The Zhuang language (or language group) has been divided by Chinese linguists into northern and southern "dialects" (fāngyán 方言 in Chinese), each of which has been divided into a number of vernacular varieties (known as
tǔyǔ 土語 in Chinese) by Chinese linguists (Zhang & Wei 1997; Zhang 1999:29-30). The
Wuming dialect of Yongbei Zhuang, classified within the "Northern Zhuang dialect", is considered to be the "
standard" or
prestige dialect of Zhuang, developed by the government for certain official usages. Although Southern Zhuang varieties have aspirated stops, Northern Zhuang varieties lack them. There are over 60 distinct tonal systems with 5–11 tones depending on the variety. Zhang (1999) identified 13 Zhuang varieties. Later research by the
Summer Institute of Linguistics has indicated that some of these are themselves multiple languages that are not
mutually intelligible without previous exposure on the part of speakers, resulting in 16 separate
ISO 639-3 codes.
Northern Zhuang Northern Zhuang comprises dialects north of the
Yong River, with 8,572,200 speakers ( [] prior to 2007): •
Guibei 桂北 (1,290,000 speakers):
Luocheng,
Huanjiang,
Rongshui,
Rong'an,
Sanjiang,
Yongfu,
Longsheng,
Hechi,
Nandan,
Tian'e,
Donglan ( []) •
Liujiang 柳江 (1,297,000 speakers):
Liujiang, North
Laibin,
Yishan,
Liucheng,
Xincheng ( []) •
Hongshui He 紅水河 (2,823,000 speakers): South
Laibin,
Du'an,
Mashan, Shilong,
Guixian,
Luzhai,
Lipu,
Yangshuo. Castro and Hansen (2010) distinguished three
mutually unintelligible varieties: Central Hongshuihe ( []),
Eastern Hongshuihe ( []) and Liuqian ( []). •
Yongbei 邕北 (1,448,000 speakers): North
Yongning,
Wuming (prestige dialect),
Binyang,
Hengxian,
Pingguo ( []) •
Youjiang 右江 (732,000 speakers):
Tiandong,
Tianyang, and parts of the
Baise City area; all along the
Youjiang River basin area ( []) •
Guibian 桂邊 (
Yei Zhuang; 827,000 speakers):
Fengshan,
Lingyun,
Tianlin,
Longlin, North
Guangnan (
Yunnan) ( []) •
Qiubei 丘北 (
Yei Zhuang; 122,000 speakers):
Qiubei area (
Yunnan) ( []) •
Lianshan 連山 (33,200 speakers):
Lianshan (
Guangdong), North
Huaiji (
Guangdong) ( [])
Eastern Guangxi In east-central Guangxi, there are isolated pockets of Northern Zhuang speakers in
Zhongshan (14,200 Zhuang people),
Pingle (2,100 Zhuang people),
Zhaoping (4,300 Zhuang people),
Mengshan (about 5,000 Zhuang people), and
Hezhou (about 3,000 Zhuang people) counties. These include the following varieties named after administrative villages that are documented by Wei (2017). •
Lugang Village 蘆崗村, Etang Town 鵝塘鎮, Pinggui District 平桂區,
He County 賀縣 •
Qishan Village 啟善村, Yuantou Town 源頭鎮,
Pingle County •
Xiping Village 西坪村, Zouma Township 走馬鄉,
Zhaoping County •
Xie Village 謝村, Xinxu Town 新圩鎮,
Mengshan County •
Nitang Village 坭塘村, Yuantou Town 源頭鎮,
Pingle County •
Linyan Village 林岩村, Qingtang Town 清塘鎮,
Zhongshan County Southern Zhuang Southern Zhuang dialects are spoken south of the
Yong River, with 4,232,000 speakers •
Yanguang 硯廣 (
Nong Zhuang; 308,000 speakers): South
Guangnan (
Yunnan),
Yanshan area ( []) •
Wenma 文麻 (
Dai Zhuang; 95,000 speakers):
Wenshan (
Yunnan),
Malipo, Guibian ( []) The
Tày and
Nùng language complex in Vietnam is also considered one of the varieties of Central Tai and shares a high
mutual intelligibility with Wenshan Dai and other Southern Zhuang dialects in
Guangxi. The Nùng An language has a mixture of Northern and Central Tai features.
Recently described varieties Johnson (2011) distinguishes four distinct Zhuang languages in
Wenshan Prefecture,
Yunnan:
Nong Zhuang,
Yei Zhuang,
Dai Zhuang, and
Min Zhuang, all of which are Southern Zhuang varieties except for Yei Zhuang, which is Northern Zhuang.
Min Zhuang is a recently discovered Southern Zhuang variety that has never been described previous to Johnson (2011). (
See also Wenshan Zhuang and Miao Autonomous Prefecture#Ethnic groups)
Pyang Zhuang and
Myang Zhuang are recently described Southern Zhuang (Central Tai) languages spoken in
Debao County, Guangxi, China. == Writing systems ==