Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - Did the former emperors speak Mandarin or dialects?

Did the former emperors speak Mandarin or dialects?

In modern society, with the development of science and technology, transportation becomes more and more convenient. People in different areas walk around each other, and the language in each place is different. But we have Mandarin, which can be heard in many places in China. However, in ancient times, due to inconvenient transportation and low education, people generally spoke their own dialects. But did the ancient emperors speak Mandarin or dialect?

In fact, in the history of China, every dynasty has its own official language, which is equivalent to the Mandarin we speak now. At that time, Qin was in China, and Emperor Ying Zheng spoke Shaanxi dialect. Slowly, in the dynasties after Qin, this official language also improved a little. This is the official language known as Yayu. It is still difficult for all dynasties in history to unify into a standard language pronunciation in the same sense. After all, the pronunciation practice in ancient China was word cutting.

Great changes have taken place in Chinese in China since the Ming Dynasty. At that time, Zhu Yuanzhang was from Nanjing and spoke Nanjing dialect. Then he took Nanjing dialect as the official language. Slowly, with the rule of the Qing Dynasty, the accent of Kangxi in the Qing Dynasty will subvert your cognition. Isn't it surprising that the Mandarin of Kangxi period has now become the Mandarin of Hua Er Yin? What we are speaking now is Putonghua, which is the habit of Tunguska standard-bearer to speak Chinese in a broken voice and gradually developed into Putonghua.

In fact, in ancient China, except for the founding emperor, everyone was born among the people, and most of them spoke with the accent of their hometown. They all received the top formal royal education, all spoke the official language, and could not speak any dialect.

Can the ancient emperors speak Mandarin?

In modern society, with the development of science and technology, transportation becomes more and more convenient. People in different areas walk around each other, and the language in each place is different. But we have Mandarin, which can be heard in many places in China. However, in ancient times, due to inconvenient transportation and low education, people generally spoke their own dialects. But did the ancient emperors speak Mandarin or dialect?

In fact, in the history of China, every dynasty has its own official language, which is equivalent to the Mandarin we speak now. At that time, Qin was in China, and Emperor Ying Zheng spoke Shaanxi dialect. Slowly, in the dynasties after Qin, this official language also improved a little. This is the official language known as Yayu. It is still difficult for all dynasties in history to unify into a standard language pronunciation in the same sense. After all, the pronunciation practice in ancient China was word cutting.

Great changes have taken place in Chinese in China since the Ming Dynasty. At that time, Zhu Yuanzhang was from Nanjing and spoke Nanjing dialect, and then he took Nanjing dialect as the official language. Slowly, with the rule of the Qing Dynasty, the accent of Kangxi in the Qing Dynasty will subvert your cognition. Isn't it surprising that the Mandarin of Kangxi period has now become the Mandarin of Hua Er Yin? What we are speaking now is Putonghua, which is the habit of Tunguska standard-bearer to speak Chinese in a broken voice and gradually developed into Putonghua.

In fact, in ancient China, except for the founding emperor, everyone was born among the people, and most of them spoke with the accent of their hometown. They all received the top formal royal education, all spoke the official language, and could not speak any dialect.

In fact, Mandarin and dialects are only in different places. If the capital is in Guangzhou, now Mandarin is Cantonese, which is actually the oldest spoken language in China. Therefore, there is no standard mandarin, but the status and period of each dynasty are different, which has caused this kind of mandarin now. In fact, even if the ministers at that time listened differently, there were still translators to translate, so some ancient emperors could speak Mandarin, while others could not.