Languages of China
- Languages of China
Languages of
country = China

image size = 300px
caption = Map of Linguistic Groups showing areas claimed by thePeople's Republic of China (including areas governed by the Republic of China)
official = Chinese
unofficial =
main =
regional =
indigenous =
minority =
immigrant =
foreign =
sign =Chinese Sign Language
keyboard =
keyboard
China's many different ethnic groups speak many differentlanguage s, collectively called "Zhōngguó Yǔwén" (中国语文), literally "speech and writing of China" which mainly span six linguistic families. Most of them are dissimilar morphologically andphonetic ally and aremutually unintelligible . "Zhongguo Yuwen" includes the many differentHan Chinese language variants (commonly simply called Chinese) as well as non-Han minority languages such as Mongolian and Tibetan.Chinese language policy in
mainland China is heavily influenced by Soviet nationalities policy and officially encourages the development of standard spoken and written languages for each of thenationalities of China . However, in this schema,Han Chinese are considered a single nationality, and official policy of thePeople's Republic of China (PRC) treats the different varieties of theChinese spoken language differently from the different national languages. For example, while official policies in mainland China encourage the development and use of different orthographies for the national languages and their use in educational and academic settings, the same is not true for the differentChinese spoken languages , despite the fact that they are more different from each other than, for example, theRomance languages of Europe.Putonghua orStandard Mandarin is the official national spoken language (except in Hong Kong and Macau), althoughautonomous regions andspecial administrative region s have additional official languages. For example, Tibetan has official status within theTibet Autonomous Region and Mongolian has official status within theInner Mongolian Autonomous Region .Hong Kong andMacau not only have English and Portuguese as official languages respectively, Cantonese is the legal official spoken Chinese variant, with the use of traditional characters as the official written language.Unofficially, there are large economic, social and practical incentives to be functional in
Putonghua , a standardised form of the Mandarin group of dialects spoken in northern and southwestern China, which serves as alingua franca among the different groups within mainland China. In addition, it is also considered increasingly prestigious and useful to have some ability in English, which is a required subject for persons attending university. During the 1950s and 1960s, Russian had some social status among elites in mainland China as the international language ofsocialism .The Economist , issue April 12, 2006 reported that up to one fifth of the population is learning English.Gordon Brown , the British Prime Minister, estimated that the total English-speaking population in China will outnumber the native speakers in the rest of the world in two decades. [http://www.economist.com/displaystory.cfm?story_id=6803197]Spoken
The spoken languages of nationalities that are a part of the
People's Republic of China belong to at least seven families:*The Sino-Tibetan family: 28 nationalities (including the Han,
Tibetans , Miao (Hmong), and Yao)
*The Altaic family: 17 (including the Uyghurs,Mongols , andManchu )
*The Austroasiatic family: 4 (theDe'ang ,Blang , Gin (Vietnamese), and Wa)
*The Tai-Kadai family: several languages spoken by theZhuang , theBuyei , theDai people , theDong people , and the Hlai (Li people).
*The Indo-European family: 2 (theRussians and Tajiks)
*The Austronesian family: 1 official nationality (theGaoshan , who speak many languages), 1 unofficial (theUtsul s, who speak theTsat language but are consideredHui .)
*Language isolate: 1 (theKoreans )Written
The following languages have traditionally had written forms that do not involve
Chinese character s ("hanzi"):*The
Mongolians -Mongolian language -Mongolian alphabet
*TheManchus -Manchu language -Manchu alphabet
*TheTibetans -Tibetan language -Tibetan script
*The Uyghurs -Uyghur language -Arabic alphabet
*TheKazakhs -Kazakh language -Arabic alphabet
*TheKyrgyz -Kyrgyz language -Arabic alphabet
*TheKoreans -Korean language -Hangul
*TheXibe (Sibo) -Xibe language -Manchu alphabet
*TheDai -Dai language
*The Yi -Yi language - Yi syllabary
*TheNaxi -Dongba script Chinese palaces, temples, and coins have traditionally been inscribed in four scripts:
*Mongol
*Tibetan
*Chinese
*ManchuChinese banknotes contain several scripts in addition to Chinese script. These are:
*Mongol
*Tibetan
*Arabic (for Uyghur)
*Latin (for Zhuang)Ten nationalities who never had a written system have, under the
PRC 's encouragement, developedphonetic alphabet s. According to [http://www.china.org.cn/e-white/20050301/index.htm a government white paper] published in early 2005, "by the end of 2003, 22 ethnic minorities in China used 28 written languages."Political controversies
Language policy within China is the subject of a number of political controversies mostly having to do with the political status of minority nationalities in China. Some critics of the Beijing government,such as the
Tibetan Government-in-Exile argue that social pressures and political efforts result in a policy ofsinicization and often term PRC policiescultural genocide Fact|date=June 2008. Supporters of Chinese policies argue that both in theory and in practice that Chinese policies are rather supportive of multilingualism and the development of minority languages, and that China has a far better track record in these issues than some other countries.Fact|date=June 2008.Further reading
*Kane, D. (2006). "The Chinese language: its history and current usage". North Clarendon, VT: Tuttle. ISBN 0804838534
*Halliday, M. A. K., & Webster, J. (2005). "Studies in Chinese language". London: Continuum. ISBN 0826458742
*Ramsey, S. R. (1987). "The languages of China". Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691066949
*Hong, B. (1978). "Chinese language use". Canberra: Contemporary China Centre, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University. ISBN 0909596298
*Cheng, C. C., & Lehmann, W. P. (1975). "Language & linguistics in the People's Republic of China". Austin: University of Texas Press. ISBN 0292746156See also
*
Demographics of the People's Republic of China and Taiwan
*ISO 639 macrolanguage#zho
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