Junjiahua
Junjiahua, Junhua, Junsheng or "military speech" in English, is any of a number of isolated dialects in Guangdong, Guangxi, Hainan, Fujian, and Taiwan region. Some believe that they are a Mandarin dialect group that assimilated to local Chinese variants in southern China. Junhua began as a lingua franca in the army, being spoken between soldiers from all parts of China during the Ming dynasty. It was subsequently spread to areas around the camps where the army settled. It is now an endangered language. In Hainan, it's still spoken by about 100,000 people. These speakers mainly live in Sanya, Changjiang Li Autonomous County, Danzhou, Dongfang and Lingao.
Junjiahua | |
---|---|
軍話 | |
Native to | Mainland China Republic of China (Taiwan) |
Region | Taiwan: Taoyuan Guangdong: Huizhou, Lufeng Hainan: Sanya, Changjiang, Danzhou, Dongfang, Lingao Guangxi Fujian etc.[1] |
Native speakers | ~150,000 |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | None (mis ) |
ISO 639-6 | jnha |
Glottolog | None |
Some also consider the Dapenghua spoken in Dapeng Peninsula of Shenzhen to be a form of Junjiahua.