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Is there a local accent in Cantonese?

There are many kinds of Cantonese dialects, which are quite different from each other. What we usually hear through the media is Cantonese. Guangzhou dialect is the standard pronunciation of Guangfu dialect, which originated in Nanhai, Panyu and Shunde (Nanfanshun). In the late Qing Dynasty, Hong Kong, Bao 'an (Shenzhen), Dongguan, Zengcheng, Huadu, Qingyuan, Jiangmen, Zhongshan, Zhuhai and Macau, which used to speak other Cantonese, were gradually unified with the help of port immigrants and the influence of modern media, and further cities such as Shaoguan and Zhanjiang. However, some areas still retain the original Cantonese, such as Humen, my ancestral home is in Dongguan. There are still obvious differences between local Cantonese and Cantonese. The tone is 2 13, and vowels such as am an ang ap at ak au with long vowels are preceded by the intermediate I, and so on.

Cantonese, the farthest from Guangfu dialect, is Taishan dialect in guangzhou fu in the Qing Dynasty. Taishan dialect is the representative of overflowing Cantonese. Although it is adjacent to Guangfu dialect, it actually originated from Min dialect and Gan dialect, so the tone of Taishan dialect is very similar to Quanzhou dialect, and there are mb and? G and other unique voiced initials, there are currently three languages in Taishan: Taiwanese, Cantonese and Mandarin. The local people are proficient in Guangfu dialect and never forget their mother tongue-Taishan dialect (many people don't agree that Taishan dialect is a kind of Cantonese). When they speak Cantonese, they don't distinguish L and N like most people in Guangzhou and Hong Kong (in fact, standard Cantonese strictly distinguishes L and N).

Cantonese to the west of Taishan, such as Maoming and Gaozhou, is very close to Guangfu dialect, and its tone is basically the same (closer to Guangzhou dialect than Dongguan dialect). The only difference is that they have no vowels.

Then Cantonese in Xijiang River basin, such as Fengkai and Wuzhou, is actually the birthplace of Cantonese (called Guangxin in ancient times), so compared with Guangzhou dialect, which is deeply influenced by northern dialects, it retains more ancient sounds (such as voiced sounds). There are no voiced stops and voiced fricatives in Guangzhou dialect. However, the difference between Guangfu dialect and Siyi dialect is still smaller than that between Guangfu dialect and Siyi dialect.

Cantonese, Cantonese and Cantonese

2. 1 Cantonese

2.2 Cantonese in Hong Kong and Macao

2.2. 1 Language differences between China and Hongkong

2.3 Nanfanshun Dialect

2.4 Xiangshan dialect

2.5 Wuzhou dialect point

3 Guan Bao Cantonese

3. 1 Dongguan dialect

3.2 Baoan Dialect

4 Luoguang Cantonese

4. Similarity between1and Goulou Cantonese

4.2 Differences with Goulou Cantonese

5 overflowing Cantonese

6 Laiwen Cantonese

7 Yongxun Cantonese

8 Goulou Cantonese

9 Qin Lian Cantonese

10 Wuhua Cantonese

10. 1 wuchuan dialect

10.2 Huazhou Dialect

1 1 Jia dialect

12 controversial dialect film

12. 1 Dongjiang dialect

12. 1. 1 Huizhou dialect

12. 1.2 Longmen dialect

12.2 Danzhou dialect

12.3 Guinan Pinghua