Jian'ou (建甌事 / Gṳ̿ing-é-dī)

Jian'ou is a variety of Northern Min spoken in Jian'ou, a city in northern Fujian in the southeast of China. In 1992 there were about 2 million speakers of Jian'ou, and there are about 11 million speakers of all varieties of Northern Min.

Jian'ou is also known as Kienow dialect or 建瓯话 (jiàn'ōuhuà). Jian'ou speakers call it 建甌事 (Gṳ̿ing-é-dī).

In 1900 European missionaries devised a way to write Jian'ou with the Latin alphabet known as Gṳ̿ing-Nǎing-Hǔ Gâ̤ Tǔ-kióng Lô̤-mǎ-cī (建寧府土腔羅馬字). This spelling system is used only in churches and is not widely known by non-church people.

Jian'ou pronunciation

Jian'ou pronunciation

Download an alphabet chart for Jian'ou (Excel)

Links

Information about Jian'ou
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jian'ou_dialect
https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/建瓯话
https://www.ethnologue.com/language/mnp

Sinitic (Chinese) languages

Dungan, Cantonese, Fuzhounese, Gan, Hakka, Jian'ou, Mandarin, Puxian, Shanghainese, Taiwanese, Taiwanese Hakka, Teochew, Weitou, Wenzhounese, Xiang


Chinese pages

Written Chinese: Oracle Bone Script, Simplified characters, Bopomofo, Types of characters, Structure of written Chinese, Evolution of characters, How the Chinese script works, Xiao'erjing, General Chinese

Spoken Chinese: Mandarin, Dungan, Wu, Shanghainese, Wenzhounese, Yue, Cantonese, Weitou, Min, Jian'ou, Taiwanese, Teochew, Fuzhounese, Puxian, Hakka, Xiang, Gan, How many people speak Chinese?

Other Chinese pages: Chinese numbers (數碼) | Chinese classifiers (量詞) | Electronic dictionaries | Chinese links | Books: Chinese characters and calligraphy | Cantonese | Mandarin, Shanghainese, Hokkien and Taiwanese

Languages written with the Latin alphabet

Page created: 25.08.22. Last modified: 30.01.23

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