Northeastern Mandarin Explained

Northeastern Mandarin
Nativename:Chinese: 东北话
Dōngběihuà
States:Jilin, Heilongjiang, Liaoning and Inner Mongolia provinces of China; (Overseas, United States-New York City, Russia-primarily in Primorsky Krai)
Region:Northeast China, Russian Far East (Taz)
Speakers:82 million
Date:1987
Familycolor:Sino-Tibetan
Fam2:Sinitic
Fam3:Chinese
Fam4:Mandarin
Dia1:Taz
Dia2:Shenyang
Dia3:Harbin
Dia4:Changchun
Map:Mandarín noreste.png
Isoexception:dialect
Iso6:dbiu
Linglist:cmn-nem
Glotto:nort3283
Glottorefname:Northeastern Mandarin
Glottofoot:no
Lingua:79-AAA-bc

Northeastern Mandarin (or Chinese: 东北官话/Chinese: 東北官話 Dōngběiguānhuà "Northeast Mandarin") is the subgroup of Mandarin varieties spoken in Northeast China with the exception of the Liaodong Peninsula and few enclaves along Amur and Ussuri rivers. The classification of Northeastern Mandarin as a separate dialect group from Beijing Mandarin was first proposed by Li Rong, author of the Language Atlas of China, in 1989. However, many researchers do not accept the distinction.[1]

Geographical distribution

Northeastern Mandarin varieties are spoken in the northeastern part of China, in the provinces of Liaoning (except its southern part from Dalian to Dandong where Jiaoliao Mandarin is spoken), Jilin and Heilongjiang, and in some northern parts of Inner Mongolia. The number of speakers was estimated in 1987 as 82 million.

Dialects

The Language Atlas of China divided Northeastern Mandarin into three subgroups, following a classification be Hè Wēi based on the occurrence of nasal initials in words having a zero initial in Beijing:

More distant varieties tend to be more similar to the Beijing dialect than closer ones, so that the speech of Harbin is closer to that of Beijing than that of Jilin and Changchun, which in turn are closer than that of Shenyang.

A form of Northeastern Mandarin (with some words from Udege and Nanai) has been spoken since approximately 1800 by the Taz people nearby in the Russian Far East, primarily in Primorsky Krai.[2]

Overseas, Northeastern Mandarin is spoken in increasingly larger communities in New York City Chinatowns/Flushing in the United States.

Phonology

Northeastern Mandarin shares similarities with the Beijing dialect, such as a similar development of the entering tone and the preservation of initial pronounced as /[w]/, where the dialects of Hebei province, which surrounds Beijing, have pronounced as /[v]/. However, in northeastern Chinese, final -ian or -üan is pronounced with an pronounced as /[æ]/ rather than with pronounced as /[ɛ]/ or pronounced as /[e]/ as in the standard. The pronounced as /[ʐ]/ initial of Beijing (spelled r- in pinyin) is generally elided in northeastern varieties.

Cultural and regional identity

Mandarin variants like Northeastern Mandarin often contribute to a strong regional identity. Because of its informal usage of words and tones, comedians often use Northeast dialects when performing. Comedian Zhao Benshan is recognized nationwide for his performances which make humorous use of Northeastern dialect and Northeastern Errenzhuan folk dance and song traditions.

References

Works cited

Notes and References

  1. Book: Zhang, Shifang 张世方 . [{{google books|plainurl=y|id=L8LRYgEACAAJ|page=45}} Běijīng Guānhuà yǔyīn yánjiū ]. 2010 . Beijing yuyan daxue chubanshe . 9787561927755 . 45 . zh . zh:北京官话语音研究.
  2. Web site: Russian Census 2010: Population by ethnicity . 6 March 2019 . Gosudarstvennyi komitet po statistike.