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Xiāng (Hsiang, simplified Chinese: 湘语; traditional Chinese: 湘語), also known as Hunanese (Chinese: 湖南话), is a Chinese language spoken mainly in Hunan province, but also in Sichuan and Guangxi provinces. Scholars divide it into Old Xiāng and New Xiāng. Old Xiāng dialects are of immense interest to Chinese dialectologists and historical phonologists because they, along with dialects of Wu Chinese, still exhibit the three-way distinction of Middle Chinese obstruents, preserving the voiced stops, fricatives and affricates. However, Xiāng has been heavily influenced by Mandarin, which adjoins three of the four sides of the Xiāng speaking territory. New Xiāng, which has lost the voiced obstruents, is to a certain extent intelligible to speakers of Southwestern Mandarin.
[edit] ClassificationAccording to Norman (1988), Xiāng belongs to the central group of Chinese.[1] [edit] Geographic distributionXiāng is spoken by over 36 million people in China, primarily in the central and southwestern parts of the Hunan province, in about 20 counties of Sichuan province, the four counties of Quánzhōu (全州), Guànyáng (灌陽), Zīyuán (資源) and Xīngān (興安) in northern Guangxi province, and parts of Guangdong province. It is abutted by Mandarin speaking areas to the north, west and south, and by Gàn in the eastern parts of Hunan and Jiangxi. Xiāng is also in contact with the Tujia and Hmong languages in the northwest. [edit] DialectsAs mentioned above, linguists distinguish two subdivisions of Xiāng, namely the Old Xiāng and New Xiāng. Old Xiāng, the variety less influenced by Mandarin, is spoken to the south and New Xiāng to the north. According to Bao & Chen (2005), three main dialect groups have been identified, amongst other unclassified dialects:
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[edit] See also[edit] Bibliography
[edit] External links
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