| Min 閩方言 |
||
|---|---|---|
| Spoken in: | China; Malaysia, Singapore; Taiwan; Philippines | |
| Region: | Fujian; Guangdong (around Chaozhou-Swatou and Leizhou peninsula); Hainan; Zhejiang Zhoushan archipelago off Ningbo & other Chinese communities around the world | |
| Total speakers: | over 70 million | |
| Language family: | Sino-Tibetan Min |
|
| Language codes | ||
| ISO 639-1: | zh | |
| ISO 639-2: | chi (B) | zho (T) |
| ISO 639-3: | variously: cdo — Min Dong cpx — Pu-Xian czo — Min Zhong mnp — Min Bei nan — Min Nan |
|
| Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. | ||
Min (Chinese: 閩方言;
pinyin: Mǐn fāngyán; POJ: Bân
hong-giân; BUC: Mìng huŏng-ngiòng) is a general term for a group of
Min is typically divided, on the basis of mutual unintelligibility, into Min Bei (northern Min), Min Nan (southern Min), and other sub-groups. Min Bei is centered around the city of Fuzhou, capital of Fujian province (though this variant is also classed by some as Min Dong, Eastern Min), while Min Nan is dominant in most other locations. Qiong Wen, spoken in Hainan, is sometimes classed as a separate sub-group, but often viewed as part of Min Nan. Min Nan is also called by the name of its regional variants in the places it is spoken, especially Taiwanese. Xiamen (Amoy) dialect is the prestige dialect of Min Nan in mainland China, with Teochew also being an important sub-variant.
More complex division is suggested by SIL: Northern Min (Min-Bei, around Jian'ou in Fujian), Central Min (Min-Zhong, around Shaxian, Sanming), Eastern Min (Min-Dong in Fuzhou and Fu'an), Xinghua (in Puxian and Xianyou counties) and Southern Min (Min-Nan, in Zhangzhou, Quanzhou, Xiamen). Southern Min is also spoken by Fujian or Hoklo diaspora in Guangdong, Taiwan, Hainan, etc.
The Southern Min language in Taiwan is known as Hō-ló-oē, in Guangdong as Hoklo, in Hainan as Qiong Wen or Qiongzhou hua (though some class Qiong Wen as a separate sub-group). Min Nan is the dominant Chinese dialect spoken by the Chinese minority in the Philippines, known as Lan-nang. In Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia and other areas in Southeast Asia, Minnan is known as Hokkien, in addition to the Teochew variant, originating in the Chaoshan region, which is the ancestral home of many ethnic Chinese in Singapore.
Writing system
The writing system in Chinese characters is identical to Mandarin, with the addition of some specialized characters, although some Min speakers use the Church Romanization (Chinese: 教會羅馬字; pinyin: Jiaohui Luomazi): for Min Nan the Romanization is called POJ and for Min Dong called BUC, both of which were created by foreign missionaries in the 19th century (these Romanization systems are also used on Min Nan and Min Dong Wikipedia). There are some uncommon publications in mixed writing, combining Chinese characters for Chinese words and Latin alphabet for indigenous words, including those from Taiwanese aborigines.
Further reading
- DeBernardi, J. E. (1991). Linguistic nationalism--the case of Southern Min. Sino-Platonic papers, no. 25. Philadelphia, PA, USA: Order from Dept. of Oriental Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
External links
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