Wuzhou Wu
| Wuzhou Wu | |
|---|---|
| Native to | People's Republic of China |
| Region | Zhejiang |
Native speakers | (4 million cited 1987)[1] |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | None (mis) |
| ISO 639-6 | wzou |
| Glottolog | wuzh1238 |
| Linguasphere | 79-AAA-df |
Wuzhou Wu (婺州話 or 務州片) is a Southern Wu Chinese language spoken in and around Jinhua in Zhejiang province. It is at best only poorly intelligible with Taihu Wu. Wuzhou Wu is named after the ancient Wuzhou County that existed in modern-day Jinhua.
Dialects
Jinhua is the chief and representative dialect of Wuzhou.
- Jinhua dialect
- Lanxi dialect
- Pujiang dialect
- Yiwu dialect
- Dongyang dialect
- Pan'an dialect
- Yongkang dialect
- Wuyi dialect
- Jiande dialect
References
Sino-Tibetan branches | |||||
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| Western Himalayas (Himachal, Uttarakhand, Nepal, Sikkim) |
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| Eastern Himalayas (Tibet, Bhutan, Arunachal) | |||||
| Myanmar and Indo- Burmese border |
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| East and Southeast Asia |
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| Dubious (possible isolates, Arunachal) |
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| Proposed groupings | |||||
| Proto-languages | |||||
Italics indicates single languages that are also considered to be separate branches. | |||||
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