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Yue
Cantonese
粵語/粤语
廣東話/广东话
Yueyu.png
Yuht Yúh/Jyut6 jyu5 (Yue) written in traditional Chinese (left) and simplified Chinese (right) characters
Native to China, Vietnam, Malaysia, Singapore
Region Pearl River Delta (central Guangdong, Hong Kong, Macau); eastern-southern Guangxi
Ethnicity Cantonese people (Han Chinese)
Native speakers 59 million  (2007)[1]
Language family
Dialects
Writing system Traditional Chinese
Simplified Chinese
(Written Cantonese)
Cantonese Braille
Official status
Official language in Hong Kong and Macau (de facto, though officially referred to as "Chinese"; Cantonese and occasionally Mandarin are used in government). Recognised regional language in Suriname.
Language codes
ISO 639-3 yue
Cantonese in China.png
Yue / Cantonese
Traditional Chinese 粵語
Simplified Chinese 粤语
Cantonese Jyutping Jyut6 jyu5
Cantonese Yale Yuht Yúh
Hanyu Pinyin Yuè Yǔ
Commonly known as
Traditional Chinese 廣東話
Simplified Chinese 广东话

Yue or Yueh (English pronunciation: /ˈjuː/ or /juːˈ/[2]) is a primary branch of Chinese spoken in southern China, particularly the provinces of Guangdong and Guangxi. The name Cantonese is sometimes used, but linguists prefer to reserve that name for the Yue dialect of Guangzhou (Canton) and Hong Kong, which is the prestige dialect. The Cantonese and Taishanese dialects of Yue are spoken by substantial overseas populations in Southeast Asia, Canada, Australia, and the United States.

Yue is mutually unintelligible with other varieties of Chinese. They are among the most conservative varieties with regard to the final consonants and tonal categories of Middle Chinese, but have lost several distinctions in the initial and medial consonants that other dialects have retained.

Contents

Names[edit]

The prototypical use of the name "Cantonese" in English is for the Guangzhou (Canton) dialect of Yue,[3] but it is commonly used for Yue as a whole. To avoid confusion, academic texts may call the primary branch of Chinese "Yue",[4][5] following the Mandarin pinyin spelling, and either restrict "Cantonese" to its common usage as the dialect of Guangzhou, or avoid the term "Cantonese" altogether and distinguish Yue from Canton or Guangzhou dialect.

In Chinese, people of Hong Kong, of Macau, and Cantonese immigrants abroad[clarification needed] usually call the Yue language Gwóngdùng wá [kʷɔ̌ːŋ tʊ́ŋ wǎː] (廣東話) "speech of Guangdong".[a] People of Guangdong and Guangxi do not use that term, but rather Yuht Yúh [jỳt jy̬ː] (粵語) "Yue language". They also use baahk wá [pàːk wǎː] (白話) on its own to refer to the Guangzhou dialect.[citation needed] It is also used in Guangxi to refer to Yue dialects, as for example in an expression like "南宁白话", which means the baak waa of Nanning.[6]

History[edit]

The area of China south of the Nanling Mountains, known as the Lingnan (roughly modern Guangxi and Guangdong), was originally home to peoples known to the Chinese as the Hundred Yue. Large-scale Chinese migration to the area began after the Qin conquest of the region in 214 BC.[7] Successive waves followed at times of upheaval in North China, such as the falls of the Han, Tang and Song dynasties.[7] The most popular route was via the Xiang River, which the Qin had connected to the Li River by the Lingqu Canal, and thence into the valley of the Xi Jiang (West River).[8] A secondary route followed the Gan River and then the Bei Jiang (North River) into eastern Guangdong.[9] Yue speakers were later joined by Hakka speakers following the North River route, and Min speakers arriving by sea.[10]

After the fall of Qin, the Lingnan area was part of the independent state of Nanyue for about a century, before being incorporated in the Han empire.[9] Following the collapse of the Tang dynasty, much of the Yue area became part of the Southern Han, one of the longest-lived states of the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms, between 917 and 971.[9]

The waves of Chinese migration also assimilated huge numbers of aborigines, with the result that today's Yue-speaking population is descended from both groups.[11] The colloquial layers of Yue dialects have a number of elements influenced by the Tai languages formerly spoken widely in the area and still spoken by people such as the Zhuang.[12]

Rise of Cantonese[edit]

The port city of Guangzhou lies in the Pearl River Delta, with access to the interior via the West River, North River and East River, which converge at the delta. It has been the economic centre of the Lingnan region since Qin times, when it was an important shipbuilding centre.[13] By 660, it was the largest port in China, part of a trade network stretching as far as Arabia.[14] During the Southern Song, it also became the cultural centre of the region.[11] Like many other dialects it developed a distinct literary layer associated with the local tradition of reading the classics.[15] The Guangzhou dialect (Cantonese) was used in the popular Yuèōu, Mùyú and Nányīn folksong genres, as well as Cantonese opera.[16][17] There was also a small amount of vernacular literature, written with Chinese characters extended with a number of non-traditional characters for Cantonese words.[17]

Guangzhou became the centre of rapidly expanding foreign trade after the maritime ban was lifted, with the British East India Company establishing a chamber of commerce in the city in 1715.[14] The ancestors of most of the Chinese population of Hong Kong came from Guangzhou after the territory was ceded to Britain in 1842. As a result Hong Kong Cantonese is an offshoot of the Guangzhou dialect.[18] The popularity of Cantonese-language media, Cantopop and the Cinema of Hong Kong has since led to substantial exposure of Cantonese to China and the rest of Asia. On the Mainland, the national policy is to promote Putonghua. While the government does not prevent people from promoting local Cantonese language and culture, it does not support them. Occasionally there are news reports of children being punished for speaking Cantonese in schools.[19]

Dialects[edit]

Yue dialects are spoken in the southern provinces of Guangdong and Guangxi, an area long dominated culturally and economically by the city of Guangzhou (Canton) at the mouth of the Pearl River. The Cantonese dialect, also spoken in Hong Kong and Macau, is the prestige variety of Yue. The influence of Guangzhou has spread westward along the Pearl River system, so that for example the speech of the Guangxi city of Wuzhou some 190 km upstream is much more similar to that of Guangzhou than dialects of coastal districts that are closer but separated from the city by hilly terrain.[20] One of these coastal dialects, Taishanese, is the most common Yue dialect among overseas communities.[5]

Classification[edit]

Distribution of Pinghua and Yue dialect groups in Guangxi and Guangdong[21]
     Guibei (N Pinghua)      Gou–Lou
     Guinan (S Pinghua)      Guangfu
     Siyi
     Yong–Xun      Gao–Yang
     Qin–Lian      Wu–Hua

In the Language Atlas of China, Yue dialects are divided into seven groups.[21] Three groups are found in the watershed of the Pearl River:

The remaining four groups are found in coastal areas:

The Pinghua dialect of western Guangxi was formerly classified as Yue, but is distinguished as a separate primary branch of Chinese in the Language Atlas of China,[22] a classification generally followed in the West.

Anne Yue-Hashimoto has proposed an alternative classification based on a wider sampling of features:[23]

  • Pearl River
    • Northern
      • Sanyi–Zhaoqing: dialects of Foshan and southeast Zhaoqing
      • Interior: western part of the Pearl River catchment, including the Atlas's Gou–Lou and Wu–Hua dialects.
    • Guangfu, including Cantonese proper (Guangzhou, Hong Kong Cantonese), and also Gao–Yang dialects of Maoming and the Yong–Xun dialects of Nanning and Guiping.
    • Southern
  • Siyi–Liangyang

Cantonese[edit]

The Guangzhou (Canton) dialect of Yuehai, usually called "Cantonese", is the prestige dialect of Guangdong province and social standard of Yue. It is the most widely spoken dialect of Yue, and is an official language of Hong Kong and of Macau, alongside English and Portuguese respectively. It is the lingua franca of not only Guangdong province, but of overseas Cantonese emigrants, though in many areas abroad it is numerically second to the Taishanese dialect of Yue.

By law, Mandarin Chinese (Putonghua or guoyu) is the standard language of mainland China and Taiwan and is taught nearly universally as a supplement to local languages such as Cantonese in Guangdong. Mandarin is the medium of instruction in the state education system in Mainland China, but Cantonese is the oral language of instruction in Chinese schools in Hong Kong and Macau. Cantonese is the de facto official language of Hong Kong (along with English) and Macau (along with Portuguese), though legally the official language is just "Chinese". It is used extensively in Cantonese-speaking households. Cantonese-language media (Hong Kong films, television serials, and Cantopop), isolation from the other regions of China, local identity, and the non-Mandarin speaking Cantonese diaspora in Hong Kong and abroad give the language a unique identity. Colloquial Hong Kong Cantonese often incorporates English words due to historical British influences.

Most wuxia films from Canton are filmed originally in Yue and then dubbed or subtitled in Mandarin, English, or both.

Taishanese[edit]

When the Chinese government removed the prohibition on emigration in the mid-19th century, many people from rural areas in the coastal regions of Fujian and Guangdong emigrated to Southeast Asia and North America. Until the late 20th century, the vast majority of Chinese immigrants to North America came from the Siyi (four counties) to the southwest of Guangzhou.[24] The speech of this region, particularly the Taishan dialect, is thus the most common Yue variety in these areas.[5]

Taishanese has preserved the initial /n/ sound of words, whereas many post-World War II-born Hong Kong Cantonese speakers have changed this to an /l/ sound ("ngàuh lām" instead of "ngàuh nām" for "beef brisket" 牛腩) and more recently dropped the "ng-" initial (so that it changes further to "àuh lām"); this seems to have arisen from some kind of street affectation as opposed to systematic phonological change[citation needed]. The common word for "who" in Taishan is "sŭe" (), which is the same character used in Mandarin, whereas Cantonese uses the classical word "bīn go" (邊個), meaning which one.

Phonology[edit]

Distribution of Yue and other subgroups of Chinese

Yue dialects are among the most conservative of Chinese dialects regarding the final consonants and tonal categories of Middle Chinese, so that the rhymes of Tang poetry are clearer in Yue dialects than any other Chinese variety. However they have lost several distinctions in the initial and medial consonants that other dialects have retained.[25]

Initials and medials[edit]

In addition to aspirated and unaspirated voiceless initials, Middle Chinese had a series of voiced initials, but voicing has been lost in Yue and most modern varieties apart from the Wu dialects.[26] In many Yue dialects, including Cantonese, Middle Chinese /kʰ/ has become [h] or [f] in most words. In Taishanese, /tʰ/ has also changed to [h],[27] for example in the native name of the dialect, "Hoisan".

Most Yue dialects have merged the Middle Chinese retroflex sibilants with the alveolar sibilants, in contrast with Mandarin dialects, which have generally maintained the distinction.[26] For example, the words jiāng and zhāng are distinguished in Mandarin, but in modern Cantonese they have the same sound, jeung1.

Many Mandarin dialects, including that of Beijing, have a third sibilant series, formed through a merger of palatalized alveolar sibilants and velars, but this is a relatively recent innovation that has not affected Yue and other dialects.[28] For example, 晶, 精, 經 and 京 are all pronounced as jīng in Mandarin, but in Cantonese the first pair is pronounced jīng, and the second pair gīng. The earlier pronunciation is reflected in historical Mandarin romanizations, such as "Peking" (Beijing), "Kiangsi" (Jiangxi) and "Tientsin" (Tianjin).

Some Yue speakers, such as many Hong Kong Cantonese speakers born after World War II, merge /n/ with /l/,[29] but Taishanese and most other Yue dialects preserve the distinction.[26] Younger Cantonese speakers also tend not to distinguish between /ŋ/ and the zero initial,[30] though this distinction is retained in most Yue dialects.[26] Yue dialects retain the initial /m/ in words where Late Middle Chinese shows a shift to a denti-labial consonant, realized in most Northern dialects as [w].[31] Nasals can be independent syllables in Yue words, e.g. Cantonese ńgh (五) "five", and m̀h (唔) "not", although Middle Chinese did not have syllables of this type.[31]

In most Yue dialects (except for Tengxian), the rounded medial /w/ has merged with the following vowel to form a monophthong, except after velar initials. In most analyses velars followed by /w/ are treated as labio-velars.[32] Most Yue dialects have retained the Middle Chinese palatal medial, but in Cantonese it has also been lost to monophthongization, yielding a variety of vowels.[33]

Final consonants and tones[edit]

Middle Chinese syllables could end with glides /j/ or /w/, nasals /m/, /n/ or /ŋ/, or stops /p/, /t/ or /k/. Syllables with vocalic or nasal endings could occur with one of three tonal contours, called level (píng 平), rising (shǎng 上) or departing ( 去). Syllables with final stops were traditionally treated as a fourth tone category, the entering tone ( 入), because the stops were distributed in the same way as the corresponding final nasals.[34]

While northern and central varieties have lost some of the Middle Chinese final consonants, they are retained by most southern Chinese varieties, though sometimes affected by sound shifts. They are most faithfully preserved in Yue dialects.[33] Final stops have disappeared entirely in most Mandarin dialects, including the Beijing-based standard, with the syllables distributed across the other tones.[28] For example, the characters , , , , , , , , , and are all pronounced in Mandarin, but they are all different in Yue (Cantonese jeoi6, ngat6, ngai6, jik1, jik6, ji3, ji6, ai3, jap1, and jat6, respectively).

Similarly, in Mandarin dialects the Middle Chinese final /m/ has merged with /n/, but the distinction is maintained in southern dialects such as Hakka, Min and Yue.[28] For example, Cantonese has taahm (譚) and tàahn (壇) versus Mandarin tán, yìhm (鹽) and yìhn (言) versus Mandarin yán, tìm (添) and tìn (天) versus Mandarin tiān, and hàhm (含) and hòhn (寒) versus Mandarin hán.

Middle Chinese is described in contemporary dictionaries as having four tones, where the fourth category, the entering tone, consists of syllables with final stops. Many modern Chinese varieties contain traces of a split of each of these four tones into two registers, an upper or yīn register from voiceless initials and a lower or yáng register from voiced initials.[35] Mandarin dialects retain the register distinction only in the level tone, yielding the first and second tones of the standard language (corresponding to the first and fourth tones in Cantonese), but have merged several of the other categories. Most Yue dialects have retained all eight categories, with a further split of the upper entering tone conditioned by vowel length, as also found in neighbouring Tai dialects.[36] A few dialects spoken in Guangxi, such as the Bobai dialect, have also split the lower entering tone.

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ 廣東話: Yale Gwóngdùng wá, Jyutping Gwong2 dung1 waa2, Mandarin pinyin Guǎngdōng huà

References[edit]

  1. ^ Nationalencyklopedin "Världens 100 största språk 2007" The World's 100 Largest Languages in 2007
  2. ^ "Yueh", Webster's Third International Dictionary.
  3. ^ "Cantonese". Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. September 2005. 
  4. ^ Ethnologue: "Yue Chinese"; "Yue" or older "Yüeh" in the OED; ISO code yue
  5. ^ a b c Ramsey (1987), p. 98.
  6. ^ Kurpaska (2010), pp. 76, 176.
  7. ^ a b Yue-Hashimoto (1972), p. 1.
  8. ^ Yue-Hashimoto (1972), pp. 2–3.
  9. ^ a b c Yue-Hashimoto (1972), p. 2.
  10. ^ Yue-Hashimoto (1972), p. 3.
  11. ^ a b Yue-Hashimoto (1972), p. 4.
  12. ^ Yue-Hashimoto (1972), p. 6.
  13. ^ Li (2006), pp. 19–20.
  14. ^ a b Li (2006), p. 126.
  15. ^ Yue-Hashimoto (1972), p. 5.
  16. ^ Yue-Hashimoto (1972), pp. 5–6.
  17. ^ a b Ramsey (1987), p. 99.
  18. ^ Yue-Hashimoto (1972), p. 70.
  19. ^ Lai, Chloe (11 October 2009). "Linguistic heritage in peril". South China Morning Post. 
  20. ^ Ramsey (1987), p. 23.
  21. ^ a b Wurm et al. (1987).
  22. ^ Kurpaska (2010), p. 76.
  23. ^ Bauer & Benedict (1997), pp. xxxvii–xxxviii.
  24. ^ Yue-Hashimoto (1972), p. 10.
  25. ^ Ramsey (1987), pp. 99–100.
  26. ^ a b c d Norman (1988), p. 216.
  27. ^ Ramsey (1987), pp. 100–101.
  28. ^ a b c Norman (1988), p. 193.
  29. ^ Bauer & Benedict (1997), pp. 24, 32–33.
  30. ^ Bauer & Benedict (1997), pp. 24–25.
  31. ^ a b Ramsey (1987), p. 101.
  32. ^ Norman (1988), pp. 216–217.
  33. ^ a b Norman (1988), p. 217.
  34. ^ Norman (1988), p. 52.
  35. ^ Norman (2003), p. 77.
  36. ^ Norman (2003), p. 80.
Works cited

External links[edit]



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