Dungan language

Dungan (Хуэйзў йүян)
Spoken in: Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan
Region:
Total speakers: 50,000
Ranking: not in top 100
Genetic classification: Sino-Tibetan

 Chinese
  Dungan

Official status
Official language of:
Regulated by:
Language codes
ISO 639-1
ISO 639-2sit
SILDNG
See also: LanguageList of languages

The Dungan language (autonym: Хуэйзў йүян [khueuzwu yuuyan]; 东干语 [東干語] in Chinese) is a Sino-Tibetan language spoken by the 50,000 Dungan or (Hui) of Central Asia. It is spoken primarily Kyrgyzstan, with speakers in Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Russia as well. This ethnic group may be the descendants of prisoners of war brought to China in the 14th century, who migrated west from China into Central Asia.

Although in vocabulary and structure, the language is not very different from Mandarin Chinese, it is unique in that it is the only variety of the Chinese language which is not normally written using Chinese characters. Originally the Dungan, being Muslim, wrote their language in the Arabic alphabet; however, the Soviet Union banned all Arabic scripts in the late 1920s. A Latin alphabet lasted until 1940, when the current Cyrillic alphabet was enforced. Like other Chinese languages, Dungan is tonal. There are two main dialects, one with 4 tones, and the other, upon which the writing system is based, has 3 tones, but this is not indicated in writing.

Dungan is most akin to the dialects of Mandarin spoken in the provinces of Shaanxi and Gansu. However, it contains many Russian, Arabic, and Persian loanwords. It forms most new words, however, using its own resources, as Chinese does. It is used in the school system.

Dungan alphabet: А/а, Б/б, В/в, Г/г, Д/д, Е/е, Ё/ё, Ж/ж, Җ/җ, З/з, И/и, Й/й, К/к, Л/л, М/м, Н/н, Ң/ң, Ә/ә, О/о, П/п, Р/р, С/с, Т/т, У/у, Ў/ў, Ү/ү, Ф/ф, Х/х, Ц/ц, Ч/ч, Ш/ш, Щ/щ, Ъ/ъ, Ы/ы, Ь/ь, Э/э, Ю/ю, Я

External links


Chinese: spoken varieties
Categories:

Gan | Hakka | Hui | Jin | Mandarin | Min | Pinghua | Xiang | Wu | Yue
Danzhouhua | Shaozhou Tuhua | Xianghua

Subcategories of Min: Min Bei | Min Dong | Min Nan | Min Zhong | Pu Xian | Qiong Wen | Shao Jiang
Note: The above is only one classification scheme among many.
The categories in italics are not universally acknowledged to be independent categories.
Comprehensive list of Chinese dialects
Official spoken varieties: Standard Mandarin | Standard Cantonese
Historical phonology: Old Chinese | Middle Chinese | Proto-Min | Proto-Mandarin | Haner
Chinese: written varieties
Official written varieties: Classical Chinese | Vernacular Chinese
Other varieties: Written Vernacular Cantonese

ja:ドンガン語 zh:东干语