Weihai dialect

Weihai is a Jiao-Liao dialect of Mandarin spoken in and around the city of Weihai, in eastern Shandong province.[1]

Weihai dialect
Native toChina
RegionShandong Peninsula
Sino-Tibetan
Language codes
ISO 639-3
GlottologNone

Language Variation

There are observable differences in how the dialect is spoken by younger and older generations. This is primarily due to the differences in education. The younger generation was and is educated in standard Mandarin, while the older generation is "hardly educated" due to the Cultural Revolution.[2]

Phonology

Like other Sino-Tibetan languages and dialects, Weihai is tonal.

Tones

Mandarin, and most dialects of Mandarin, has four tones. In Weihai, it is unclear if the tonal inventory matches standard Mandarin exactly or if the second tone follows the same pitch contour as the first tone (35, rising). The first tone in Weihai may also follow a 31 (low falling) contour rather than a 35 (rising) contour.[3]

Dang and Fulop[4] have found that high onset tones correlate to shorter stop releases.

gollark: I may need to work out how to make this legible.
gollark: ++tel graph
gollark: It can actually bridge channels to DMs, see.
gollark: I hope that isn't DMing someone.
gollark: Where exactly is 8286whatever?

References

  1. Wurm, S.; Li, R.; Baumann, T. (1987). Language Atlas of China. London: Longman Group.
  2. Jiang, L. (2006). The research on Weihai dialect kinship terminology. Wuhan, China: Central China Normal University.
  3. Yan, M. M. (2006). Introduction to Chinese Dialectology. Munich: Lincom Europa.
  4. Deng, J.; Fulop, S. (2016). "Interactions between stop aspiration and tonal pitch in Weihai Chinese". Proceedings of Meetings on Acoustics 171. 26.
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