Spoken and Written
Languages
The Chinese spoken and written language by the Han people is
also the most commonly used language in China, as well as one of
the most commonly used languages in the world. Chinese, also known
as Hanyu or Han Chinese, comprises seven major dialect groups that
are composed of over 100 sub-dialects. These dialects are major
components of the splendid Chinese culture, playing a unique role
in the formation and development of the Chinese nation.
Except for the Hui and Manchu peoples who use Han Chinese, the
remaining 53 ethnic minorities have their own languages. Generally
speaking, one ethnic group uses one language, but there are those
that use two or more languages. Because of this, there are a total
of 72 ethnic minority languages being used in China today.
These languages, except for Korean and Gin, whose relationships
have not been classified, belong respectively to the Sino-Tibetan
family, the Altaic family, the Austro-Asiatic family, the
Austronesian family and the Indo-European family of languages.
Statistics show that in 2003, the ethnic autonomous areas had
122 radio broadcasting organizations with 73 radio stations and 523
radio transmitting stations, broadcasting in 15 ethnic minority
languages; 111 TV broadcasting organizations with 94 TV stations
and 830 TV transmitting stations, broadcasting in 11 ethnic
minority languages. There were also 254,900 satellite radio and TV
receiving and relaying systems.
Archaeological findings and research results indicate a total of
57 ethnic minority scripts have been used within the boundaries of
China since ancient time. By the end of 2003, 22 ethnic minorities
in China used 28 written languages of their own. In China, the
spoken and written languages of ethnic minorities are widely used
in the fields of law and justice, administration, education,
political and social life, and other areas. When important
meetings, such as national congresses of the Communist Party of
China and sessions of the National People’s Congress and the
Chinese People’s Political Conference, are held, the documents of
the meetings are available in Mongolian, Tibetan, Uygur, Kazak,
Korean, Yi and Zhuang, and simultaneous interpretations in those
languages are also provided.
The minority groups of Mongolian, Tibetan, Uygur, Kazak, Kirgiz,
Korean, Yi, Dai, Lahu, Jingpo, Xibe and Russian have their own
scripts, most of which have a long history. Of these, Mongolians in
the Mongolian-inhabited areas use alphabetic scripts, written
vertically, while those living in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region
use different alphabetic scripts that fit local dialect features.
The Dais in Yunnan Province use four kinds of scripts in different
areas.
Most of the Lisu Christians use a Lisu script based on the Roman
alphabet, which uses only upper case letters as well as inverted
upper case letters. There are also a small number who use syllabic
Lisu writing, created by locals. The Va Christians in Yunnan use a
Va script based on the letters of Roman alphabet. Some Zhuang, Bai
and Yao peoples use ethnic scripts that are prominently influenced
by Han Chinese scripts.
The Mongolian, Tibetan, Uygur, Korean and Yi languages have
coded character sets and national standards for fonts and keyboard.
Software in the Mongolian, Tibetan, Uygur and Korean languages can
be run in the Windows system, and laser photo-typesetting in these
languages has been realized. Applied software in languages of
ethnic minorities are emerging one after another, and some
achievements have been made in research into the OCR (optic
character recognition) of languages of ethnic minorities and
machine-aided translation.
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