Haklau Min
Hailufeng (海陸丰 Hai Lok Hong), or in the language itself Haklau, is a variety of Chinese mostly spoken in the Hailufeng region of Guangdong. The region includes Shanwei (Swabue), which administratively includes Haifeng County (海丰 Hai Hong), and Lufeng City (陸丰 Lok Hong), which itself was a former county and now county-level city. The name 'Hailufeng' / 'Hai Lok Hong' (海陸丰) is a portmanteau of those places. It is a Southern Min (Min Nan) language with similarities to Hokkien, especially Chiangchew Hokkien, though it also has close geographical and cultural ties with neighboring Teochew. Ethnically, the Haklau see themselves as Hailok, separate from the Teochews.
Hailufeng | |
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Hai Lok Hong | |
Haklau | |
Region | Mainly in Shanwei, eastern Guangdong province. |
Native speakers | 2.65 million (2021) |
Early forms | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | (hlh is proposed) |
ISO 639-6 | hife |
Glottolog | None |
Linguasphere | 79-AAA-jik (Haifeng) |
Haklau Min | |||||||||||||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 海陸豐話 | ||||||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 海陆丰话 | ||||||||||||||||
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Differences from Teochew include the preservation of the final codas -t and -n, which are completely lost in Teochew, as well as the absence of the -oi finals.