Sixian dialect

Sixian dialect
四縣腔
PronunciationNorthern: [ɕi˥ i̯en˥ kʰi̯oŋ˨˦]
Southern: [ɕi˥ i̯an˥ kʰi̯oŋ˨˦]
Native toTaiwan
RegionMiaoli County; Taoyuan; Kaohsiung; Pingtung County; Huatung Valley
EthnicityTaiwanese Hakka
Dialects
  • Northern Sixian
  • Southern Sixian
Pha̍k-fa-sṳ
Hakka Romanization System
Official status
Regulated byHakka Affairs Council
Language codes
ISO 639-3
Glottologsanh1239  Sixian
liud1234  Liudui-Pingtung
taoy1234  Taoyuan-Miaoli
Sixian dialect
Traditional Chinese四縣話
Simplified Chinese四县话
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinSìxiànhuà
Hakka
Pha̍k-fa-sṳSi-yen-fa
Alternative Chinese name
Traditional Chinese四縣腔
Simplified Chinese四县腔
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinSìxiànqiāng
Hakka
Pha̍k-fa-sṳSi-yen-khiông
Jiaoling County (yellow) in Meizhou, Guangdong
Liudui in Kaohsiung and Pingtung, the area where Southern Sixian is spoken

The Sixian dialect, also known as the Sixian accent (traditional Chinese: 四縣腔; simplified Chinese: 四县腔; Sixian Hakka Romanization System: Xi ien kiongˊ / Xi ian kiongˊ;[1] Pha̍k-fa-sṳ: Si-yen-khiông / Si-yan-khiông[1]), is a dialect of Hakka used by Taiwanese Hakkas, and it is the most spoken dialect of Taiwanese Hakka, being used in Hakka broadcasting in many public occasions. The Sixian dialect is generally spoken in northern and southern Taiwan, with main representative regions being Taoyuan and Miaoli in the north, as well as the Liudui Region in Kaohsiung and Pingtung in the south.

Taiwanese Hakka is often called Si Hai Yong Le Da Ping An (四海永樂大平安; 四海永乐大平安; Sì Hǎi Yǒng Lè Dà Píng Ān), referring to the Sixian (四縣; 四县), Hailu (海陸; 海陆), Yongding (永定), Changle (長樂; 长乐), Dabu (大埔), Raoping (饒平; 饶平) and Zhao'an (詔安; 诏安) dialects. Among these, the Sixian and Changle dialects originate in Jiaying Prefecture, Guangdong, established in 1733 during the Qing dynasty under the rule of Yongzheng Emperor. Historically, the Jiaying Prefecture governed five counties. The Sixian dialect comes from the four counties of Chengxiang (now Meixian), Zhengping (now Jiaoling), Xingning and Pingyuan, giving it the name Sixian (four counties); the Changle dialect originates in its eponym, the county of Changle (now Wuhua). Currently, speakers of the Yongding and Changle dialects have basically left their own accent families, so only the Sixian, Hailu, Dabu, Raoping and Zhao'an dialects remain in use in Taiwan. In Taiwan, the only widely used Hakka dialects are Sixian and Hailu.

The Sixian dialect of Taiwan is slightly different from the Meixian dialect of mainland China since the majority of immigrants from Jiaying Prefecture are from Zhenping County, which is present-day Jiaoling County, so the Sixian dialect is closer to the Jiaoling dialect of mainland China. There are also differences in vocabulary and phonology between the Sixian dialect spoken in northern Taiwan (called Northern Sixian or Miaoli dialect) and in Liudui of southern Taiwan (called Southern Sixian).[2][3] Because of the differences between the two varieties of Sixian, the recitation contests in the National Language Competition separate the contest into the two accents of (Northern) Sixian and Southern Sixian. Alternatively, Sixian may include Xingning and Changle, but because these two counties were formerly a part of Huizhou fu, they may be closer to the Hailu dialect.

  1. ^ a b is pronounced as ien (PFS: yen) in Northern Sixian and as ian (PFS: yan) in Southern Sixian.
  2. ^ For vocabulary differences, see Jiaoyubu (2011), pp. 6, 16, 22, 31, etc.
  3. ^ See Jiaoyubu (2012b), pp. 3, 5–6