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Chang–Du Gan
Dialect of Gan Chinese From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Chang–Du or Chang–Jing, sometimes called Nanchang or Nanchangese[1] (simplified Chinese: 南昌话; traditional Chinese: 南昌話; pinyin: Nánchānghuà) after its principal dialect, is one of the Gan Chinese languages. It is named after Nanchang and Duchang County, and is spoken in those areas as well as in Xinjian, Anyi, Yongxiu, De'an, Xingzi, Hukou, and bordering regions in Jiangxi and in Pingjiang County, Hunan.
![]() | You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Chinese. (December 2012) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
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Phonology
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The Nanchang dialect has 19 syllable onsets or initials (including the zero initial), 65 finals and 7 tones.[2]
Initials
In each cell below, the first line indicates IPA transcription, the second indicates pinyin.
Finals
The finals of the Nanchang dialect are:[3]
Consonantal codas
consonantal finals | -p | -t | -k | -m | -n | -ng |
IPA | [-p] | [-t] | [-k] | [-m] | [-n] | [-ŋ] |
Example | 十 | 八 | 百 | 咸 | 限 | 横 |
- The codas in italic are at present only reserved in several Gan dialects.
Tone
Like other Chinese varieties, tones in Gan make phonemic distinctions. There are five phonemic tones in Gan, which are reduced to two 'entering tones' before stop consonants. In the traditional classification, these are considered separately:

The 6th and 7th tones are the same as the 4th and 5th tones, except that the syllable ends in a stop consonant, /t/ or /k/.
Example
A poem of Meng Haoran (“Men Hau-len” in Gan):
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References
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