Jin Chinese


Jin is a group of Chinese linguistic varieties spoken by roughly 48 million people in northern China, including most of Shanxi province, much of central Inner Mongolia, and adjoining areas in Hebei, Henan, and Shaanxi provinces.
Although Jin was traditionally classified as a branch of Mandarin due to partial mutual intelligibility with neighboring varieties, modern linguistic research has largely established Jin as a distinct Sinitic branch independent of Mandarin. In linguistic terms, Jin is widely regarded as the only major non-Mandarin Sinitic variety predominantly spoken in northern China, distinguishing it from surrounding Mandarin-speaking regions.

Classification

After the concept of Mandarin Chinese was proposed, the Jin dialects were universally included within it, mainly because Chinese linguists paid little attention to these dialects at the time. In order to promote Standard Mandarin in the early days of People's Republic of China, linguists started to research various dialects in Shanxi, comparing these dialects with Standard Mandarin for helping the locals to learn it more quickly. During this period, a few linguists discovered some unique features of Jin Chinese that do not exist in other northern Mandarin dialects, planting the seeds for the future independence of Jin Chinese. Finally, in 1985, Li Rong proposed that Jin should be considered a separate top-level dialect group, similar to Yue or Wu. His main criterion was that Jin dialects had preserved the entering tone as a separate category, still marked with a glottal stop as in the Wu dialects, but distinct in this respect from most other Mandarin dialects. Some linguists have adopted this classification. However, others disagree that Jin should be considered a separate dialect group for these reasons:
  1. Use of the entering tone as a diagnostic feature is inconsistent with the way that all other Chinese dialect groups have been delineated based on the reflexes of the Middle Chinese voiced initials.
  2. Certain other Mandarin dialects also preserve the glottal stop, especially the Jianghuai dialects, and so far, no linguist has claimed that these dialects should also be split from Mandarin.

    Dialects

The Language Atlas of China divides Jin into the following eight groups:
The Taiyuan dialect from the Bingzhou group is sometimes taken as a convenient representative of Jin because many studies of this dialect are available, but most linguists agree that the Taiyuan vocabulary is heavily influenced by Mandarin, making it unrepresentative of Jin. The Lüliang group is usually regarded as the "core" of the Jin language group as it preserves most archaic features of Jin. However, there is no consensus as to which dialect among the Lüliang group is the representative dialect.

Phonology

Unlike most varieties of Mandarin, Jin has preserved a final glottal stop, which is the remnant of a final stop consonant. This is in common with the Early Mandarin of the Yuan dynasty and with a number of modern southern varieties of Chinese. In Middle Chinese, syllables closed with a stop consonant had no tone. However, Chinese linguists prefer to categorize such syllables as belonging to a separate tone class, traditionally called the "entering tone". Syllables closed with a glottal stop in Jin are still toneless, or alternatively, Jin can be said to still maintain the entering tone. In standard Mandarin Chinese, syllables formerly ending with a glottal stop have been reassigned to one of the other tone classes in a seemingly random fashion.

Initials

  • is mainly used in finals.
  • The nasal consonant sounds may vary between nasal sounds or prenasalised stop sounds.
  • A prenasalised affricated fricative sound, is also present.

    Finals

  • The diphthong may also be realized as a monophthong close central vowel.
  • Sounds ending in the sequence may also be heard as, then realized as.
  • can also be heard as a labio-palatal approximant when preceding initial consonants.
  • when occurring after alveolar sounds can be heard as an alveolar syllabic, and is heard as a retroflex syllabic when occurring after retroflex consonants.

    Tones

Jin employs extremely complex tone sandhi, or tone changes that occur when words are put together into phrases. The tone sandhi of Jin is notable in two ways among Chinese varieties:
  • Tone sandhi rules depend on the grammatical structure of the words being put together. Hence, an adjective–noun compound may go through different sets of changes compared to a verb–object compound.
  • There are Jin varieties in which the "dark level" tone category and "light level" tone have merged in isolation but can still be distinguished in tone sandhi contexts. That is, while e.g. Standard Mandarin has a tonal distinction between Tone 1 and Tone 2, corresponding words in Jin Chinese may have the same tone when pronounced separately. However, these words can still be distinguished in connected speech. For example, in Pingyao Jin, dark level tou 偷 'secretly' and ting 听 'to listen' on the one hand, and light level tao 桃 'peach' and hong 红 'red' on the other hand, all have the same rising tone when pronounced in isolation. Yet, when these words are combined into touting 偷听 'eavesdropping' and taohong 桃红 'peach red', the tonal distinction emerges. In touting, tou has a falling tone and ting has a high-rising tone , whereas both syllables in taohong still have the same low-rising tone as in isolation.
  • According to Guo and also noted by Sagart, the departing tone category in the Jin dialect of Xiaoyi is characterized by -ʰ and a high falling tone . Xiaoyi also lacks a voicing split in the level tone. The rising tone in Xiaoyi is also "characterized by a glottal break in the middle of the syllable ".

    Grammar

Jin readily employs prefixes such as , , , and , in a variety of derivational constructions. For example:

"fool around" < "ghost, devil"
In addition, there are a number of words in Jin that evolved, evidently, by splitting a mono-syllabic word into two, adding an 'l' in between. For example:
A similar process can in fact be found in most Mandarin dialects, but it is especially common in Jin.
This may be a kind of reservation for double-initials in Old Chinese, although this is still controversial. For example, the character 孔 which appears more often as 窟窿 in Jin, had the pronunciation like in Old Chinese.
Some dialects of Jin make a three-way distinction in demonstratives.

Vocabulary

There is considerable lexical diversity in Jin Chinese, with some words having very distinct regional forms. Usually, there are more unique words in the core dialects than in the non-core dialects. Moreover, some cannot be easily represented using Chinese characters.