She Chinese or Shehua (, ShÃÂhuÃÂ , meaning 'She speech') is an unclassified Sinitic ethnolect and spoken by the She people of Southeastern China. It is also called Shanha, San-hak () or Shanhahua (). She speakers are located mainly in Fujian and Zhejiang provinces of Southeastern China, with smaller numbers of speakers in a few locations of Jiangxi (in Guixi and Yanshan County), Guangdong (in Chaozhou and Fengshun County) and Anhui (in Ningguo) provinces.
ShÃÂhuà() is not to be confused with ShÃÂyà(, also known as Ho Ne), which is a HmongâÂÂMien language spoken in East-Central Guangdong. She and Sheyu speakers have separate histories and identities, although both are officially classified by the Chinese government as She people. The Dongjia of Majiang County, Guizhou are also officially classified as She people, but speak a Western Hmongic language closely related to Chong'anjiang Miao ().
History
During the Tang dynasty, She speakers lived in the Jiangxi-Guangdong-Fujian border region. Afterwards, they moved to their present locations further to the northeast.
Classification
Some linguists consider She to be a variety of Hakka Chinese, while others consider it to be an unclassified variety of Chinese that has received some influence from Hakka and is part of Hakka. Hiroki Nakanishi (2010) considers She to be a Hakka dialect that may have a Sheyu (Hmongic) substratum. However, Zhao (2004) considers She to be an independent branch of Chinese, and that it should not be classified within Hakka.
Depending on their locations, She dialects have been variously influenced by Hakka, Gan, Wu, and Min.
Dialects
You (2002:31-35) divides She into 9 dialectal areas (fangyan qu æÂ¹è¨Âåº), and with respective locations and speaker demographics from You (2002) listed as well. The Eastern Fujian and Southern Zhejiang dialectal areas each have over 100,000 speakers, while the smallest dialectal areas are in Guangdong and Jiangxi, with each having only a few thousand speakers. Altogether, there are more than 400,000 She speakers in China.
- Mindong (, Eastern Fujian), spoken in the counties of Fu'an ç¦Âå®Â, Fuding ç¦Âé¼Â, Xiapu éÂÂ浦, Ningde å®Âå¾·, Shouning 寿å®Â, Zhouning å¨å®Â, Zherong æÂÂè£, Pingnan å±ÂÃ¥ÂÂ, Luoyuan ç½ÂæºÂ, Lianjiang è¿Âæ±Â, Fuzhou ç¦Âå·ÂéÂÂåº, Minhou é½侯, Minqing 齿¸Â
, and Yongqin 永泰. 184,000 speakers. In contact with Eastern Min.
- Minbei (, Northern Fujian), spoken in the counties of Nanping Ã¥ÂÂå¹³, Jian'ou 建ç¯, Jianyang 建é³, Shaowu éµæÂ¦, Shunchang 顺æÂÂ, and Guangze Ã¥Â
Âæ³½. 21,000 speakers. In contact with Northern Min.
- Minzhong (, Central Fujian), spoken in the counties of Sanming ä¸ÂæÂÂ, Yong'an æ°¸å®Â, Shaxian æ²Âå¿, and Ninghua å®ÂÃ¥ÂÂ. Also spoken in Shuangguishan Ã¥ÂÂ贵山, Youxi County, Fujian. 12,000 speakers. In contact with Central Min.
- Minnan (, Southern Fujian), spoken in the counties of Licheng District 鲤åÂÂåº (in Quanzhou), Anxi å®Â溪, Dehua å¾·åÂÂ, Yongchun æ°¸æÂÂ¥, Hua'an Ã¥ÂÂå®Â, Longyan é¾Â岩, and Zhangping 漳平. 12,000 speakers. In contact with Southern Min. In Zhangping City, Shanyangge She å±±ç¾ÂéÂÂç²诠is spoken by over 800 people in the two villages of Shanyangge å±±ç¾ÂéÂÂ, Guilin Township æ¡ÂæÂÂ乡, and Jianci å°Â祠, Xi'nan Township 溪åÂÂ乡. Shanyangge She is distinct from Shejiake ç²家客, which is a Southern Min dialect spoken by over 100 people in Zhangping County in the two villages of Changta Village é¿å¡ÂæÂÂ, Xianghu Township 象æ¹Â乡 and Wei Village å°¾æÂÂ, Shuangyang Township Ã¥ÂÂæ´Â乡.
- Zhenan (, Southern Zhejiang), spoken in the counties of Pingyang å¹³é³, Cangnan èÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ, Rui'an çÂÂå®Â, Wencheng æÂÂæÂÂ, Taishun 泰顺, Lishui 丽水, Jingning æÂ¯å®Â, Yunhe äºÂÃ¥ÂÂ, Longquan é¾Âæ³Â, Songyang æÂ¾é³, Qingtian éÂÂç°, and Wuyi æÂ¦ä¹Â. 120,000 speakers. In contact with Wu Chinese.
- Zhezhong (, Central Zhejiang), spoken in the counties of Longyou é¾Â游, Quxian è¡¢å¿, Lanxi Ã¥Â
°æºª, Jinhua éÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ, and Suichang éÂÂæÂÂ. 23,000 speakers. In contact with Wu Chinese.
- Zhebei (, Northern Zhejiang), spoken in the counties of Tonglu æ¡ÂåºÂ, Jiande 建德, Lin'an 临å®Â, Fuyang å¯Âé³, and Anji å®ÂÃ¥ÂÂ. 13,000 speakers. In contact with Wu Chinese.
- Yuedong (, Eastern Guangdong), spoken in the counties of Chaozhou 潮巠and Fengshun 丰顺. 2,200 speakers. In contact with the Teochew dialect of Southern Min. In Fengshun County, it is spoken in Fengping Village å¤åªæÂÂ, Tanjiang Town æ½Âæ±ÂéÂÂ. You, Lei & Lan (2005) document the She variety of Fenghuangshan å¤å°山 ("Phoenix Mountain") in eastern Guangdong.
- Gandong (, Eastern Jiangxi), spoken in the counties of Guixi 贵溪 and Yanshan éÂÂ
å±±. 4,000 speakers. In contact with Gan Chinese. The She variety of Taiyuan 太æºÂç²æÂÂ乡, Yanshan County, Jiangxi has been documented in detail by Hu & Hu (2013), while the She variety of Zhangping Township æ¨Âåªç²æÂÂ乡, Guixi City, Jiangxi has been documented in detail by Liu (2008).
In Anhui Province, there is also a She dialect spoken by about 2,400 people in Yunti She Ethnic Township (), Ningguo City that has been influenced by Lower Yangtze Mandarin.
You (2002) provides a comparative vocabulary list for the following 13 datapoints. The Zhebei dialectal area æµÂÃ¥ÂÂæÂ¹è¨Âåº has not been included by You (2002).
- Fu'an ç¦Âå®Â, Ningde, Fujian (Mindong dialectal area é½ä¸ÂæÂ¹è¨Âåº)
- Fuding ç¦Âé¼Â, Ningde, Fujian (Mindong dialectal area é½ä¸ÂæÂ¹è¨Âåº; includes Xiamen She Ethnic Township ç¡Âé¨ç²æÂÂ乡)
- Luoyuan ç½ÂæºÂ, Fuzhou, Fujian (Mindong dialectal area é½ä¸ÂæÂ¹è¨Âåº)
- Sanming ä¸ÂæÂÂ, Fujian (Minzhong dialectal area é½ä¸ÂæÂ¹è¨Âåº)
- Shunchang 顺æÂÂ, Nanping Ã¥ÂÂå¹³, Fujian (Minbei dialectal area é½åÂÂæÂ¹è¨Âåº)
- Hua'an Ã¥ÂÂå®Â, Zhangzhou Ã¥ÂÂå®Â, southern Fujian (Minnan dialectal area é½åÂÂæÂ¹è¨Âåº)
- Guixi 贵溪, Yingtan é¹°æ½Â, Jiangxi (Gandong dialectal area èµ£ä¸ÂæÂ¹è¨Âåº)
- Cangnan èÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ, Wenzhou 温å·Â, Zhejiang (Zhe'nan dialectal area æµÂÃ¥ÂÂæÂ¹è¨Âåº)
- Jingning æÂ¯å®Â, Lishui 丽水, Zhejiang (Zhe'nan dialectal area æµÂÃ¥ÂÂæÂ¹è¨Âåº)
- Lishui 丽水, Zhejiang (Zhe'nan dialectal area æµÂÃ¥ÂÂæÂ¹è¨Âåº)
- Longyou é¾Â游, Quzhou è¡¢å·Â, Zhejiang (Zhezhong dialectal area æµÂä¸ÂæÂ¹è¨Âåº; includes Muchen She Ethnic Township æ²Âå°Âç²æÂÂ乡)
- Chaozhou æ½®å·Â, Guangdong (Yuedong dialectal area 粤ä¸ÂæÂ¹è¨Âåº)
- Fengshun 丰顺, Meizhou æ¢Â
å·Â, Guangdong (Yuedong dialectal area 粤ä¸ÂæÂ¹è¨Âåº)
Distribution
The following maps show ethnic She townships and other administrative divisions (highlighted in magenta) in Zhejiang, Fujian, and Jiangxi provinces. The She people of these three provinces speak She, while the She of central Guangdong and Guizhou speak Hmongic languages.
The most She speakers are located in Ningde Prefecture, Fujian, and Wenzhou and Lishui Prefectures, Zhejiang. Smaller communities of She speakers are located in central Zhejiang, southern Fujian, the mountainous interior of western Fujian, southeastern Anhui, eastern Guangdong, and northeastern Jiangxi near its border with Fujian. It is not known whether She is spoken by She people living in central and southern Jiangxi.
Phonology
She is a very dialectally uniform language. Like many southern Chinese languages, it has syllables with stop codas, traditionally considered as part of a separate tone class. Much like its sister branch Hakka Chinese, it has the same three nasal codas as well as three stop codas. However, the /k/ coda has evolved into a glottal stop.
Consonants
In addition to the consonants listed below, She also has a null initial, often realized as a glottal stop.
Some dialects of She in eastern Fujian (including the Fú'ÃÂn and FúdÃÂng varieties) have the initial voiceless lateral fricative ì- where other She dialects have an initial s-.
Only a limited number of consonants can act as a coda, including the nasals and the plain labial, dental, and glottal stops.
Vowels
The syllabic coronal consonant /zé/, frequently known in Chinese linguistics as the apical vowel, is also found in some dialects of She.
Tones
She has 4 phonemic contour tones, which can be organized into the following 6 tone categories (You 2002:80-83); the Dark Going tone has merged into the Dark Level tone in the development of She. Almost all She dialects have identical tone values in each tone category, which are provided below.
The Tàiyuán dialect may have more divergent tone values. Hú recorded the dialect as having (212) for its Light Level tone, (25) on its Rising tone, and (4) for its Dark Entering tone.
Lexicon
Unique vocabulary
You (2002:183-216) notes that She has many unique vocabulary items that have no cognates in Hakka, Gan, Wu, or any other Chinese language. Instead, many words have parallels in Hmong-Mien languages (You 2002:490-504), and in Tai and Kam-Sui languages (You 2002:458-489). Other words appear to have no parallels in any other language family or branch (You 2002:505-518).
Swadesh list
Below is a vocabulary table comparing Swadesh lists of She (Fengshun), Hakka (Boluo), and She (Boluo), from Gan (2011:188-191).
Further reading
- Liu Lunxin Ã¥ÂÂ纶é«. 2008. Guixi Zhangping Shehua yanjiu 贵溪æ¨Âåªç²è¯Âç Âç©¶. Beijing: China Social Sciences Academy Press ä¸Âå½社ä¼Âç§Âå¦åºçÂÂ社.
- Zhao Zeling èµµåÂÂç². 2004. Zhejiang Shehua yanjiu æµÂæ±Âç²è¯Âç¡Âç©¶. Hangzhou: Zhejiang People's Press æµÂæ±Â人æ°ÂåºçÂÂ社.
- Wu Chong-chieh å³ä¸ÂæÂ°. 2004. Languages of She Minority / Shezu yuyan yanjiu ç¾ÂÂèªÂè¨Âç Âç©¶. Ph.D. dissertation. Hsinchu, Taiwan: National Tsing Hua University Ã¥ÂÂç«Âæ¸Â
è¯大å¸èªÂè¨Âç Âç©¶æÂÂ.
- Chang Kuang-yu å¼µåÂ
Âå®Â. 2008. Guangdong Chao'an Shehua diaocha yanjiu 廣æÂ±æ½®å®Âç¬話調æÂ¥ç Âç©¶. Hsinchu, Taiwan: National Tsing Hua University Ã¥ÂÂç«Âæ¸Â
è¯大å¸èªÂè¨Âç Âç©¶æÂÂ.
- Fujian Provincial Gazetteer ç¦Â建çÂÂå¿ æÂ¹è¨Âå¿Â. Appendix: The Fujian She language éÂÂ: ç¦Â建ç²è¯Â.
- æÂ¹å¿ÂèÂÂ. 2002. Ã¥ÂÂé¨å´è¯Âè¯Âé³ç Âç©¶. Ã¥ÂÂ京: Ã¥ÂÂå¡å°书é¦Â. 2002å¹´9æÂÂ.
- Ã¥ÂÂ
å½éÂÂ. 2010. æÂ¹è¨Âä¸Â稿. Ã¥ÂÂ京: ä¸ÂÃ¥ÂÂ书å±Â. 2010å¹´9æÂÂ. (ç¹Âä½Âä¸ÂæÂÂ)
- Luo Meizhen ç½Âç¾ÂçÂÂ. 1980. Shezu suo shuo de Kejiahua ç²æÂÂæÂÂ说çÂÂ客家è¯Â. In ä¸Â央æ°ÂæÂÂå¦é¢å¦æÂÂ¥ 1980å¹´01æÂÂ.
- Ã¥ÂÂ
æ ¹æ¸Â
. 2003. ä»ÂæÂ¯å®Âç²è¯ÂçÂÂè¯Âé³ç¹ç¹论åÂ
¶ä¸Â客家è¯ÂçÂÂÃ¥Â
³ç³». å±±ä¸Â大å¦å¦æÂÂ¥, 2003, (5).
- Deng, Xiaohua éÂÂæÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ. 1999. Kejiahua gen Miao-yao Zhuangdongyu de Guanxi wenti 客家è¯Âè·ÂèÂÂç¶壮ä¾Âè¯ÂçÂÂÃ¥Â
³ç³»é®é¢Â. Minzu Yuwen æ°ÂæÂÂè¯ÂæÂ 3:42-49.
- Hsiu, Andrew. 2018. The origins of Shehua. Archive.org : https://web.archive.org/web/20190420131003/https://sites.google.com/site/msealangs/home/blog/shehua
Notes
References
Citations
Sources
- Hu Songbai è¡æÂ¾æÂÂ; Hu Derong è¡德è£. 2013. Yanshan Taiyuan Shehua yanjiu ãÂÂéÂÂ
山太æºÂç²è¯Âç Âç©¶ãÂÂ. Beijing: China Social Sciences Academy Press ä¸Âå½社ä¼Âç§Âå¦åºçÂÂ社.
- You Wenliang 游æÂÂè¯. 2002. Shezu yuyan ãÂÂç²æÂÂè¯Âè¨ÂãÂÂ. Fuzhou: Fujian People's Press ç¦Â建人æ°ÂåºçÂÂ社.