman, Nicholas C. (1984). "The Namlong Dialect, a Northern Min Outlier in Zhongshan Xian and the Influence of Cantonese on its Lexicon and Phonology". Tsing Hua Journal of Chinese Studies. 14 (1): 1–19.
  13. ^ Bodman, Nicholas C. (1985). "The Reflexes of Initial Nasals in Proto-Southern Min-Hingua". In Acson, Veneeta; Leed, Richard L. (eds.). For Gordon H. Fairbanks. Oceanic Linguistics Special Publications. Vol. 20. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 2–20. ISBN 978-0-8248-0992-8. JSTOR 20006706.
  14. ^ Bodman, Nicholas C. (1984). "The Namlong Dialect, a Northern Min Outlier in Zhongshan Xian and the Influence of Cantonese on its Lexicon and Phonology". Tsing Hua Journal of Chinese Studies. 14 (1): 1–19.
  15. ^ Bodman, Nicholas C. (1985). "The Reflexes of Initial Nasals in Proto-Southern Min-Hingua". In Acson, Veneeta; Leed, Richard L. (eds.). For Gordon H. Fairbanks. Oceanic Linguistics Special Publications. Vol. 20. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 2–20. ISBN 978-0-8248-0992-8. JSTOR 20006706.
  16. ^ 李, 含茹. "苍南蛮话语音研究--《复旦大学》2009年硕士论文". CDMD.cnki.com.cn.
  17. ^ Yuan, Bixia; Wang, Yizhi (2013). "On the Initial Assimilations of Eastern Min Dialects in Fujian Province--《Dialect》2013年01期". Dialect. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  18. ^ Yang, Ching-Yu Helen (2015). "A synchronic view of the consonant mutations in Fuzhou dialect" (PDF). University System of Taiwan Working Papers in Linguistics. 8.

Further reading

  • Norman, Jerry (1977–1978). "A preliminary report on the dialects of Mintung". Monumenta Serica. 33: 326–348. doi:10.1080/02549948.1977.11745053. JSTOR 40726246.
  • Yan, Margaret Mian (2006). Introduction to Chinese Dialectology. LINCOM Europa. ISBN 978-3-89586-629-6.
  • Akitani Hiroyuki; Chen Zeping [秋谷裕幸; 陈泽平]. 2012. The Gutian dialect of Min Dong District [闽东区古田方言研究]. Fuzhou: Fujian People's Press [福建人民出版社]. ISBN 9787211064830

eastern, mindong, redirects, here, eastern, region, fujian, province, fuzhou, ningde, dong, traditional, chinese, 閩東語, simplified, chinese, 闽东语, pinyin, mǐndōngyǔ, foochow, romanized, mìng, ngṳ, branch, group, sinitic, languages, china, prestige, form, most, c. Mindong redirects here For the eastern region of Fujian province see Fuzhou and Ningde Eastern Min or Min Dong traditional Chinese 閩東語 simplified Chinese 闽东语 pinyin Mǐndōngyǔ Foochow Romanized Ming dĕ ng ngṳ is a branch of the Min group of Sinitic languages of China The prestige form and most cited representative form is the Fuzhou dialect the speech of the capital of Fujian 5 Eastern MinMin Dong 閩東語 Foochowese 福州話 平話Pronunciation Bang ua in different dialects paŋ ŋuɑ Fuzhou paŋ ŋuɑ Fuqing paŋ ŋua Gutian paŋ ŋuɑ Matsu paŋ ɰo Ningde paŋ ɰo Fu an paŋ ŋua Xiapu paŋ ŋua Zherong Native toSoutheast China Taiwan Southeast Asia United States chiefly New York City RegionEastern Fujian Fuzhou and Ningde Matsu parts of Taishun and Cangnan Wenzhou ZhejiangNative speakers9 5 million 2007 1 Language familySino Tibetan SiniticMinCoastal MinEastern MinDialectsFuzhou dialect Fuqing dialect Fu an dialect Ningde dialect Mango dialect Longdu dialect Guangdong Nanlang dialect Guangdong Writing systemChinese characters and Foochow RomanizedOfficial statusOfficial language inMatsu Islands Taiwan as local language 2 3 Recognised minoritylanguage inone of the statutory languages for public transport announcements in the Matsu Islands Taiwan 4 Language codesISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code cdo class extiw title iso639 3 cdo cdo a Glottologmind1253 Eastern Min Contents 1 Geographic distribution 1 1 Fujian and vicinity 1 2 United States 1 3 Europe 1 4 Japan and Malaysia 2 Classification 2 1 Branches 3 Phonology 3 1 Sandhi phenomena 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingGeographic distribution EditFujian and vicinity Edit Eastern Min varieties are mainly spoken in the eastern part of Fujian Province 闽东 of the People s Republic of China in and near the cities of Fuzhou and Ningde They are also widely encountered as the mother tongue on the Matsu Islands controlled by the Republic of China Additionally the inhabitants of Taishun and Cangnan to the north of Fujian in Zhejiang also speak Eastern Min varieties Eastern Min generally coexists with the official standard Chinese in all these areas United States Edit As the coastal area of Fujian has been the historical homeland of a large worldwide diaspora of overseas Chinese varieties of Eastern Min can also be found across the world especially in their respective Chinatowns Cities with high concentrations of such immigrants include New York City 6 especially Little Fuzhou Manhattan Sunset Park Brooklyn and Flushing Queens Europe Edit They are also found in various Chinatown communities in Europe including London Paris and Prato in Italy 7 Japan and Malaysia Edit Chinese communities within Ikebukuro Tokyo 8 as well as Sibu Sarawak Malaysia have significant populations of Eastern Min speakers Fuzhou communities can also be found in Sitiawan Perak and Yong Peng Johor in West Malaysia citation needed Classification EditEastern Min is descended from Proto Min which split from the transition from Old Chinese into Middle Chinese during the Han Dynasty 9 It has been classified by Pan Maoding and Jerry Norman as belonging to the Coastal Min branch and is thus closely related to Northern Min 10 9 Norman lists four distinctive features in the development of Eastern Min 9 The Proto Min initial dz becomes s in Eastern Min as opposed to ts as in Southern Min For example 坐 to sit is pronounced so i IPA sɔy in colloquial Fuzhou dialect but tsō IPA t so in Xiamen and Taiwanese Hokkien Eastern Min varieties have an upper register tone for words which correspond to voiceless nasal initials in Proto Min e g 妹 younger sister in Fuzhou is pronounced with an upper departing tone muoi IPA mui rather than a lower departing tone There are some lexemes that descend from Old Chinese which have been conserved in Eastern Min but replaced in other Min varieties For example 犬 instead of 狗 for dog A lack of nasal vowels in contrast to Southern Min 9 Branches Edit the branches of Eastern Min Eastern Min is conventionally divided into three branches 11 Houguan dialect group 侯官片 also called the Southern subgroup including the Fuzhou dialect Fuqing dialect Changle dialect Lianjiang dialect and the dialect of the Matsu Islands Funing dialect group 福寧片 also called the Northern subgroup including the Ningde dialect and the Fu an dialect Manjiang dialect 蠻講 spoken in parts of Taishun and Cangnan Wenzhou Zhejiang Besides these three branches some dialect islands in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong were classified as Eastern Min 12 13 Zhongshan Min is a group of Min varieties spoken in the Zhongshan county of Guangdong divided into three branches the Longdu dialect and Nanlang dialect belong to the Eastern Min group while the Sanxiang dialect belongs to Southern Min 14 15 Phonology EditThe Eastern Min group has a phonology which is particularly divergent from other varieties of Chinese Aside from the Manjiang dialect both Houguan and Funing groups are similar in the number of initials with the Fu an dialect having 17 initials two more than the Fuzhou dialect the additions being w and j or ɰ as separate phonemes the glottal stop is common to both but excluded from this count The Manjiang dialect on the other hand has been influenced by the Wu dialects of Zhejiang and hence has significantly more initials than the varieties of Fujian The finals vary significantly between varieties with the extremes being represented by Manjiang dialects at a low of 39 separate finals and the Ningde dialect representing the high at 69 finals Comparison of numbers of Eastern Min initials and finals Types Houguan subgroup 侯官片 Funing subgroup 福寧片 Manjiang 蠻講 City Fuzhou 福州 Fuqing 福清 Gutian 古田 Ningde 宁德 Fuding 福鼎 Fu an 福安 Qianku Cangnan Zhejiang 蒼南錢庫 Number of Initials 15 15 15 15 15 17 29Number of Finals 46 42 51 69 41 56 39Number of Tones 7 7 7 7 7 7 7Eastern Min varieties generally have seven tones by the traditional count based on the four tones of Middle Chinese including the entering tone as a separate entity In the middle of the Qing dynasty eight tones were attested but the historical rising tones 上聲 re merged 16 Comparison of tones across Eastern Min varieties Dark level 陰平 Light level 陽平 Rising 上聲 Dark departing 陰去 Light departing 陽去 Dark entering 陰入 Light entering 陽入Fuzhou 福州話 44 53 31 213 242 23 5Fu an 福安話 332 22 42 21 324 2 5Ningde 寧德話 44 11 42 35 52 4 5Fuding 福鼎話 445 212 55 53 22 5 23Taishun Zhejiang 泰順 213 33 455 53 42 5 43Qianku Cangnan Zhejiang 蒼南錢庫蠻講 44 214 45 41 21 5 21Miaojiaqiao Cangnan Zhejiang 蒼南繆家橋蠻講 33 213 45 41 11 5 1Sandhi phenomena Edit The Eastern Min varieties have a wide of range of sandhi phenomena As well as tone sandhi common to many varieties of Chinese there is also the assimilation of consonants 17 and vowel alternations such as rime tensing Tone sandhi across Eastern Min varieties can be regressive where the last syllable affects the pronunciation of those before progressive where earlier syllables affect the later ones or mutual where both or all syllables change The rules are generally quite complicated Initial assimilation of consonants is usually progressive and may create new phonemes that are not phonemically contrastive in initial position but do contrast in medial position 18 A few varieties exhibit regressive assimilation too See also EditProtection of the varieties of ChineseReferences Edit Mikael Parkvall Varldens 100 storsta sprak 2007 The World s 100 Largest Languages in 2007 in Nationalencyklopedin 本土語言納中小學必修 潘文忠 將按語發法實施 in Chinese 國家語言發展法 第二條 大眾運輸工具播音語言平等保障法 李如龙 Li Rulong 1994 福州方言词典 Rev 1st ed Fuzhou Fujian People s Press 福建人民出版社 p 1 ISBN 7211023546 Guest Kenneth J 2003 God in Chinatown Religion and Survival in New York s Evolving Immigrant Community Online Ausg ed New York New York University Press p 48 ISBN 0814731546 Pieke Frank Research Briefing 4 Transnational Communities PDF Transnational Communities Programme Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology Oxford Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 2 March 2015 Wong Bernard P Chee Beng Tan eds 2013 Chinatowns around the world gilded ghetto ethnopolis and cultural diaspora Leiden etc Brill p 251 ISBN 978 9004255906 a b c d Norman Jerry 1991 The Mǐn Dialects in Historical Perspective Journal of Chinese Linguistics Monograph Series 3 323 358 ISSN 2409 2878 Pan 潘 Maoding 茂鼎 李 如龍 梁 玉璋 張 盛裕 陳 章太 1963 福建漢語方言分區略說 中國語文 6 475 495 Kurpaska Maria 2010 Chinese language s a look through the prism of the great dictionary of modern Chinese dialects Online Ausg ed Berlin De Gruyter Mouton p 71 ISBN 9783110219142 Bodman Nicholas C 1984 The Namlong Dialect a Northern Min Outlier in Zhongshan Xian and the Influence of Cantonese on its Lexicon and Phonology Tsing Hua Journal of Chinese Studies 14 1 1 19 Bodman Nicholas C 1985 The Reflexes of Initial Nasals in Proto Southern Min Hingua In Acson Veneeta Leed Richard L eds For Gordon H Fairbanks Oceanic Linguistics Special Publications Vol 20 University of Hawaii Press pp 2 20 ISBN 978 0 8248 0992 8 JSTOR 20006706 Bodman Nicholas C 1984 The Namlong Dialect a Northern Min Outlier in Zhongshan Xian and the Influence of Cantonese on its Lexicon and Phonology Tsing Hua Journal of Chinese Studies 14 1 1 19 Bodman Nicholas C 1985 The Reflexes of Initial Nasals in Proto Southern Min Hingua In Acson Veneeta Leed Richard L eds For Gordon H Fairbanks Oceanic Linguistics Special Publications Vol 20 University of Hawaii Press pp 2 20 ISBN 978 0 8248 0992 8 JSTOR 20006706 李 含茹 苍南蛮话语音研究 复旦大学 2009年硕士论文 CDMD cnki com cn Yuan Bixia Wang Yizhi 2013 On the Initial Assimilations of Eastern Min Dialects in Fujian Province Dialect 2013年01期 Dialect Retrieved 9 September 2019 Yang Ching Yu Helen 2015 A synchronic view of the consonant mutations in Fuzhou dialect PDF University System of Taiwan Working Papers in Linguistics 8 Further reading Edit Min Dong Chinese edition of Wikipedia the free encyclopedia Wikivoyage has a phrasebook for Mindong Norman Jerry 1977 1978 A preliminary report on the dialects of Mintung Monumenta Serica 33 326 348 doi 10 1080 02549948 1977 11745053 JSTOR 40726246 Yan Margaret Mian 2006 Introduction to Chinese Dialectology LINCOM Europa ISBN 978 3 89586 629 6 Akitani Hiroyuki Chen Zeping 秋谷裕幸 陈泽平 2012 The Gutian dialect of Min Dong District 闽东区古田方言研究 Fuzhou Fujian People s Press 福建人民出版社 ISBN 9787211064830 Portals Language China Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eastern Min amp oldid 1131117281, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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