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Min (linguistics)
Some researchers divide the Min group into Northern and Southern subgroups, with Fuzhou and Xiamen (Amoy) dialects being paramount. More complex division is suggested by SIL: Northern Min (Min-Bei, around Jian'ou in Fujian), Central Min (Min-Zhong, around Shaxian , Sanming ), Eastern Min (Min-Dong in Fuzhou), Xinghua (in Puxian and Xianyou counties) and Southern Min (Min-Nan, in Zhangzhou, Quanzhou, Xiamen). Southern Min is also spoken by Fujian diaspora in Guangdong, Taiwan, Hainan, etc. The initials and finals of Min dialects are more numerous than in Mandarin Chinese. The Southern Min language in Taiwan is known as Hō-ló-oē, in Guangdong as Hoklo, in Hainan as Qiongzhou hua. The writing system is identical to Mandarin, although some Taiwanese use the Church Romanization (Jiaohui Luomazi, or in Taiwanese, Pe̍h-oē-jī, "vernacular writing"; see Taiwanese language) created by foreign missionaries in the 19th century. There are some uncommon publications in mixed writing, combining Chinese characters for Chinese words and Latin alphabet for indigenous words, including those from Taiwanese aborigines. External linksIn Singapore, Malaysia and other areas in Southeast asia the common users of Min-nan are known as Hokkien speakers. The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License.
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