the questionnaire of the
2018 New Zealand census. According to Hong Kong's 2021 census, 91.6 per cent of its population is Hongkongers and Chinese, with 29.9 per cent having been born in
mainland China,
Taiwan or
Macau. and in the 1940s prior to the establishment of the People's Republic of China in 1949. Thus, immigrants from Guangdong and their descendants have long constituted the majority of the ethnic Chinese residents of Hong Kong, which accounts for the city's broad
Cantonese culture. The
Cantonese language, a form of
Yue Chinese, is the primary language of Hong Kong and that used in the media and education. For that reason, while there are groups with ancestral roots in more distant parts of China, such as
Shanghai and
Shandong, as well as members of other Han Chinese subgroups, such as the
Hakka,
Hokkien, and
Teochew, residents who are Hong Kong-born and/or raised often assimilate into the mainstream Cantonese identity of Hong Kong and typically adopt Cantonese as their first language. Cantonese continues to remain the dominant language, spoken by 93.7% of the population in 2021. However, Mandarin has become increasingly important in daily life, with more residents speaking it due to growing ties with the Mainland. This change in linguistic trends is shaping the territory's cultural future and its role within the greater Chinese-speaking world. Simultaneously, there has been an increase in the number of new immigrants from
mainland China, influencing both demographic composition and linguistic trends in the territory. At the same time Mainland China holds the largest number of Hong Kong residents outside of Hong Kong.
Ethnic minorities In addition to the
Chinese supermajority, In 2021, 0.8 per cent of Hong Kong's population were of
European ancestry, many (48.9 per cent) of whom resided on
Hong Kong Island, where they constitute 2.5 per cent of the population. There are long-established
South Asian communities, which comprise both descendants of 19th and early 20th-century migrants as well as more recent short-term expatriates. There are small pockets of South Asian communities who live in Hong Kong including
Indians,
Nepalese, and
Pakistanis, who respectively made up 0.6 per cent, 0.4 per cent, and 0.3 per cent of Hong Kong's population in 2021. Smaller diaspora groups from the
Anglosphere include
Americans,
Britons,
Canadians, Australians, New Zealanders. There are also small pockets of East Asian communities, such as the
Japanese and
Koreans, living in Hong Kong. • Hong Kong includes: Indigenous inhabitants of the New Territories,
Tanka people,
Hakka people • Guangzhou and Macau includes:
Humen,
Cixi,
Zhongshan,
Hua County,
Wanshan Archipelago,
Nanhai,
Bao'an County,
Panyu,
Sanshui,
Shenzhen,
Shilong Shunde,
Dapeng,
Zengcheng,
Conghua,
Dongguan,
Huiyang • Sze Yap includes:
Kaiping,
Heshan,
Jiangmen,
Xinhui,
Taishan,
Enping • Chaozhou includes:
Shantou,
Chenghai,
Chao'an,
Chaoyang,
Fengshun,
Jieyang,
Nan'ao District, Nanshan,
Puning,
Huilai,
Raoping • Other places in Guangdong include: Hainan administrative region and other places.
Languages Religion ==Cultural identity==