Beijing dialect () is the dialect of Mandarin spoken in the urban area of Beijing, China. The Beijing dialect is the basis of Standard Mandarin, the standard official Chinese spoken language that is used by the People's Republic of China, the Republic of China on Taiwan, and Singapore.
Although the Beijing dialect and Standard Mandarin are extremely similar, there are some differences that make it easy for Chinese people to tell between a native of Beijing speaking homegrown Beijing dialect, and a non-native of Beijing speaking flawless Standard Mandarin.
For example, the local speech of Chengde, a city north of Beijing, is considered sufficiently close to Beijing dialect to be put into this category. Standard Mandarin is also put into this category, since it is after all based on the local dialect of Beijing. Other examples include the local speech of Hailar, Inner Mongolia; Karamay, Xinjiang; and (increasingly) Shenzhen, Guangdong. Many of these cities are populated by recent Han Chinese immigrants from diverse linguistic backgrounds or their descendants. As a result, the residents of these cities have adopted standard Mandarin (or something very close to it) as the de facto common language.
In phonology, Beijing dialect and Standard Mandarin are almost identical. See Standard Mandarin for its phonology charts; the same charts apply to Beijing dialect.
However, there are some striking differences. Most prominently is the proliferation of rhotic vowels. All rhotic vowels are the result of , a noun suffix, except for a few words pronounced as that do not have this suffix. In Standard Mandarin, these also occur, but nowhere near the ubiquity and frequency in which they appear in Beijing dialect.
Moreover, Beijing dialect has a few phonetic reductions that are usually considered too "slangy" for use in Standard Mandarin. For example, in fast speech, initial consonants go through lenition if they are in an unstressed syllable: pinyin zh ch sh become r , so bùzhīdào "don't know" can sound like bùrīdào (stress is on the first and third syllables); j q x become y /j/, so gǎnjǐnqù "go quickly" can sound like gǎnyǐnqù; pinyin b d g /p t k/ go through voicing to become d g; similar changes also occur on other consonants. Also, final /-n/ and (less frequently) (-ng) can fail to close entirely, so that a nasal vowel is pronounced instead of a nasal consonant; for example, nín ends up sounding like "nyih" (nasalized), instead of "nyeen" in Standard Mandarin:
| Pinyin | Standard Mandarin | typical street pronunciation in Beijing |
|---|---|---|
| an | ||
| ian | ||
| en | ||
| in | ||
| ang | ||
| eng | ||
| ing |
Note that some of the slang are considered to be tuhua (土话), or "base language", that are carryovers from an older generation and are no longer used amongst more educated individuals, for example:
Others, still, can be construed as neologistic expressions that are used amongst "trendier" crowds:
An example:
Standard Mandarin:
今天会下雨,所以出门时要记得带伞。
Jīntiān huì xiàyǔ, suǒyǐ chūmén shí yào jìde dài sǎn.
Beijing dialect:
今儿啊可能会下雨,所以呀你出门儿的时候可一定得记着带上伞!
Jīnr a kěnéng huì xiàyǔ, suǒyǐ ya nǐ chūménr de shíhou kě yídìng děi jìzhe dàishang sǎn!
After having gone through Beijing dialect's phonetic reductions:
Jīnr ra kěnéng wèi yàyǔ, suǒyǐ ya nǐ chūménr re ri'ou kě yídìng něi jìre dàirang sǎn!
It might rain today, so remember to bring an umbrella when you go out.
The Beijing dialect sentence would sound too long-winded if used in a context that requires Standard Mandarin (e.g. in writing, or formal speech), though it sounds fine if used among Beijing locals (with Beijing phonetic reductions in place). The Standard Mandarin pronunciation sounds fine if it is used in a context that requires it (e.g. among friends from different Chinese regions), but it is too stilted and short to be able to accommodate all the phonetic reductions of Beijing pronunciation and may be rendered incomprehensible as a result.
Chinese language | City colloquials | Beijing culture
北京語 | Dialekt pekiński | 北京话
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Beijing dialect".
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