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by jon2512chua
4400 days ago
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I do understand that when people refer to Chinese it means Mandarin. However, if Mandarin is a language does that mean that Hokkien, Foochow, Cantonese, Hakka, etc are languages too? I don't think the way I described it in the grandparent post above is entirely accurate as well, but how I've always seen it is that the written words forms the Chinese language, whereas the different way people pronounces it (not talking about accents here) and orders them are the dialects. |
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What distinguishes one from the other?
> how I've always seen it is that the written words forms the Chinese language, whereas the different way people pronounces it (not talking about accents here) and orders them are the dialects
Then, before the development of kana, was Japanese also a chinese dialect? Korean before hangeul?
If I wrote the english sentence "how old are you?" as 多老是你?, would that make english a dialect of Chinese? If I wrote 你多大? as "ni duo da?", would mandarin stop being a chinese dialect?
If you imagine two illiterate people, one of whom speaks mandarin and the other cantonese, do neither know any language at all, due to being illiterate?