Talk:Hakka language
Appearance
This article contains a translation of Hakka language from en.wikipedia. |
Edit 26 March 2009
[change source]I'm moving the info box here so it can be edited at a later stage. Much of the information in the box is currently not "Simple English".
Hakka | |
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客家話 / 客家话 Hak-kâ-fa | |
Native to | People's Republic of China, Malaysia, Taiwan (Republic of China), Japan (due to presence of Taiwanese community in Tokyo-Yokohama Metropolitan Area), Singapore, Philippines, Indonesia, Mauritius, Suriname, South Africa, India and other countries where Hakka Chinese migrants have settled. |
Region | in China: Eastern Guangdong province; adjoining regions of Fujian and Jiangxi provinces |
Native speakers | 34 million |
hanzi, romanization | |
Official status | |
Official language in | none (legislative bills have been proposed for it to be one of the 'national languages' in the Republic of China); one of the statutory languages for public transport announcements in the ROC [1]; ROC government sponsors Hakka language television station to preserve language |
Regulated by | The Guangdong Provincial Education Department created an official romanisation of Meixian Hakka dialect in 1960, one of four languages receiving this status in Guangdong. It is called Kejiahua Pinyin Fang'an. |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-1 | zh (Chinese) |
ISO 639-2 | chi (B) zho (T) |
ISO 639-3 | hak |