Tangshan dialect, also known as Tangshan dialect, Jidong dialect and hometown dialect, etc. Tangshan dialect belongs to the regional language of Jilu Mandarin system, a sub-dialect of North China in the northern dialect area of Chinese Mandarin, and is one of the representative dialects in Hebei dialect. In the long historical process, Tangshan dialect has been influenced by many places in China, and at the same time, it has absorbed the vocabulary of other national languages on a small scale.
The development of history
Tangshan, referred to as JD.COM in the Yuan, Ming and Qing Dynasties, is located in the east of Hebei Province, northeast of North China Plain, bordering Bohai Sea in the south, Yanshan Mountain in the north, adjacent to Beijing and Tianjin, and at the throat of North China and Northeast China. Tangshan belongs to a country with no end in Shang and Zhou Dynasties, an isolated bamboo country, a state of Yan in Warring States, a quiet state in Han Dynasty, a quiet state in Hebei, Jizhou and Pingzhou in Tang Dynasty, Dadu Road and Yongping Road in Yuan Dynasty, Shuntianfu and Yongping House in Ming Dynasty, and Yongping House in Zunhua Zhili in Qing Dynasty.
Tangshan area has been thistle land and flat land since ancient times, including Qinhuangdao area. 1968 Before the abolition of Tangshan Special Zone, Tang and Qin were integrated for most of the time, and their folk customs and languages were similar. That is, before this, the scope of Tangshan dialect should involve Qinhuangdao dialect. Most of Qinhuangdao dialect belongs to Long Fu dialect of Hebei-Shandong-Henan Mandarin, which is the main source of northeastern mandarin and Beijing Mandarin.