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Languages of China

There are several hundred languages in the People's Republic of China. The predominant language is Standard Chinese, which is based on Beijingese, but there are hundreds of related Chinese languages, collectively known as Hanyu, that are spoken by 92% of the population. The Chinese languages are typically divided into seven major language groups, and their study is a distinct academic discipline. They differ as much from each other morphologically and phonetically as do English, German and Danish, but speakers of different Chinese languages are taught to write in Mandarin at school and often do to communicate with speakers of other Chinese languages. This does not mean non-Mandarin Sinitic languages do not have vernacular written forms however. There are in addition approximately 300 minority languages spoken by the remaining 8% of the population of China. The ones with greatest state support are Mongolian, Tibetan, Uyghur and Zhuang, as shown in the banknote of Chinese renminbi.

Spoken languages
The spoken languages of nationalities that are a part of China belong to at least nine families: • The Sino-Tibetan family: 19 official ethnicities (including the Han and Tibetans) • The Tai–Kadai family: several languages spoken by the Zhuang, the Bouyei, the Dai, the Dong, and the Hlai (Li people); 9 official ethnicities. • The Hmong–Mien family: 3 official ethnicities • The Austroasiatic family: 4 official ethnicities (De'ang, Blang, Gin (Vietnamese), and Wa) • The Turkic family: Uyghurs, Kazakhs, Salars, etc.; 7 official ethnicities. • The Mongolic family: Mongols, Dongxiang, and related groups; 6 official ethnicities. • The Tungusic family: Manchus (formerly), Hezhe, etc.; 5 official ethnicities. • The Koreanic family: Korean • The Indo-European family: 2 official ethnicities, the Russians and Tajiks (actually Pamiri people). There is also a heavily Persian-influenced Äynu language spoken by the Äynu people in southwestern Xinjiang, who are officially considered Uyghurs. • The Austronesian family: 1 official ethnicity (the Gaoshan, who speak many languages of the Formosan branch), 1 unofficial (the Utsuls, who speak the Tsat language but are considered Hui.) ===Sino-Tibetan=== • SiniticChineseMandarin ChineseBeijing MandarinStandard ChineseSingaporean MandarinMalaysian MandarinTaiwanese MandarinNortheastern MandarinJilu MandarinJiaoliao MandarinCentral Plains MandarinLan-Yin MandarinLower Yangtze MandarinSouthwestern MandarinJin ChineseWu ChineseShanghaineseSuzhouneseWenzhouneseHuizhou ChineseYue ChineseCantoneseTaishanesePing ChineseGan ChineseXiang ChineseHakka ChineseMin ChineseSouthern MinHokkienTeochew MinHainaneseLeizhou MinHaklau MinEastern MinPu–Xian MinNorthern MinCentral MinShao–Jiang MinXiangnan TuhuaShaozhou TuhuaBa–Shu Chinese (extinct)BaiDali language () • Dali dialect (Bai: Darl lit) • Xiangyun dialectYitdut language/Jianchuan language () • Yitdut dialect (Bai: Yit dut) • Heqing dialect (Bai: hhop kait) • Bijiang languageBijiang dialectLanping dialect (Bai: ket dant) • SonglinCai-LongCaijiaTibeto-BurmanTujiaPuroikQiangicQiangNorthern QiangSouthern QiangGyalrongicGyalrong (rGyalrong, Jiarong) • Khroskyabs (Lavrung) • Horpa (Stau) • PrinmiMuya (Munya) • ZhabaChoyo (Queyu) • Tangut (extinct)Tibeto-KanauriBodishTibetanCentral Tibetan (Standard Tibetan) • Amdo TibetanKhams TibetanBaimaTshanglaZhangzhung (extinct)Lolo–Burmese–Naxi • BurmishAchangChashanBolaZaiwaLangsuLashiLoloishYiLisuLahuHaniJino • Nakhi/Naxi • Jingpho–Nungish–Luish • JingphoNungishDerungNung • Nu • NusuRouruoMishmiMijuishMiju (Midzu, Kman, Geman, Kaman) • Zakhring (Meyor) • DigarishIduDigaroTaniDamuBokar ===Kra–Dai=== • BeKraGelaoKam–SuiDongSuiMaonan • Mulao/MulamHlai/Li • TaiZhuang (Vahcuengh) • Northern ZhuangSouthern ZhuangBouyei • Dai • Tai Lü languageTai Nüa languageTai Dam languageTai Ya language ===Turkic=== • KarlukIli TurkiUyghurUzbekKipchakKazakhKyrgyzTatarOghuzSalarSiberianÄynuFuyu KyrgyzWestern YugurTuvanOld Uyghur (extinct)Old Turkic (extinct) ===Mongolic=== • MongolianOiratTorgut OiratBuryatDaur • Southeastern • MonguorEastern YugurDongxiangBonanKangjiaTuoba (extinct) ;Para-MongolicKhitan (extinct)Tuyuhun (extinct) ===Tungusic=== • Southern • ManchuJurchenXibeNanai/Hezhen • Northern • EvenkiOroqen ===Koreanic=== • KoreanYukjin ===Hmong–Mien=== • HmongMienShe ===Austroasiatic=== • PakanicBolyuBuganMangPalaungicPalaung (De'ang, Ta'ang) • RiangAngkuicHu (Angku, Kon Keu) • Man Met (Kemie) • U (Pouma) • WaicBlang (Pulang, Samtao) • Wa (Va) • VieticVietnamese ===Austronesian=== • Formosan languagesTsat ===Indo-European=== • RussianTocharian (extinct)Saka (extinct)Pamiri (mislabelled as "Tajik") • SarikoliWakhiPortuguese (official in Macau) • English (official in Hong Kong) ===Yeniseian=== • Jie (Kjet) (extinct) (?) ===Mixed=== • E (TaiPinghua mixed language) • Hezhou (Uyghur-Mandarin mixed language or a Uyghur creole) • Macanese Patois (PortugueseCantonese creole) • Tangwang (MandarinSanta mixed language) • Wutun (Lower Yangtze MandarinAmdoBonan mixed language) ===Unclassified=== • Rouran (Rouran) (extinct)Nam (extinct) ==Written languages==
Written languages
(Yuzhi Wuti Qing Wenjian). The work contains four terms on each of its pages, arranged in the order of Manchu, Tibetan, Mongolian, Chagatai, and Chinese languages. For the Tibetan, it includes both transliteration and a transcription into the Manchu alphabet. For the Chagatai, it includes a line of transcription into the Manchu alphabet. The following ethnic minority languages traditionally had written forms that do not involve Chinese characters: • Tai Lü languageTai Lü alphabetTai Nüa languageTai Nüa scriptDagur languageManchu alphabetHmongic languagesHmong writing (Pollard script, Pahawh Hmong, Nyiakeng Puachue Hmong, etc.) • Kazakh languageKazakh alphabetsKorean languageChosŏn'gŭl alphabetKyrgyz languageKyrgyz alphabetsLisu languageLisu scriptManchu languageManchu alphabetMongolian languageMongolian writingNaxi languageDongba charactersQiang language or Rrmea languageRma scriptSanta languageArabic scriptSui languageSui scriptTibetic languagesTibetan scriptUyghur languageUyghur Arabic alphabetXibe languageManchu alphabetLoloish languagesYi script Many modern forms of spoken Chinese languages have their own distinct writing system using Chinese characters that contain colloquial variants. These typically are used as sound characters to help determine the pronunciation of the sentence within that language: • CantoneseWritten CantoneseShanghaineseWritten ShanghaineseHokkienWritten Hokkien Some non-Sinitic languages have historically used Chinese characters: • Korean languageHanjaVietnamese languageChữ NômZhuang languagesSawndipBouyei languageBouyei writing () • Bai languageBai writing () • Kam languageDong writing () Other languages, all now extinct, used separate logographic scripts influenced by, but not directly derived from, Chinese characters: • The Jurchens (Manchu ancestors) – Jurchen languageJurchen script • The Khitans (Mongolic people) – Khitan language – Khitan large and small scripts • The Tanguts (Sino-Tibetan people) – Tangut languageTangut script During Qing dynasty, palaces, temples, and coins have sometimes been inscribed in five scripts: • ChineseManchuMongolTibetanChagatai During the Mongol Yuan dynasty, the official writing system was: • 'Phags-pa script note with Chinese (Pinyin) at the top and Mongolian, Tibetan, Uyghur, and Zhuang along the bottom. Chinese banknotes contain several scripts in addition to Chinese script. These are: • Latin alphabet (for Chinese)Mongolian script • Tibetan script • Arabic script (for Uyghur)Latin alphabet (for Zhuang) Other writing system for Chinese languages in China include: • Nüshu scriptDongba symbols (pictograph) - Naxi language Ten nationalities who never had a written system have, under the PRC's encouragement, developed phonetic alphabets. According to a government white paper published in early 2005, "by the end of 2003, 22 ethnic minorities in China used 28 written languages." ==Language policy==
Language policy
One decade before the demise of the Qing dynasty in 1912, Mandarin was promoted in the planning for China's first public school system. Standard Mandarin (Putonghua) has been promoted as the commonly spoken language for the People's Republic since 1956, based phonologically on the dialect of Beijing, grammatically and lexically on various Mandarin varieties, and stylistically on the writings of Mao Zedong and Lu Xun. In September 1951, the All-China Minorities Education Conference established that all minorities should be taught in their language at the primary and secondary levels when they count with a writing language. Those without a writing language or with an "imperfect" writing language should be helped to develop and reform their writing languages. The Tibetan Government-in-Exile argues that social pressures and political efforts result in a policy of sinicization and feels that Beijing should promote the Tibetan language more. Because many languages exist in China, they also have problems regarding diglossia. Recently, in terms of Fishman's typology of the relationships between bilingualism and diglossia and his taxonomy of diglossia (Fishman 1978, 1980) in China: more and more minority communities have been evolving from "diglossia without bilingualism" to "bilingualism without diglossia." This could be an implication of mainland China's power expanding. In 2010, Tibetan students protested against changes in the Language Policy on the schools that promoted the use of Mandarin instead of Tibetan. They argued that the measure would erode their culture. In 2013, China's Education Ministry said that about 400 million people were unable to speak Mandarin. In that year, the government pushed linguistic unity in China, focusing on the countryside and areas with ethnic minorities. Mandarin Chinese is the prestige language in practice, and failure to protect ethnic languages does occur. In summer 2020, the Inner Mongolian government announced an education policy change to phase out Mongolian as the language of instructions for humanities in elementary and middle schools, adopting the national instruction material instead. Thousands of ethnic Mongolians in northern China gathered to protest the policy. The Ministry of Education describes the move as a natural extension of the ''Law of the People's Republic of China on the Standard Spoken and Written Chinese Language'' () of 2000. In 2024, General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party Xi Jinping called for wider use of Mandarin by ethnic minorities and in border areas. He stated that it is necessary to guide all ethnic groups in border regions to "continuously enhance their recognition of the Chinese nation, Chinese culture and the Communist Party". ==Study of foreign languages== . Front to back: French, Russian, Spanish, Japanese, Arabic, and Korean. Indo-European English English has been the most widely-taught foreign language in China, as it is a required subject for students attending university. After the Reform and opening up policy in 1988, English was taught in public schools starting in the third year of primary school. The Economist reported in 2006 that up to one fifth of the population was learning English. Gordon Brown, the former British prime minister, estimated that the total English-speaking population in China would outnumber the native speakers in the rest of the world in two decades. In China, English is used as a lingua franca in several fields, especially for business settings, and in schools to teach Standard Mandarin to people who are not Chinese citizens. English is also one of the official languages in Hong Kong, as prescribed by Chapter 1, Article 9 of the Basic Law of Hong Kong. German As of 2015, about 170,000 people have studied the German language in China. Spanish Due to growing interest in Latin America within China, about 20,000 people in China have studied the Spanish language as of 2016. As of 2018, there are about 120 Spanish-language departments nationwide. Portuguese Interest in Portuguese has increased greatly, due in part to Chinese investment in African nations such as Angola, Mozambique, and Cape Verde. although with government backing since then, interest in it has increased. Macau is used by China as a hub for learning Portuguese and diplomatic and financial ties with Brazil and Portuguese-speaking African countries. As of 2018, there are about 40 Portuguese-language departments nationwide. For example, Jianwen Foreign Language School, a high school located in the city of Shenzhen, has offered a Russian program since 2011. Arabic There have been a growing number of students studying Arabic, due to reasons of cultural interest and belief in better job opportunities. The language is also widely studied amongst the Hui people. In the past, literary Arabic education was promoted in Islamic schools by the Kuomintang when it ruled mainland China. Esperanto Esperanto became prominent in certain circles in the early 20th century and reached its peak in the 1980s, though by 2024 its prominence had declined. Japanese As of 2012, a little over one million people in China were studying Japanese, and there were 16,752 Japanese-language teachers. Learner motivations included interest in Japan's society and culture. Korean There are about 2 million Korean language speakers in China. Korean language education in China began in the year 1945 at the National Oriental Language College. Some non-Korean families have learned Korean because they expect to attain educational success or to increase their business connections with South Korea. ==See also==
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