Gan Chinese


Gan, 'Gann or Kan' is a group of Sinitic languages spoken natively by many people in the Jiangxi province of China, as well as significant populations in surrounding regions such as Hunan, Hubei, Anhui, and Fujian. Gan is a member of the Sinitic languages of the Sino-Tibetan language family, and Hakka is the closest Chinese variety to Gan in terms of phonetics.
There are different dialects of Gan; the Nanchang dialect is the prestige dialect.

Classification

Like all other varieties of Chinese, there is extremely little mutual intelligibility between Gan Chinese and other varieties. Within the variation of Chinese languages, Gan has more similarities with Mandarin than with Yue or Min. However, Gan clusters more with Xiang than Mandarin.
Gan and other Southern Chinese languages can be distinguished from Northern Chinese by their placement of direct objects before indirect objects. Gan's ditransitive verbs introduce the theme right after the verb, while Mandarin's introduce the recipient. So the difference in tritransitive verbs may occur because they evolved from different types of ditransitive verbs.

Name

  • Gan is the most common name. Also spelled Gann to reflect the falling tone of the name in Mandarin. Scholars in mainland China use Gan.
  • Jiāngxīhuà is commonly used in Chinese, but since the borders of the language do not follow the borders of the province, this name is not geographically exact.
  • Xi is an ancient name, now seldom used, arising from the fact that most Gan speakers live south of the Yangtze River, beyond the right-hand bank when traveling downstream.

    Region

Most Gan speakers live in the middle and lower reaches of the Gan River, the drainage area of the Fu River, and the region of Poyang Lake. There are also many Gan speakers living in eastern Hunan, eastern Hubei, southern Anhui, northwest Fujian, etc.
According to the Diagram of Divisions in the People's Republic of China, Gan is spoken by approximately 48,000,000 people: 29,000,000 in Jiangxi, 4,500,000 in Anhui, 5,300,000 in Hubei, 9,000,000 in Hunan, and 270,000 in Fujian.

History

Antiquity

During the Qin dynasty, a large number of troops were sent to southern China in order to conquer the Baiyue territories in Fujian and Guangdong, as a result, numerous Han Chinese emigrated to Jiangxi in the years following. In the early years of the Han dynasty, Nanchang was established as the capital of the Yuzhang Commandery , along with the 18 counties of Jiangxi Province. The population of the Yuzhang Commandery increased from 350,000 to 1,670,000 ; it ranked fourth in population among the more than 100 contemporary commanderies of China. As the largest commandery of Yangzhou, Yuzhang accounted for two-fifths of the population and Gan gradually took shape during this period.

Middle Ages

As a result of continuous warfare in the regions of central and Northern China, the first large-scale emigration in the history of China took place. Large numbers of people in central China relocated to southern China in order to escape the bloodshed caused by the upheaval of the Five Barbarians and in this process, Jiangxi played the role of a transfer station. Also, during this period, ancient Gan began to be exposed to the northern dialects. After centuries of rule by the Southern Dynasties, Gan still retained many original characteristics despite having absorbed some elements of northern speech. Up until the Tang dynasty, there was little difference between old Gan and the contemporary Gan of that era. Beginning in the Five Dynasties period, however, inhabitants in the central and northern parts of Jiangxi Province began to migrate to eastern Hunan, eastern Hubei, southern Anhui and northwest Fujian. During this period, following hundreds of years of migration, Gan spread to its current areas of distribution.

Late traditional period

evolved into a standard language based on Beijing Mandarin, owing largely to political factors. At the same time, the differences between Gan and Mandarin continued to become more pronounced. However, because Jiangxi borders on Jianghuai, a Mandarin, Xiang, and Hakka speaking region, Gan proper has also been influenced by these surrounding varieties, especially in its border regions.

Modern times

After 1949, as a "dialect" in mainland China, Gan faced a critical period. The impact of Mandarin is quite evident today as a result of official governmental language campaigns. Currently, many youths are unable to master Gan expressions, and some are no longer able to speak Gan at all.
Recently, however, as a result of increased interest in protecting the local language, Gan now has begun to appear in various regional media, and there are also newscasts and television programs broadcast in Gan Chinese.

Languages and dialects

There are significant differences within the Gan-speaking region, and Gan constitutes more languages than listed here. For example, in Anfu county, which was categorized as Ji-Cha, there are two main varieties, called Nanxiang Hua and Beixiang Hua. People from one region cannot even understand people from the other region if they were not well educated or exposed to the other.
Image:Gan Dialects.png|thumb|right|The main areas of Gan languages in mainland China.
The Language Atlas of China divides Gan into nine groups:
SubgroupRepresentativeProvincesCities
Changdu 昌都片Nanchang dialectnorthwestern JiangxiNanchang City, Nangchang, Xinjian, Anyi, Yongxiu, Xiushui*, De'an, Xingzi, Duchang, Hukou, Gao'an*, Fengxin*, Jing'an*, Wuning*, Tonggu*
Changdu 昌都片Nanchang dialectnortheastern HunanPingjiang
Yiliu 宜浏片 / 宜瀏片Yichun dialectcentral and western JiangxiYichun City, Yichun, Yifeng*, Shanggao, Qingjiang, Xingan, Xinyu City, Fen yi, Pingxiang City, Fengcheng, Wanzai
Yiliu 宜浏片 / 宜瀏片Yichun dialecteastern HunanLiuyang*, Liling
Jicha 吉茶片Ji'an dialectcentral and southern JiangxiJi'an City, Ji'an*, Jishui, Xiajiang, Taihe*, Yongfeng*, Anfu, Lianhua, Yongxin*, Ninggang*, Jianggangshan* Wan'an, Suichuan*
Jicha 吉茶片Ji'an dialecteastern HunanYouxian*, Chaling*, Linxian
Fuguang 抚广片 / 撫廣片Fuzhou dialect central and eastern JiangxiFuzhou City, Linchuan, Chongren, Yihuang, Le'an, Nancheng, Lichuan, Zixi, Jinxi, Dongxiang, Jinxian, Nanfeng, Guangchang*
Fuguang 抚广片 / 撫廣片Fuzhou dialect southwestern FujianJianning, Taining
Yingyi 鹰弋片Yingtan dialectnortheastern JiangxiYingtan City, Guixi, Yujiang, Wannian, Leping, Jingdezhen*, Yugan, Poyang, Pengze, Hengfeng, Yiyang, Chuanshan
Datong 大通片Daye dialectsoutheastern HubeiDaye, Xianning City, Jiayu, Puqi, Chongyang, Tongcheng, Tongshan, Yangxin, Jianli*
Datong 大通片Daye dialecteastern HunanLinxiang*, Yueyang*, Huarong
Leizi 耒资片 / 耒資片Leiyang dialecteastern HunanLeiyang, Changning, Anren, Yongxing, Zixing City
Dongsui 洞绥片 / 洞綏片Dongkou dialectsouthwestern HunanDongkou*, Suining*, Longhui*
Huaiyue 怀岳片 / 懷嶽片Huaining dialectsouthwestern AnhuiHuaining, Yuexi, Qianshan, Taihu, Wangjiang*, Susong*, Dongzhi*, Shitai*, Guichi*

Cities marked with * are partly Gan-speaking.

Phonology

Grammar

In Gan, there are nine principal grammatical aspects or "tenses" – initial, progressive, experimental, durative, processive, continuative, repeating, perfect, and complete.
The grammar of Gan is similar to southern Chinese varieties. The sequence subject–verb–object is most typical, but subject–object–verb or the passive voice is possible with particles. Take a simple sentence for example: "I hold you". The words involved are: ngo, tsot dok, ň.
  • Subject–verb–object : The sentence in the typical sequence would be: ngo tsot dok ň.
  • Subject–lat–object–verb: Another sentence of roughly equivalent meaning is ngo lat ň tsot dok, with the slight connotation of "I take you and hold" or "I get to you and hold."
  • Object–den–subject–verb : Then, ň den ngo tsot dok means the same thing but in the passive voice, with the connotation of "You allow yourself to be held by me" or "You make yourself available for my holding."

    Vocabulary

In Gan, there are a number of archaic words and expressions originally found in ancient Chinese, and which are now seldom or no longer used in Mandarin. For example, the noun "clothes" in Gan is "衣裳" while "衣服" in Mandarin, the verb "sleep" in Gan is "睏覺" while "睡覺" in Mandarin. Also, to describe something dirty, Gan speakers use "下里巴人", which is a reference to a song from the Chu region dating to China's Spring and Autumn period.
Additionally, there are numerous interjections in Gan, which can largely strengthen sentences, and better express different feelings.

Writing system

Gan can be written with Chinese characters, though it does not have a strong written tradition. There are also some romanization schemes, but none are widely used. When writing, Gan speakers usually have to use Standard Chinese, which is widely used in China.