View text source at Wikipedia
Ji–Lu Mandarin | |
---|---|
Beifang Mandarin | |
Region | Hebei, Shandong |
Native speakers | (84 million cited 1982)[1] 12.6% of all Mandarin |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
ISO 639-6 | jlua |
cmn-jil | |
Glottolog | jilu1239 |
Linguasphere | 79-AAA-be |
Jilu or Ji–Lu Mandarin, formerly known as Beifang Mandarin "Northern Mandarin", is a dialect of Mandarin Chinese spoken in the Chinese provinces of Hebei (冀, Jì) and the western part of Shandong (魯, Lǔ) and Xunke, Tangwang & Jiayin counties of Heilongjiang. Its name is a combination of the abbreviated names of the two provinces, which derive from ancient local provinces.[2] The names are combined as Ji–Lu Mandarin.
Although these areas are near Beijing, Ji–Lu has a different accent and many lexical differences from the Beijing dialect, which is the basis for Standard Chinese, the official national language. There are three dialect groups: Bao–Tang, Shi–Ji, and Cang–Hui.[3][4]
People from the eastern part of Shandong, or the Jiaodong Peninsula, speak Jiaoliao Mandarin.
The Bao–Tang dialect shares the same tonal evolution of the checked tone from Middle Chinese as Beijing Mandarin and Northeastern Mandarin. Moreover, the popularization of Standard Chinese in the two provincial capitals has induced changes in the Shi–Ji dialect causing the former to shift rapidly towards the standard language.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link), with supplementary sound recordings.