This article needs additional citations for
verification. (April 2011) |
ZhangjiakouāHohhot | |
---|---|
å¼µå¼ē, ę¤å°čÆ | |
Native to | China |
Region | Inner Mongolia, Zhangjiakou |
Chinese characters | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | ā |
Glottolog |
huhe1234 Huhehaote |
Location of the ZhangjiakouāHohhot dialect (yellow) spoken within China |
ZhangjiakouāHohhot ( simplified Chinese: å¼ å¼ē; traditional Chinese: å¼µå¼ē; pinyin: ZhÄnghÅ«piĆ n) is a dialect of Jin, one of the principal varieties of Chinese. It is colloquially referred to by native speakers as CĒdƬhuĆ (ę¤å°čÆ; lit.: local speech, or "this-place speech"). It is spoken in the city of Hohhot, in Inner Mongolia, and Zhangjiakou in Hebei Province in China. One of its sub-branches is Hohhot dialect ( simplified Chinese: å¼å굩ē¹čÆ; traditional Chinese: å¼å굩ē¹č©±; pinyin: HÅ«hĆ©hĆ otĆØhuĆ ), which is also locally referred as HÅ«shƬhuĆ (å¼åøčÆ; lit. Hu-city speech). The other sub-branch is the Zhangjiakou dialect ( simplified Chinese: å¼ å®¶å£čÆ; traditional Chinese: 張家å£č©±; pinyin: ZhÄngjiÄkĒuhuĆ ). [1]
There is notable dialectal variation within the two cities. People in the Jiucheng area ( Yuquan District), especially the Muslim Hui minority, speak a dialect very similar to what is heard in neighbouring Shanxi province and is undoubtedly a branch of the Jin linguistic group. The Mandarin dialect in Xincheng District is a branched combination of the Jin, Hebei dialect, Northeastern Mandarin, and elements of the Manchu language, caused by the migration patterns to the region. It has thus created a distinct linguistic style. The two spoken forms of the Hohhot dialect are only partially intelligible to each other.
Like most Jin dialects, the Jiucheng Hohhot dialect uses the glottal stop and is mutually intelligible with many dialects in neighboring Shanxi. In its full-fledged form, however, it is only partially intelligible with Standard Chinese. Arguably the most eccentric sound is the "nge" sound used to express "I". Many expressions in the dialect has crossed over itself with the Mandarin taught in schools to create "Hohhot Mandarin", or what is commonly heard on the street.
Notable features of the Hohhot dialect include:
The above elements are generally seen in the Jin sub-branch of the "raw" Hohhot dialect, which has its own exclusive elements:
The dialect spoken in Wuchuan County, about 60 km north of the city, has a recognizably different flavour. The same applies to the dialect in Siziwang Banner. The dialect around Tumed Left Banner, west of the city, is significantly different phonologically, but lexically similar. In Zhangjiakou, Hebei, however, the dialect seems relatively similar and has little variation.
This article needs additional citations for
verification. (April 2011) |
ZhangjiakouāHohhot | |
---|---|
å¼µå¼ē, ę¤å°čÆ | |
Native to | China |
Region | Inner Mongolia, Zhangjiakou |
Chinese characters | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | ā |
Glottolog |
huhe1234 Huhehaote |
Location of the ZhangjiakouāHohhot dialect (yellow) spoken within China |
ZhangjiakouāHohhot ( simplified Chinese: å¼ å¼ē; traditional Chinese: å¼µå¼ē; pinyin: ZhÄnghÅ«piĆ n) is a dialect of Jin, one of the principal varieties of Chinese. It is colloquially referred to by native speakers as CĒdƬhuĆ (ę¤å°čÆ; lit.: local speech, or "this-place speech"). It is spoken in the city of Hohhot, in Inner Mongolia, and Zhangjiakou in Hebei Province in China. One of its sub-branches is Hohhot dialect ( simplified Chinese: å¼å굩ē¹čÆ; traditional Chinese: å¼å굩ē¹č©±; pinyin: HÅ«hĆ©hĆ otĆØhuĆ ), which is also locally referred as HÅ«shƬhuĆ (å¼åøčÆ; lit. Hu-city speech). The other sub-branch is the Zhangjiakou dialect ( simplified Chinese: å¼ å®¶å£čÆ; traditional Chinese: 張家å£č©±; pinyin: ZhÄngjiÄkĒuhuĆ ). [1]
There is notable dialectal variation within the two cities. People in the Jiucheng area ( Yuquan District), especially the Muslim Hui minority, speak a dialect very similar to what is heard in neighbouring Shanxi province and is undoubtedly a branch of the Jin linguistic group. The Mandarin dialect in Xincheng District is a branched combination of the Jin, Hebei dialect, Northeastern Mandarin, and elements of the Manchu language, caused by the migration patterns to the region. It has thus created a distinct linguistic style. The two spoken forms of the Hohhot dialect are only partially intelligible to each other.
Like most Jin dialects, the Jiucheng Hohhot dialect uses the glottal stop and is mutually intelligible with many dialects in neighboring Shanxi. In its full-fledged form, however, it is only partially intelligible with Standard Chinese. Arguably the most eccentric sound is the "nge" sound used to express "I". Many expressions in the dialect has crossed over itself with the Mandarin taught in schools to create "Hohhot Mandarin", or what is commonly heard on the street.
Notable features of the Hohhot dialect include:
The above elements are generally seen in the Jin sub-branch of the "raw" Hohhot dialect, which has its own exclusive elements:
The dialect spoken in Wuchuan County, about 60 km north of the city, has a recognizably different flavour. The same applies to the dialect in Siziwang Banner. The dialect around Tumed Left Banner, west of the city, is significantly different phonologically, but lexically similar. In Zhangjiakou, Hebei, however, the dialect seems relatively similar and has little variation.