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Mandarin(官话方言,old:北方方言), when used in the broad sense to refer to most of the Chinese dialects spoken over northern and southwestern China, covers many variations. This is manifested in two ways:
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The eight main dialect areas of Mandarin in Mainland China.
Generally speaking, the local pronunciations of people from other Mandarin-speaking areas depart more and more from the standard as distance from Beijing increases. Some areas, such as Heilongjiang, have pronunciations that are not significantly different from the standard, though this is the exception rather than the rule. Cities very close to Beijing, such as Tianjin, Baoding, Shenyang, or Dalian, already have pronunciations that are markedly different. In general Mandarin can be divided into the following dialect areas:
In addition, Jin is sometimes categorized under Mandarin, as the Qin-jin subdivision. However, current practice tends to set it apart as a separate division on equal footing with Mandarin.
See List of Chinese dialects for a comprehensive listing of major Chinese dialects, including Mandarin dialects.
Note: This page or section contains IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. See Help:IPA for a pronunciation key.
Due to differences in pronunciation, not all variations of spoken Mandarin are readily mutually intelligible. Specifically, according to SIL International [1]:
In addition, persons speaking forms of Mandarin which are not completely intelligible with Standard Mandarin will often conceptualize their speech as distinct from Standard Mandarin. Educated speakers of the official language of instruction living in southwestern cities such as Guilin and Kunming will be found to speak quite adequate Standard Mandarin, as well as their own mother tongue. However, they will conceptualize their mother tongue to be different from Standard Mandarin.
In addition, it is not uncommon for two speakers who both think of themselves as speaking Standard Mandarin to find it difficult to understand each other.
A generalized table for the initials of the Mandarin dialects is as follows. Initials not present in Standard Mandarin are inside parentheses.
| Bilabial | Labio- dental | Alveolar | Retroflex | Alveolo- palatal | Velar | Glottal | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plosives | p | pʰ | t | tʰ | k | kʰ | (ʔ) | |||||||
| Nasals | m | n | (ŋ) | |||||||||||
| Fricatives | f | (v) | s | ʂ | ʐ | ɕ | x | |||||||
| Affricates | (pf) | (pfʰ) | ts | tsʰ | tʂ | tʂʰ | tɕ | tɕʰ | ||||||
| Approximant | l | Ø | ||||||||||||
| Character | Meaning | Standard (Beijing) | Jinan (Ji Lu) | Xi\'an (Zhongyuan) | Chengdu (Southwestern) | Yangzhou (Jianghuai) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pinyin | IPA | ||||||
| 課 | lesson | ke | kʰɤ | kʰə | kʰuo | kʰo | kʰo |
| 客 | guest | kʰei | kʰei | kʰe | kʰəʔ | ||
| 果 | fruit | guo | kuo | kuə | kuo | ko | ko |
| 國 | country | kue | kue | kɔʔ | |||
Tone distribution variation:
V- = obstruent unvoiced initial consonant
L = sonorant voiced initial consonant
V+ = obstruent voiced initial consonant
| Middle Chinese Tone | Ping "level tone" | Shang "rising tone" | Qu "departing tone" | Ru "entering tone" | |||||||||
| Middle Chinese Initial | V- | L | V+ | V- | L | V+ | V- | L | V+ | V- | L | V+ | |
| Modern Mandarin | Beijing | Yin Ping | Yang Ping | Shang | Qu | redistributed with no pattern | Qu | Yang Ping | |||||
| Northeastern | Qu | Yang Ping | |||||||||||
| Ji-Lu | Yin Ping | Qu | Yang Ping | ||||||||||
| Jiao-Liao | Shang | Qu | Yang Ping | ||||||||||
| Zhongyuan | Yin Ping | Yin Ping | Yang Ping | ||||||||||
| Lan-Yin | Qu | Qu | Yang Ping | ||||||||||
| Southwestern | Yang Ping | Yang Ping | Yang Ping | ||||||||||
| Jianghuai | Ru | Ru | Ru | ||||||||||
Tone contour variation:
| Tone name | Yin Ping | Yang Ping | Shang | Qu | Ru | |
| Beijing | Beijing | ˥ (55) | ˧˥ (35) | ˨˩˦ (214) | ˥˩ (51) | |
| Northeastern | Harbin | ˦ (44) | ˨˦ (24) | ˨˩˧ (213) | ˥˨ (52) | |
| Ji-Lu | Tianjin | ˨˩ (21) | ˧˥ (35) | ˩˩˧ (113) | ˥˧ (53) | |
| Shijiazhuang | ˨˧ (23) | ˥˧ (53) | ˥ (55) | ˧˩ (31) | ||
| Jiao-Liao | Yantai | ˧˩ (31) | (˥ (55)) | ˨˩˦ (214) | ˥ (55) | |
| Zhongyuan | Zhengzhou | ˨˦ (24) | ˦˨ (42) | ˥˧ (53) | ˧˩˨ (312) | |
| Luoyang | ˧˦ (34) | ˦˨ (42) | ˥˦ (54) | ˧˩ (31) | ||
| Xi\'an | ˨˩ (21) | ˨˦ (24) | ˥˧ (53) | ˦ (44) | ||
| Tianshui | ˩˧ (13) | ˥˧ (53) | ˨˦ (24) | |||
| Lan-Yin | Lanzhou | ˧˩ (31) | ˥˧ (53) | ˧ (33) | ˨˦ (24) | |
| Yinchuan | ˦ (44) | ˥˧ (53) | ˩˧ (13) | |||
| Southwestern | Chengdu | ˦ (44) | ˨˩ (21) | ˥˧ (53) | ˨˩˧ (213) | |
| Xichang | ˧ (33) | ˥˨ (52) | ˦˥ (45) | ˨˩˧ (213) | ˧˩ʔ (31) | |
| Kunming | ˦ (44) | ˧˩ (31) | ˥˧ (53) | ˨˩˨ (212) | ||
| Wuhan | ˥ (55) | ˨˩˧ (213) | ˦˨ (42) | ˧˥ (35) | ||
| Liuzhou | ˦ (44) | ˧˩ (31) | ˥˧ (53) | ˨˦ (24) | ||
| Jianghuai | Yangzhou | ˧˩ (31) | ˧˥ (35) | ˦˨ (42) | ˥ (55) | ˥ʔ (5) |
| Nantong | ˨˩ (21) | ˧˥ (35) | ˥ (55) | ˦˨ (42), ˨˩˧ (213)* | ˦ʔ (4), ˥ʔ (5)* | |
* Dialects in and around the Nantong area typically have many more than 4 tones, due to influence from the neighbouring Wu dialects.
In general, the greatest variation occurs in slang, in kinship terms, in names for common crops and domesticated beasts, for common verbs and adjectives, and other such everyday terms. The least variation occurs in "formal" vocabulary -- terms dealing with science, law, or government.
Northeastern Mandarin, in particular, has a number of borrowings from Altaic languages not shared by other varieties of Mandarin.
Especially prominent in conversational Chinese, sentence-final particles alter the inherent meaning of a sentence by changing its sentence construction. Much like vocabulary (of which it is a hyponym of), particles can vary a great deal with regards to the locale. For example, the particle 嘛 (ma), which is used in most northern regionalects to denote obviousness or contention, is replaced by 哟 (yo) for southern usage. More examples persist in everyday colloquialism.
One feature of southwestern Mandarin is its frequent use of noun reduplication, which is almost not used in standard Mandarin. In Sichuan, one hears baobao "handbag" whereas Beijing uses bao\'r.
In both Mainland China and Taiwan, Mandarin in predominantly Han Chinese is taught by immersion starting in elementary school. After the second grade, the entire educational system is in Mandarin, except for local language classes that have been taught for a few hours each week in Taiwan starting in the mid-1990\'s.
In northern China, Sichuan, and other areas where the "Northern" language is spoken, the local variations of Mandarin are the mother tongues of most of the people who live in those regions. The era of mass education in Mandarin has not erased these earlier regional differences. In the south, the interaction between Mandarin and local variations of Chinese has produced local versions of the "Northern" language that are rather different from that official standard Mandarin in both pronunciation and grammar. For example, the Mandarin spoken in Taiwan by students who speak Taiwanese (a dialect of Southern Min) or Hakka as their mother tongue is usually spoken with a grammar and accent that renders it different from the Kuoyu standard, creating a version of Mandarin commonly known as Taiwanese Mandarin. Similarly in Singapore, the multi-cultural populance as well as large representative groups of various southern Chinese dialect groups has resulted in modifications to its own version of Mandarin.
Although Mandarin is considered the standard dialect, speaking Mandarin without the local accent or speaking Mandarin instead of the local dialect can mark a person as being an outsider or as someone who is not "a regular guy." Thus most Chinese, including Chinese political leaders themselves, do not bother to learn to speak Mandarin with the official standard accent. In some cases, such as with both Mao Zedong and Chiang Kai-Shek this results in the political leaders\' speech being largely unintelligible to large numbers of Chinese. One other consequence of this linguistic diversity, is that Chinese politics does not have a strong tradition of speech-making and a great amount of political discourse occurs in writing.
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| Generally accepted first-level categories: | ||||
| Often accepted first-level categories: | ||||
| Unclassified: | ||||
| Second-level Subcategories of Mandarin: | Northeastern | Beijing | Ji-Lu | Jiao-Liao | Zhongyuan | Lan-Yin | Southwestern | Jianghuai | |||
| Second-level Subcategories of Min: | Min Bei | Min Dong | Min Nan | Min Zhong | Puxian | Qiong Wen | Shaojiang | |||
| Ausbausprachen: | Standard Mandarin | (Taiwanese Mandarin) | Standard Cantonese | Dungan | |||
| Comprehensive list of Chinese dialects | Identification of the varieties of Chinese | ||||
| Historical phonology: | Old Chinese | Middle Chinese | Proto-Min | Proto-Mandarin | Haner | |||
| Written varieties | ||||
| Official written varieties: | Classical Chinese | Vernacular Chinese | |||
| Other varieties: | Written Vernacular Cantonese | |||
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