The Dalian dialect (, Romaji: Dairen-ben) is a dialect of Mandarin Chinese spoken on the Liaodong Peninsula, China including the city of Dalian and parts of Dandong and Yingkou. The Dalian dialect shares many similarities with the Yantai dialect and Weihai dialect spoken on Shandong Peninsula (Jiaodong Peninsula), to the south of the Bohai Strait; hence each of them is a subset of Jiao Liao Mandarin. The Dalian dialect is notable among Chinese dialects for loanwords from Japanese and Russian, reflecting its history of foreign occupation.
Notable words in the Dalian dialect include ("foolish") and ("to cheat or deceive").
Phonology
Comparing with Mandarin on pronunciation
Syllables that don't exist in standard Mandarin
- biÃÂng (de) <small>(It is actually the liaison of bì(å©¢) yÃÂng(Ã¥Â
»), almost always followed by an unvoiced de(çÂÂ))</small> -ãÂÂAdjectiveãÂÂ: literally means "raised by a maidservant";ãÂÂNounãÂÂa highly derogatory term to express despise or anger toward certain individual(s).
- pià<small>(This Chinese character is not made out yet.)</small> -ãÂÂVerbãÂÂto ridicule sb.
Consonants
Basic consonants
Vowels
Basic vowels
Compound vowels
- Dark red color means compound vowels; ai, ei, ao, ou, an, en, in, ün, ang, ong, eng, ing are as basic vowels.
- are apical vowels of zi, ci, si.
- m, n and ng are nasal vowels of independent syllables; there are also two syllables of "hm å·" and "hng å¼".
Erizational vowels
- "ç¦<small>Ã¥Â
Â</small>" and "ç¢Â<small>Ã¥Â
Â</small>" are different; "æÂÂ<small>Ã¥Â
Â</small>" and "æ ¹<small>Ã¥Â
Â</small>" are different, vowel of "æ ¹<small>Ã¥Â
Â</small>" is a kind of retroflex mid-central vowel.
- i of "zi, ci, si" is an apical vowel. After erizing, i turns into er, such as "äºÂ<small>Ã¥Â
Â</small>"ser4.
- The rule of i, u, ü combining with the erizational vowels is the same as the rule of those combining with the basic vowels, so the tabulation of this part is omitted.
Tones
In Dalianian,
- When Tone No.1 meets another Tone No.1 or Tone No.4 meets Tone No.1, usually the previous tone turns to Tone No.5 and the next tone doesn't change, like âÂÂå®¶å®¶æÂ¶æÂ¶âÂÂjia'r5-jia'r1-hur6-hur4, âÂÂé§Âå´©âÂÂjia5-beng1.
- When Tone No.1 meets Tone No.4, usually the previous tone doesn't change and the next tone turns to Tone No.6, like âÂÂèÂÂèÂÂâÂÂxi1-suai6 or xi3-suar, âÂÂç¨Âç¢ÂâÂÂxi1-sei6.
- When Tone No.4 meets another Tone No.4, usually the previous tone turns to Tone No.5 and the next tone turns to Tone No.6, like âÂÂç¢æÂÂç¢æÂ‰ÂÂbi5-gongr1-bi5-jingr6, âÂÂ客客氣氣âÂÂke'r4-ke'r-qi5-qi6.
- Tone No.5 and Tone No.6 are not basic tones, but modulations.
Vocabulary
Grammar
According to the predicate structure analysis method of the British linguists Ricci, the Dalian dialect is the same as English and Mandarin - the sentence is generally composed of S+V+O, that is subject + predicate + object of the order, but there are special circumstances, such as the older generation of Dalian people will say "Jiàzóu ba! Jiàzóu ba! (å®¶èµ°å§!å®¶èµ°å§!)" instead of "Húi jiàba! Húi jiàba! (Ã¥ÂÂå®¶å§!Ã¥ÂÂå®¶å§!)". At this time, the sentence is not S+V+O, but S+O+V, that is, subject + object + predicate.
- jiÃÂ means "home".
- zÃÂu means "go".
- húi means "go back to".
- ba means a kind of mood which means "to persuade" or "to urge".
Others
Classification
Distribution
References