New Xiang Explained

New Xiang
Also Known As:Chang-Yi
Nativename:长益片
States:People's Republic of China
Region:Hunan
Speakers:?
Familycolor:Sino-Tibetan
Fam2:Sinitic
Fam3:Chinese
Fam4:Xiang
Map:Hunanese Xiang Cities.png
Mapcaption:New Xiang is in red. It is in contact with Southwestern Mandarin to the northwest, Gan to the east, Old Xiang to the west, and Hengzhou Xiang to the south (yellow).
Iso3:none
Iso6:cayi
Glotto:chan1316
Glottorefname:Changyi
Lingua:79-AAA-eaa
Script:Chinese characters

New Xiang, also known as Chang-Yi is the dominant form of Xiang Chinese. It is spoken in northeastern areas of Hunan, China adjacent to areas where Southwestern Mandarin and Gan are spoken. Under their influence, it has lost some of the conservative phonological characteristics that distinguish Old Xiang. While most linguists follow Yuan Jiahua in describing New Xiang as a subgroup of Xiang Chinese,[1] Zhou Zhenhe and You Rujie classify it as Southwestern Mandarin.[2] [3] However, New Xiang is still very difficult for Mandarin speakers to understand, particularly the old style of New Xiang.

Dialects and regions

New Xiang-speaking cities and counties are mainly located in the northeast part of Hunan, the lower river of Xiang and Zi. The Changsha dialect is representative. There are three main subdialects under New Xiang.

Chang-Tan
  • Urban Changsha, Changsha County, Wangcheng District, Ningxiang, Liuyang*, Xiangyin, Miluo, Nanxian, Urban Zhuzhou, Zhuzhou County, Urban Xiangtan, Xiangtan County, Nanxian
    Yi-Yuan
  • Urban Yiyang, Yuanjiang, Taojiang
    Yueyang
  • Yueyang County, Yueyang

    Suantang (酸汤) is a lect spoken by about 80,000 ethnic Miao people in Baibu (白布), Dihu (地湖), Dabaozi (大堡子), and Sanqiao (三锹) in Tianzhu, Huitong, and Jing counties of Hunan province.[4] It is very similar to New Xiang, but it is unintelligible with Southwestern Mandarin.[5] [6]

    Notes and References

    1. Book: Norman, Jerry . Chinese . 1988 . Cambridge University Press . 0-521-22809-3 . Cambridge . 207.
    2. Book: Zhou, Zhenhe 周振鹤 . Fāngyán yǔ Zhōngguó wénhuà . You . Rujie 游汝杰 . Shanghai renmin chubanshe . 1986 . Shanghai . zh . zh:方言与中国文化 . Dialects and Chinese Culture.
    3. Book: Kurpaska, Maria . Chinese Language(s): A Look Through the Prism of "The Great Dictionary of Modern Chinese Dialects" . De Gruyter Mouton . 2010 . 978-3-11-021914-2 . Berlin . 55.
    4. Book: Chen, Qiguang 陈其光 . Miáo-Yáo yǔwén . 2013 . Zhongyang minzu daxue chubanshe . Beijing . 35 . zh . zh:苗瑶语文 . Miao and Yao Language.
    5. Yu Dazhong [余达忠]. 2017. "Ethnic Interactions and the Formation of the Sanqiu People in the Borderland of Modern Hunan, Guizhou and Guangxi Provinces [近代湘黔桂边区的族群互动和“三锹人”的形成]". In Journal of Guizhou Education University [贵州师范学院学报], Vol. 33, No. 1 (Jan 2017).
    6. Chen Qiguang [陈其光] (2013). Miao and Yao language [苗瑶语文]. Beijing: Ethnic Publishing House [民族出版社].