Jilu Mandarin
Jilu Mandarin (simplified Chinese: 冀鲁官话; traditional Chinese: 冀魯官話; pinyin: jìlǔguānhuà) is a Mandarin dialect spoken in the Chinese provinces of Hebei and Shandong. Despite these areas being geographically located near Beijing, Jilu has a different accent and some lexical differences from the Beijing dialect, which is the basis for Standard Chinese, the official national language. The three dialect groups (Bao-Tang, Shi-Ji, and Cang-Hui) are also commonly referred as Northern Mandarin.
Dialect groups
- Bao-Tang dialect (保唐片), incorporating a large part of Tianjin and northern part of Hebei province.
- Tianjin dialect (天津話)
- Baoding dialect (保定話)
- Tangshan dialect (唐山話)
- Shi-Ji dialect 石济片, incorporating a large part of central Hebei province including the capital Shijiazhuang and western part of Shandong province, including the capital Jinan
- Xingtai dialect (邢台话)
- Shijiazhuang dialect (石家莊話)
- Jinan dialect
- Cang-Hui dialect (沧惠片), incorporating the coastal region of the Yellow River Delta
The Bao-Tang dialect shares the same tonal evolution of the inner tone from Middle Chinese as Beijing Mandarin and Northeastern Mandarin. Moreover, the popularization of Standard Chinese in the two provincial capitals has induced changes in the Shi-Ji dialect causing the former to shift rapidly towards the standard language.