Min-nan
Min-nan (閩南(語)); native name Bân-lâm(-gú); (sometimes Hokkien or Hok-kiÃÂÃÂ n or Fookien, especially in Southeast Asia) literally means "Southern Min" or "Southern Fujian" and refers to the local language/dialect of southern Fujian province, China.
Northern and Southern Min can be grouped together as Min. Both are often classified as dialects of the Chinese language (itself part of the Sino-Tibetan language family). However, Min-nan, Northern Min and Mandarin (the Chinese official dialect) are not mutually intelligible.
Min-nan is spoken in the southern part of the southeastern Chinese of Fujian as well as by migrants from this province in Taiwan, Guangdong (around Chaozhou-Swatou, and Leizhou peninsula), Hainan, two counties in southern Zhejiang and Zhoushan archipelago offshore Ningbo. There are many Min-nan speakers also among overseas Chinese in Southeast Asia. In Taiwan, it also has the native name of Hō-lÃÂó-oē. In the Philippines, it has the name Lan nang uwe ("our people's language") among the Chinese Filipinos, many of which are descendants of Fujian people.
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2 Tones 3 Miscellanea 4 See also 5 External links |
There are three main dialects of Min-nan in southern Fujian, corresponding to the areas of:
Classification
The variant(s) spoken in Taiwan, though similar to the three southern Fujian variants, are collectively known as Taiwanese.
See also Taiwanese language and Penang Hokkien for more extensive descriptions of those variants.
Min-nan retains seven of the eight Middle Chinese toness, namely:
Tones
The numbers given in | | are tone contours (in the Amoy sub-dialect), where 1 is the lowest and 5 is highest. Unlike some Chinese languages, such as Cantonese, all tones in Min-nan are subject to tone sandhi, that is a given character's tone changes when it appears in front of another character.
The language is registered per RFC 3066 as zh-min-nan [1].Miscellanea