Hakka Chinese
| Hakka | |
|---|---|
| 客家话 Hak-kâ-va/Hak-kâ-fa | |
"Kejiahua" in Chinese characters | |
| Native to | China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, overseas communities (particularly in Southeast Asia) |
| Region | Guangdong, New Territories in Hong Kong |
| Ethnicity | Hakka |
Native speakers | 44 million (2023)[1] |
Early forms | |
| Dialects |
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| |
| Official status | |
Official language in | Taiwan[a][7] |
| Regulated by |
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| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | hak |
| Glottolog | hakk1236 |
| Linguasphere | 79-AAA-g > 79-AAA-ga (+ 79-AAA-gb transition to 79-AAA-h) |
| Hakka Chinese | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Simplified Chinese | 客家话 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Traditional Chinese | 客家話 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Hakka | hag5 ga1 fa4 or hag5 ga1 va4 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Hakka (Chinese: 客家话; pinyin: Kèjiāhuà; Pha̍k-fa-sṳ: Hak-kâ-va / Hak-kâ-fa, Chinese: 客家语; pinyin: Kèjiāyǔ; Pha̍k-fa-sṳ: Hak-kâ-ngî) forms a language group of varieties of Chinese, spoken natively by the Hakka people in parts of Southern China, Taiwan, some diaspora areas of Southeast Asia and in overseas Chinese communities around the world.
Due to its primary usage in isolated regions where communication is limited to the local area, Hakka has developed numerous varieties or dialects, spoken in different provinces, such as Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan, Fujian, Sichuan, Hunan, Jiangxi, Guizhou, as well as in Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia. Hakka is not mutually intelligible with Yue, Wu, Min, Mandarin or other branches of Chinese, and itself contains a few mutually unintelligible varieties. It is most closely related to Gan and is sometimes classified as a variety of Gan, with a few northern Hakka varieties even being partially mutually intelligible with southern Gan. There is also a possibility that the similarities are just a result of shared areal features.[8]
Taiwan designates Hakka as one of its national languages, thus regarding the language as a subject for its study and preservation. Pronunciation differences exist between the Taiwanese Hakka dialects and mainland China's Hakka dialects; even in Taiwan, two major local varieties of Hakka exist.
The Meixian dialect (Moiyen) of northeast Guangdong in mainland China has been taken as the "standard" dialect by the government of mainland China. The Guangdong Provincial Education Department created an official romanization of Moiyen in 1960, one of four languages receiving this status in Guangdong.
The She ethnic group and Hakka people have a history of contact; the She Chinese language is either closely related to or heavily influenced by Hakka, if not both.[9]
- ^ Hakka at Ethnologue (27th ed., 2024)
- ^ Nakanishi 2010.
- ^ Coblin 2019, p. 438-440.
- ^ Fan, Cheng-hsiang; Kao, Evelyn (25 December 2018). "Draft National Language Development Act Clears Legislative Floor". Focus Taiwan News Channel. Central News Agency. Archived from the original on 25 December 2018.
- ^ "Dàzhòng yùnshū gōngjù bòyīn yǔyán píngděng bǎozhàng fǎ" 大眾運輸工具播音語言平等保障法 [Act on Broadcasting Language Equality Protection in Public Transport] (in Chinese) – via Wikisource.
- ^ Article 6 of the Standards for Identification of Basic Language Abilities and General Knowledge of the Rights and Duties of Naturalized Citizens Archived 25 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Hakka Basic Act". Retrieved 22 May 2019 – via law.moj.gov.tw.
- ^ Thurgood, Graham; LaPolla, Randy J., eds. (2003). The Sino-Tibetan Languages. Routledge. ISBN 0-7007-1129-5.
- ^ You Wenliang 游文良. 2002. Shezu yuyan 畲族语言. Fuzhou: Fujian People's Press 福建人民出版社. ISBN 7-211-03885-3
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