Southwestern Mandarin | |
---|---|
Upper Yangtze Mandarin | |
Spoken in | Sichuan, Yunnan, Hubei |
Language family | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Linguist List | cmn-xin |
Southwestern Mandarin (simplified Chinese: 西南官话; traditional Chinese: 西南官話; pinyin: Xīnán Guānhuà), also known as Upper Yangtze Mandarin (simplified Chinese: 上江官话; traditional Chinese: 上江官話; pinyin: Shàngjiāng Guānhuà), is a primary branch of Mandarin Chinese spoken by Han Chinese people throughout many regions of central and southwestern China, such as Sichuan, Yunnan, Chongqing, Guizhou, most parts of Hubei, the western part of Hunan, the northern part of Guangxi, and some southern parts of Shaanxi and Gansu.
Varieties of Southwestern Mandarin are spoken by roughly 200 million people. If removed from the larger "Mandarin Chinese" group, it would have the 6th-most native speakers in the world, behind Mandarin, Spanish, English, Hindi, and Bengali.
Contents |
Modern Southwestern Mandarin was formed by the waves of immigrants brought to the regions during the Ming and Qing Dynasties. Because of this comparatively recent move, these dialects show more similarity to modern Standard Mandarin than to languages like Cantonese or Min Nan. For example, like most southern Chinese languages, Southwestern Mandarin does not possess the retroflex consonants (zh, ch, sh, r) of Standard Mandarin, but nor does it retain the entering tone, as most southern languages do. The Chengdu-Chongqing and Hubei dialects are believed to reflect aspects of the Mandarin lingua franca spoken during the Ming Dynasty.[1] However, some scholars believe its origins may be more similar to Lower Yangtze Mandarin.[2]
Though part of the Mandarin language group, Southwestern Mandarin has many striking and pronounced differences with Standard Mandarin, such that until 1955 it was generally categorized alongside Cantonese and Wu Chinese as a group of non-Mandarin dialects.[3]
Most Southwestern Mandarin dialects have, like Standard Mandarin, only retained four of the original eight tones of Middle Chinese. However, the entering tone has completely merged with the light-level tone in most Southwestern dialects, while in Standard Mandarin it is seemingly randomly dispersed among the remaining tones. A few varieties, such as the Min River dialect, do preserve some of the final -p, -t, -k stops of the entering tone.
Name | Dark-level | Light-level | Rising tone | Departing tone | Entering tone | Geographic Distribution | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sichuan | Chengdu dialect | 55 | 21 | 42 | 213 | light-level merge | Main Sichuan Basin, parts of Guizhou |
Luzhou dialect | 55 | 21 | 42 | 13 | 33 | Southwest Sichuan Basin | |
Luding County dialect | 55 | 21 | 53 | 24 | dark-level merge | Ya'an vicinity | |
Neijiang dialect | 55 | 21 | 42 | 213 | departing merge | Lower Tuo River area | |
Hanzhong dialect | 55 | 21 | 24 | 212 | level tone merge | Southern Shaanxi | |
Kunming dialect | 44 | 31 | 53 | 212 | light-level merge | Central Yunnan | |
Gejiu dialect | 55 | 42 | 33 | 12 | light-level merge | Southern Yunnan | |
Baoshan dialect | 32 | 44 | 53 | 25 | light-level merge | Western Yunnan | |
Huguang | Wuhan dialect | 55 | 213 | 42 | 35 | light-level merge | West-central Hubei |
Hanshou dialect | 55 | 213 | 42 | (light) 35/ (dark) 33 | dark-level/light-departing merge | Northwest Hunan | |
Xiangfan dialect | 34 | 52 | 55 | 212 | light-level | Northern Hubei | |
Guilin dialect | 33 | 21 | 55 | 35 | light-level | Northern Guangxi, southern Hunan, southern Guizhou |
Southwestern Mandarin dialects do not possess the retroflex consonants of Standard Mandarin, but otherwise share most Mandarin phonological features. Most have lost the distinction between the nasal consonant /n/ and the lateral consonant /l/ and the nasal finals /-n/ and /-ŋ/. For example, the sounds "la" and "na" are generally indistinguishable, as well as the sounds "fen" and "feng". Some varieties also lack a distinction between the labiodental sound /f/ and the glottal /h/.
|