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Chinese as a lingua franca in greater China
Oleh:
Li, David C.S.
Jenis:
Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi:
Annual Review of Applied Linguistics (ada di PROQUEST th.2001- 2010) vol. 26 (2006)
,
page 149-176.
Fulltext:
149-176.pdf
(341.99KB)
Ketersediaan
Perpustakaan PKBB
Nomor Panggil:
405/ARA/26
Non-tandon:
tidak ada
Tandon:
1
Lihat Detail Induk
Isi artikel
This discussion provides current perspectives on the use of Chinese as a lingua franca among the Han peoples of greater China. As a national lingua franca, Mandarin Chinese or putonghuil2 is unsurpassed in terms of the number of speakers. It is however not yet widely spoken in many dialect areas of China. This is why the promotion of putonghua among dialect speakers continues to be an important part of the language policy and planning of the People's Republic. In Taiwan, as a result of some four decades of hegemonic enforcement of the National Language Movement until 1987, an absolute majority of the Taiwanese can understand and speak Mandarin, but Southern Min continues to be commonly used in the southern parts of the island, partly because for many Taiwanese, language choice is closely bound up with national and ethnolinguistic identity. In the two special administrative regions of China, Hong Kong, and Macao, Cantonese continues to serve as a lingua franca among the Chinese there. It is the only dialect which has attained a level of prestige that rivals that of the standard national language, and which has evolved written forms of its own that are commonly used in informal genres of media discourses.
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