ShaoâJiang | |
---|---|
é”ć° / é”ć° | |
Native to | Southern China |
Region | eastern Nanping Prefecture, Fujian |
Native speakers | 850,000 (2004) [1] |
Sino-Tibetan
| |
Early forms | |
Dialects | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | None (mis ) |
1nn | |
Glottolog |
shao1234 |
Linguasphere | 79-AAA-l > 79-AAA-la |
ShaoâJiang Min |
ShaoâJiang or Shaojiang Min ( simplified Chinese: é”ć°; traditional Chinese: é”ć°; pinyin: ShĂ ojiÄng) is a Min Chinese language centered on Western Nanping in Northwest Fujian, specifically in the Nanping counties of Guangze, Shaowu, and Western Shunchang and the Northern Sanming county of Jiangle.
ShaoâJiang developed from Northern Min (Min Bei), and was deeply influenced by Gan Chinese and Hakka Chinese. The classification of ShaoâJiang is disputed. It is frequently classified as a dialect of Northern Min, but sometimes it is excluded from Min and classified as Gan Chinese instead. But it is mutually intelligible with neither other Northern Min nor other Gan. Actually it is a collection of dialects which have limited mutual intelligibility instead of a language. Some Chinese scholars call it Min-Gan dialects (éœè”Łæčèš), Min-Gan transition dialects (éœè”ŁèżæžĄæčèš) or Min-Hakka-Gan transition dialects (éœćźąè”ŁèżæžĄæčèš).
ShaoâJiang | |
---|---|
é”ć° / é”ć° | |
Native to | Southern China |
Region | eastern Nanping Prefecture, Fujian |
Native speakers | 850,000 (2004) [1] |
Sino-Tibetan
| |
Early forms | |
Dialects | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | None (mis ) |
1nn | |
Glottolog |
shao1234 |
Linguasphere | 79-AAA-l > 79-AAA-la |
ShaoâJiang Min |
ShaoâJiang or Shaojiang Min ( simplified Chinese: é”ć°; traditional Chinese: é”ć°; pinyin: ShĂ ojiÄng) is a Min Chinese language centered on Western Nanping in Northwest Fujian, specifically in the Nanping counties of Guangze, Shaowu, and Western Shunchang and the Northern Sanming county of Jiangle.
ShaoâJiang developed from Northern Min (Min Bei), and was deeply influenced by Gan Chinese and Hakka Chinese. The classification of ShaoâJiang is disputed. It is frequently classified as a dialect of Northern Min, but sometimes it is excluded from Min and classified as Gan Chinese instead. But it is mutually intelligible with neither other Northern Min nor other Gan. Actually it is a collection of dialects which have limited mutual intelligibility instead of a language. Some Chinese scholars call it Min-Gan dialects (éœè”Łæčèš), Min-Gan transition dialects (éœè”ŁèżæžĄæčèš) or Min-Hakka-Gan transition dialects (éœćźąè”ŁèżæžĄæčèš).