Hakka (客家话; Kèjiāhuà in Mandarin) is one of the main seven or so Chinese languages. It is spoken across several provinces in Southeast China including Taiwan and Hainan and Hong Kong. In this article, the Hong Kong dialect of the Hakka language will be used.
Brief Overview
The Hakka (客家 Kèjiā, IPA: [hak₃ ka₃₃] ) people are said to have migrated south from Northern China over the centuries to settle in southern Jiangsu and Hunan, western Fujian, eastern Guangdong, and various other areas, due to wars, famine, natural disasters, and political persecution. Hakka comes from the words '客' "guest" and '家' "families" which derives from an official term during the Qing Dynasty for the program of resettlement of the coastal areas of Guangdong after evacuation orders imposed during the reign of Emperor Kangxi. These settlers whose language seemed different to the original inhabitants were given this appellation to show they were not indigenous to the areas they became settled in. Most indigenous inhabitants occupied the more fertile basins, whilst the incoming Hakka became settled in the more inaccessible valleys and mountainous or hilly terrain. The Hakka language (客家话; Kèjiāhuà) is shares a common vocabulary with Southern languages such as Min and Yue, and there are regular sound correspondences to the historical sound system of Middle Chinese.
Pronunciation guide
The most accessible Hakka speakers are found in Hong Kong and Taiwan. Most of them will be dual language speakers, in Hong Kong, they are able to understand and speak Cantonese, whilst on the mainland of China and on Taiwan, they will also speak Mandarin. There is no standard form of Hakka and regional variations in local dialects can be surmounted by understanding the gist of the spoken sentence and knowing some sound correspondences that the user will encounter.
There are some sounds in Hakka which do not occur in English. The following pronunciation guide aims to rhyme English words with the sounds found in the Hakka syllable. Please note they are approximations, you may require a Hakka speaker to guide your pronunciation.
Vowels
The vowels can be long or short. Long vowels occur in open syllables, where there are no endings. Short vowels occur in syllables which end in nasals (-m, -n or -ng) or stops (-p, -t or -k).
Vowel Sound Length Varies with Syllable Endings
Romanised Vowel
IPA
Long Vowel (syllable ends in a vowel)
IPA
Short Vowel (syllable ends with -m, -n, -ng, -p, -t, -k)
a
[ aː ]
a in car
[ ɐ ]
a in pat
e
[ ɛː ]
ai in hair
[ e ]
e in pet
i
[ iː ]
ee in been
[ ɪ ]
i in pit
o
[ ɔː ]
or in core
[ ɒ ]
o in pot
u
[ uː ]
oo in boot
[ ʌ ]
u in put
In some dialects there is a vowel which we represent as ii, which does not occur in standard English. It is a retroflex i, the closest sound is almost like ir in "shir" when saying English 'sure'. In the Hong Kong dialect, these sounds become -i or -u.
Initial or Consonant
Consonant Sounds in Hakka
b
p
m
f
v
[ p ]
[ pʰ ]
[ m ]
[ f ]
[ ʋ ]
almost like b in boy
almost like p in pot
like m in man
like f in far
almost like v in van
d
t
n
l
[ t ]
[ tʰ ]
[ n ]
[ l ]
almost like d in dart
almost like t in star
like n in no (in most Hakka dialects)
like l in low
g
k
ng
h
[ k ]
[ kʰ ]
[ ŋ ]
[ h ]
like g in gone
like k in kin
like ng in singer
like h in how
z
c
s
y
[ ts ]
[ tsʰ ]
[ s ]
[ j ]
[ ˀ ]
like ts in tests
like t in too or c in Italian ciao
like s in sow
like y in yew
A slight closing of the throat before syllables that begin with a vowel
Rimes
Syllable Rimes in Hakka
a
ai
au
am
an
ang
ap
at
ak
[ a ]
[ ɐj ]
[ ɐu ]
[ ɐm ]
[ ɐn ]
[ ɐng ]
[ ɐp ]
[ ɐt ]
[ ɐk ]
far
eye
how
ham
an
fang
lap
sad
hag ]
ia
iɐu
iɐm
iɐng
iɐp
iɐk
[ ja ]
[ jɐu ]
[ jɐm ]
[ jɐng ]
[ jɐp ]
[ jɐk ]
yarn
yow
yam
yang
yap
yak
e
eu
em
en
ep
et
[ ɛ ]
[ eu ]
[ em ]
[ en ]
[ ep ]
[ et ]
hair
eow
em
en
epic
bet
ie
ieu
iem
ien
iep
iet
[ jɛ ]
[ jeu ]
[ jem ]
[ jen ]
[ jep ]
[ jet ]
yeah
yeow
yem
yen
yep
yet
i
im
in
ip
it
[ i ]
[ ɪm ]
[ ɪn ]
[ ɪp ]
[ ɪt ]
bee
dim
tin
dip ]
lit
ii
iim
iin
iip
iit
[ ʐ ]
[ ʐm ]
[ ʐn ]
[ ʐp ]
[ ʐt ]
fur
firm
fern
burp
bird
o
oi
on
ong
ot
ok
[ ɔ ]
[ ɒj ]
[ ɒn ]
[ ɒŋ ]
[ ɒt ]
[ ɒk ]
core
coy
con
kong
cot
cock
io
ioi
ion
iong
iot
iok
[ jɔ ]
[ jɒj ]
[ jɒn ]
[ jɒŋ ]
[ jɒt ]
[ jɒk ]
yore
yoy
yon
yong
yot
yok
u
ui
un
ung
ut
uk
[ u ]
[ uj ]
[ un ]
[ uŋ ]
[ ut ]
[ uk ]
woo
wee
bun
bung
but
book
iu
iun
iung
iut
iuk
[ ju ]
[ jʌj ]
[ jʌn ]
[ jʌŋ ]
[ ʌt ]
[ ʌk ]
you
youeille
'yun
young
yut
yuck
m
n
ng
[ m ]
[ n ]
[ ng]
mmm
nnn
ung
Tones
Tones in Hakka
#
IPA
Tone Letter
Character
Romanisation
Syllable in IPA
Meaning
1
33
˧
被
pi1
[ pʰi˧ ]
quilt cover
2
11
˩
皮
pi2
[ pʰi˩ ]
skin
3
31
˧˩
彼
pi3
[ pʰi˧˩ ]
that, there, those
4
53
˥˧
鼻
pi4
[ pʰi˥˧ ]
nose
5
3
˧
匹
pit5
[ pʰi˧ ]
bolt of cloth; counter for horses
6
5
˥
蝠
pit6
[ pʰi˥ ]
flying mammal called a bat
The tone changes known as sandhi does occur, but the change in the pitch is not as great as found in other Chinese languages.
Some Sound Correspondences between dialect of the Hakka Language
Apart from tonal differences, there are small variations in pronunciations from place to place. The following details some of the more commonly found differences, which may be helpful to the user when hearing other speakers from different areas.
h is sometimes pronounced as s, especially when there is a vowel -i- in the syllable. E.g. 兄hiung1 may be pronounced siung1.
au is sometimes pronounced as o. E.g. 好 hau3 / ho3
ai is sometimes pronounced as e E.g. 雞 gai1 / ge1
Some Hakka dialects has the -u- medial, so you may hear words like 光 gong1 pronounced as guong1 (gwong1).
Phrase list
Basics
Common signs
OPEN
營業中 / 開
CLOSED
休息 / 關
ENTRANCE
入口
EXIT
出口
PUSH
推
PULL
拉
TOILET
洗手間
MEN
男
WOMEN
女
FORBIDDEN
禁止
Hello.
. ()
Hello. (informal)
. ()
How are you?
? ( ?)
Fine, thank you.
. (Simungi )
What is your name?
? ( ?)
My name is ______ .
______ . ( _____ .)
Nice to meet you.
. ()
Please.
. ()
Thank you.
. ()
You're welcome.
. ()
Yes.
. ()
No.
. ()
Excuse me. (getting attention)
. ()
Excuse me. (begging pardon)
. ()
I'm sorry.
. ()
Goodbye
. ()
Goodbye (informal)
. ()
I can't speak name of language [well].
[ ]. ( [ ])
Do you speak English?
? ( ?)
Is there someone here who speaks English?
? ( ?)
Help!
! ( !)
Look out!
! ( !)
Good morning.
. ()
Good evening.
. ()
Good night.
. ()
Good night (to sleep)
. ()
I don't understand.
. ()
Where is the toilet?
? ( ?)
Problems
Leave me alone.
. ( .)
Don't touch me!
! ( !)
I'll call the police.
. ( .)
Police!
! ( !)
Stop! Thief!
! ! ( ! !)
I need your help.
. ( .)
It's an emergency.
. ( .)
I'm lost.
. ( .)
I lost my bag.
. ( .)
I lost my wallet.
. ( .)
I'm sick.
. ( .)
I've been injured.
. ( .)
I need a doctor.
. ( .)
Can I use your phone?
? ( ?)
Numbers
1
一 yit5
2
二 ngi4
3
三 sam1
4
四 si4
5
五 ng3
6
六 luk5
7
七 cit5
8
八 bat5
9
九 giu3
10
十 sip6
11
十一 sip6 yit5
12
十二 sip6 yit5
13
十三 sip6 sam1
14
十四 sip6 si4
15
十五 sip6 ng3
16
十六 sip6 luk5
17
十七 sip6 cit5
18
十八 sip6 bat5
19
十九 sip6 giu3
20
二十 ngi4 sip6
21
二十一 ngi4 sip6 yit5
22
二十二 ngi3 sip6 ngi4
23
二十三 ngi3 sip6 sam1
30
三十 sam1 sip6
40
四十 si4 sip6
50
五十 ng3 sip6
60
六十 luk5 sip6
70
七十 cit5 sip6
80
八十 bat5 sip6
90
九十 giu3 sip6
100
一百 yit5 bak5
200
二百 ngi4 bak5
300
三百 sam1 bak 5
1000
一千 yit5 cien1
2000
二千 ngi4 cien1
10,000
一萬 yit5 van4
100,000
十萬 sip6 van4
1,000,000
一百萬 yit5 bak5 van4
10,000,000
一千萬 yit5 cien1 van
100,000,000
一億 yit4 yit6
1,000,000,000
十億 sip6 yit6
10,000,000,000
一百億 yit5 bak5 yit6
100,000,000,000
一千億 yit5 cien1 yit6
1,000,000,000,000
一兆 yit5 cau4
number _____ (train, bus, etc.)
_____號 hau4
half
半 ban4
less
少 sau3
more
多 do1
Time
now
今下 gin1 ha4
late
遲 ci2
early
早 zau3
morning
朝頭早 zau1 teu2 zau3
afternoon
下晝 ha1 zu4
evening
暗晡晨 am4 bu1 sin2
night
夜晚晨 ya4 man1 sin2
dawn
日頭一起 ngit5 teu2 yit5 hi3
dusk
日頭落光 ngit5 teu2 lok6 gong1
Clock time
1 o'clock
一點鐘 yit5 diam3 zung1
2 o'clock
兩點鐘 liong3 diam3 zung1 (Note 兩 liong3 is used)
3 o'clock
三點鐘 sam1 diam3 zung1
The twelve divisions of the hour by five minute increments makes it fairly convenient to tell the time.
at the hour
搭正 dap5 zin4
5 past
搭一 dap5 yit5 (literally "connected to number 1 on the clock face")
10 past
搭二 dap5 ngi4
quarter past
搭三 dap5 sam1
20 past
搭四 dap5 si4
25 past
搭五 dap5 ng3
half past
搭半 dap5 luk5
25 to
搭七 dap5 cit5
20 to
搭八 dap5 bat5
quarter to
搭九 dap5 giu3
10 to
搭十 dap5 sip6
5 to
搭十一 dap5 sip6 yit5
Combine the two and you can express time as hour and minute combinations
twenty five past seven
七點搭五 ciu4 cit5 diam3 dap5 ng3
When you want to express a time between the five minute divisions, you can do so by nearly or just after in the following manner.