Job Recruitment Website - Ranking of immigration countries - Is Hakka a transitional language between Yayan (ancient Chinese) and Putonghua (Beijing dialect)?

Is Hakka a transitional language between Yayan (ancient Chinese) and Putonghua (Beijing dialect)?

Yeah,

In the pre-Qin, Qin and Han dynasties, elegance seems to refer to ancient Chinese, Hakka is middle ancient Chinese, and middle ancient Chinese is called elegance.

Ancient Chinese was transformed into Middle Chinese, and later Middle Chinese was transformed into various dialects, all of which were simplified sounds of Hakka dialects.

Medieval Chinese, Hakka dialect and Minnan dialect are not related to each other and belong to the same language branch, which can be matched word by word. If we want to return, Middle Chinese can be classified as Xingning piece of Hakka dialect, while Minnan dialect reading belongs to the branch of Hakka dialect.

Ancient Chinese is ancient Beijing dialect, middle Chinese is middle Beijing dialect, and middle Chinese belongs to Hakka dialect in the later period, so it can be said that middle Chinese is Hakka dialect.

Why do Hakka and Minnan dialects retain ancient Chinese? It was brought by five careless immigrants in the Jin Dynasty. The rhyme books of private schools have been used to impart orthodox consciousness for thousands of years, which has led to the reading of Hakka and Minnan languages. Reading is reading, reading, reading, reading, reading, reading.

The transitional language between Hakka dialect and Beijing dialect is the faded Hakka dialect in Changting Chengguan and some unvoiced Hukou Gan dialect.

The ancient reading of Beijing dialect is similar to Hakka dialect and Changting Chengguan Hakka dialect.

The pronunciation of other dialects is poorly preserved, and only some Hakka dialects are preserved.

The so-called Cantonese, Guangzhou dialect and Liu Jia dialect are all simplified sounds of Hakka dialect, and the genealogy ancestors of Cantonese speakers all immigrated from Zhuji Township, Jiangxi and western Fujian at the end of the Song Dynasty, so to some extent, they are also Hakka descendants who do not speak Hakka dialect.