Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - Zhuji Lane is the birthplace of Guangfu clan. Why do you speak Hakka instead of Cantonese now?

Zhuji Lane is the birthplace of Guangfu clan. Why do you speak Hakka instead of Cantonese now?

The similarity between Hakka dialect and Cantonese is 890%, and the orthographic similarity is over 90%. Cantonese inherits Hakka dialect.

Hakkas come from Zhuji Lane, Shibi and Gushi.

Look at the Chen clan association in Nanxiong Zhuji Lane. There are Chen who speaks Hakka and Chen who speaks Cantonese. Is it possible that their ancestor, Chen of Zhuji Lane, could speak Hakka and Cantonese at the same time?

Hakka Chen is the ancestor of Cantonese Chen, who spoke Hakka in Kaifeng at the end of the Song Dynasty.

At the end of the Song Dynasty, Chen spoke Chinese (Hakka) in the late Middle Ages in Nanxiong Zhuji Township.

Ancient Chinese and Wuyue combined to form Middle Chinese, and later Middle Chinese evolved into Cantonese and Mandarin.

Search the courses in the late middle ancient Chinese by yourself, which is very close to Hakka dialect.

You will find that the word "I" in Middle Chinese actually reads "Ai", while Wu and An are variants of the old saying "I".

I have a TV. I (that is, I in the old saying, write again, I) have dinner with my company first.

The correct pronunciation of Hakka dialect is the same.

Let's look at Cantonese orthography.