Jinhui dialect | |
Also Known As: | Dônđäc |
Nativename: | 偒傣 |
States: | China |
Region: | Jinhui, Fengxian, Shanghai |
Ethnicity: | Han Chinese |
Speakers: | 100,000 |
Date: | 2012 |
Familycolor: | Sino-Tibetan |
Fam2: | Sinitic |
Fam3: | Wu |
Fam4: | Taihu |
Fam5: | Suzhou–Shanghai–Jiaxing |
Isoexception: | dialect |
Glotto: | none |
The Jinhui dialect, also known as Dônđäc, is a dialect of Wu Chinese spoken in the town of, China in Shanghai's suburban Fengxian District. It has about 100,000 native speakers.[1] [2] Jinhui is located near the border of the ancient states of Wu and Yue during the Spring and Autumn period. Like other Wu dialects, Dônđäc has preserved many special features of the Old Yue language.
Dônđäc has 20 oral vowel qualities, plus many nasal and rhotic ones. According to a Fudan University study that was published in the journal Science, Dônđäc has the largest oral vowel quality inventory in the world (phonemically speaking), and ranks highest in overall phonemic diversity among all languages studied in the research.[3] [4] [5] According to linguist Qian Nairong, who spent eight years teaching in Fengxian and studying its dialects, the reason Dônđäc has so many vowels is because Jinhui is the place where five isoglosses intersect.[6]
Jinhui has 20 oral vowel phonemes, much more than Standard Mandarin which can theoretically be analysed as having as few as 2 vowels.[7] [3] Pairs of checked and non-checked finals have different vowels. These differences are meaningful in distinguishing phonemes, and therefore they are considered different vowels.[7]
i | y | e | ø | ɛ | ɑ | ɨ | ɯ | ɔ | o | u | |
ɪˀ | ʏˀ | ʌˀ | œˀ | æˀ | aˀ | — | əˀ | ɒˀ | ɵˀ | — |
There is also a rhotic vowel pronounced as /[ɚ]/ which also occurs in restricted environments and is not argued to be a separate vowel, as well as syllabic nasals pronounced as //ŋ̍ m̩//. There are no diphthongs in Jinhui; all vowels are monophthongs.[7]
Jinhui also has a large number of consonants, including glottalized stops and a palatalized series:[7]
m mʲ | n nʲ | ŋ | ||||
ˀb pʰ b ˀbʲ pʰʲ bʲ | ˀd tʰ d ˀdʲ tʰʲ dʲ | ts tsʰ dz tɕ tɕʰ dʑ | kʰ ɡ ˀɟ | kfʰ ɡv | ʔ | |
f v vʲ | s z ɕ ʑ | h ɦ | ||||
l lʲ | j | w |
pronounced as /[kfʰ ɡv]/ are phonetically unusual for a Chinese variety; these and the palatalized series correspond to the Mandarin medial vowels -u- and -i-.
It is not clear how many phonemic tones Jinhui has. Of the eight traditional tones, one pair is found in checked syllables, and so not phonemically distinctive. All four pairs may depend on the voicing of the initial, as in other varieties of Wu, but the existence of pronounced as /[ˀm ˀn ˀnʲ ˀl]/ suggests either that they are distinctive after sonorants, or that the consonant inventory is larger.
꜀平 Level | ꜂上 Rising | 去꜄ Departing | 入꜆ Entering | ||
yin | ˥˧ 53 | ˧˧˥ 335 | ˦ 4 | ˧˥ˀ 35 | |
yang | ˨˧˩ 231 | ˩˩˧ 113 | ˨˧ 23 | ˨˧ˀ 23 |
In an effort to preserve its unique dialect, Jinhui began teaching it in school in 2012, with a textbook written by Fudan University professor Li Hui, a Jinhui native, and Hong Yulong, the principal of Jinhui School.[6] [8]