Hong Kong written Chinese (HKWC) is a local variety of written vernacular Chinese (Mandarin) used in formal written communication in Hong Kong and Macau. The common name for this form of Chinese is "written language" (), in contrast to the "spoken language" (), i.e. Cantonese. While, like other varieties of Written Chinese, it is a variety of Mandarin, excluding its higher register, it differs from the variety of Standard Chinese used and promoted in mainland China in several aspects, including that it is usually written in traditional characters, that it is often read aloud in Cantonese and not Standard Mandarin, and that its lexicon has English and Cantonese influences. Thus it must not be confused with written Cantonese which, even in Hong Kong, enjoys much less prestige as a literary language than written vernacular Mandarin Chinese. The language situation in Hong Kong still reflects the pre-20th century situation of Chinese diglossia where the spoken and literary language differed and the latter was read aloud in the phonology of the respective regional variety instead of a national one.
With the formal standardisation of the Mandarin Chinese language in the Republic of China, teaching materials began being exported to the British crown colonies Hong Kong, Singapore and Malaya. The Chinese Communist Party's victory over the Chinese Nationalist Party in the Chinese Civil War, the retreat of the government of the Republic of China to Taiwan and the subsequent diplomatic isolation of the People's Republic of China from Britain under the One-China policy propagandised by the government of the Republic of China led to a diversification of the Standard Chinese (Mandarin) language. There are four primary standardised forms of Mandarin today: that of mainland China, Taiwan, Singapore and Malaysia. Hong Kong, on the other hand, was a British colony until 1997 and for most of the British colonial era, English had been the only official language. Chinese was recognised as a co-official language in 1974 after recurring riots as well as scholarly activism. Although legal texts were translated from English into Chinese in the late 1970s, the English versions alone continued to be the ultimately valid ones. This meant that there was not much historical effort on the British side to standardise a written standard of Chinese in Hong Kong. This lack of political intervention facilitated the formation what was coined Hong Kong written Chinese ( by Shi, 2006) by linguist Shao Jingmin in 1996 in order to distinguish it from Putonghua.
Hong Kong written Chinese, if taken to mean all forms of Chinese writing employed in Hong Kong, has different registers depending on the context in which it is used. It is a continuum between written Standard Mandarin Chinese, the acrolect and written vernacular Cantonese, the basilect. The higher registers used in government, schools and formal settings is identical or nearly identical to written Standard Mandarin Chinese. Yet lower registers, used in more informal settings, also developed through code-switching with written vernacular Cantonese. The rising popularity and prestige of the Cantonese language with the boom of the Hong Kong entertainment industry, especially cinema and music, in the 1980s was a contributing factor in the popularisation of written Cantonese. It began to be used more and more in subtitles, magazines, comic books and popular fiction. In more formal settings, written vernacular Cantonese can also appear in court protocols and police reports when exact transcription is deemed as important.
Chinese, without specification of any variety, stayed a fully recognised official language of Hong Kong, in addition to English, with the handover to the People's Republic of China in 1997. Since then, the high register of Hong Kong written Chinese has been used by the Hong Kong government on a regional level, while spoken Standard Mandarin (Putonghua; æÂ®éÂÂ話) is used in communications with the central Chinese government and mainland Chinese. In 1996, the government of Hong Kong announced the 'biliterate and trilingual' education policy, aiming to prepare the people of Hong Kong for the handover on a linguistic level. The policy aimed to promote trilingual proficiency in English, Standard Mandarin and Cantonese among the Hong Kong people. After the handover, first Chief Executive Tung Chee-hwa affirmed the new regime's commitment to the policy. In recent years, the Chinese government and the Hong Kong government have ramped up their promotion of spoken Standard Mandarin in Hong Kong in line with the growing economic dependence on mainland China, migration of mainland Chinese into Hong Kong and cultural and political assimilation of Hong Kong into China, factors which have increased the need for locals to learn spoken Standard Mandarin, the national common language (Ã¥ÂÂå®¶éÂÂç¨èªÂè¨Â) of the People's Republic of China, too. These and other political issues have led to tensions between the pro-Beijing camp, which are in favour of assimilating with China, and localist camp, which are in favour of protecting the widespread use of Hong Kong Cantonese in Hong Kong. Some localist xenophobes have also conducted discriminatory acts under the presumption that all mainland Chinese are part of the pro-Beijing camp.
Although Hong Kong written Chinese is variety of Mandarin Chinese, it is usually read aloud in Cantonese. However, the colloquial and literary Cantonese readings of Chinese characters can sometimes differ. The latter are based on traditional rime dictionaries and employed when reading out loud texts in Classical or written vernacular Mandarin Chinese. Thus, students in Hong Kong schools get corrected by their teachers if they read aloud a character in a written vernacular Mandarin Chinese text using the colloquial pronunciation. Some regular differences between colloquial and literary readings in Cantonese include:
Some lexical differences between the varieties of formal written Standard Chinese in mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan:
It is worth noting that some mainland Chinese and Taiwanese terms are occasionally used in Hong Kong and Macau when writing in the highest register.
Some lexemes appear both in Hong Kong written Chinese and Standard Mandarin Chinese, but may differ in their semantic range and value when the former is used outside of its highest register:
The grammar of HKWC when used outside of its highest register is slightly different from that of Standard Mandarin:
The highers registers of Hong Kong written Chinese generally differ almost as much from written Cantonese as formal spoken Standard Mandarin Chinese does. Some examples: