Hainanese
Hainanese (Hainan Romanised: Hái-nâm-oe, Hainanese Pinyin: Hhai3 nam2 ue1, simplified Chinese: 海南话; traditional Chinese: 海南話; pinyin: Hǎinánhuà), also known as Qiongwen (simplified Chinese: 琼文; traditional Chinese: 瓊文) or Qiongyu (琼语; 瓊語), is a distinct variety of Min Chinese spoken in the southern Chinese island province of Hainan and Overseas Chinese such as Thailand. In the classification of Yuan Jiahua, it was included in the Southern Min group, being mutually unintelligible with other Southern Min varieties such as Hokkien–Taiwanese and Teochew. In the classification of Li Rong, used by the Language Atlas of China, it was treated as a separate Min subgroup. Hou Jingyi combined it with Leizhou Min, spoken on the neighboring mainland Leizhou Peninsula, in a Qiong–Lei group. "Hainanese" is also used for the language of the Li people living in Hainan, but generally refers to Min varieties spoken in Hainan.
Hainanese | |
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Qiongwen | |
海南話, Hhai3 nam2 ue1, Hái-nâm-oe | |
Pronunciation | [hai˨˩˧ nam˨˩ ue˨˧] (Haikou dialect) |
Native to | China, Singapore, Thailand, |
Region | Hainan |
Ethnicity | Hainanese |
Native speakers | Around 5 million in China (2002) |
Sino-Tibetan
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Early forms | |
Dialects | |
Chinese characters Hainan Romanized | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | (hnm is proposed) |
Glottolog | hain1238 |
Linguasphere | 79-AAA-k |
Hainanese | |
Varieties of the Hainanese spoken in Hainan. | |