Guan (Mandarin) - ッ?⁄ッb

Hui - J
Jin - W?⁄
| Baotou dialect | ??? |
| Datong dialect | ??? |
| Handan dialect | ??? |
| Hohhot dialect | ??? |
| Taiyuan dialect | ??? |
| Xinxiang dialect | ??? |
Kejia (Hakka) - qニb
| Huizhou (Guangdong) Hakka dialect | ????? |
| Meizhou Hakka dialect | ????? |
| Wuhua Hakka dialect | ????? |
| Xingning Hakka dialect | ????? |
| Pingyuan Hakka dialect | ????? |
| Jiaoling Hakka dialect | ????? |
| Dapu Hakka dialect | ????? |
| Fengshun Hakka dialect | ????? |
| Longyan Hakka dialect | ????? |
Min - ?⁄??
Wu - ??⁄?
| Taihu division | ??? |
| Changzhou dialect | ???⁄??? |
| Suzhou dialect | ???⁄??? |
| Wuxi dialect | ???⁄??? |
| Hangzhou dialect | ???⁄??? |
| Huzhou dialect | ???⁄??? |
| Jiaxing dialect | ???⁄??? |
| Shaoxing dialect | ???⁄??? |
| Ningbo dialect | ???⁄??? |
| Shanghai dialect (Shanghainese) | ???⁄??? |
| Taizhou division | ??? |
| Taizhou dialect | ??? |
| Linhai dialect | ??? |
| Sanmen dialect | ??? |
| Tiantai dialect | ??? |
| Xianju dialect | ??? |
| Huangyan dialect | ??? |
| Jiaojiang dialect | ??? |
| Wenling dialect | ??? |
| Yuhuan dialect | ??? |
| Leqing dialect | ??? |
| Ninghai dialect | ??? |
| Dongou division | ??? |
| Wenzhou dialect | ??? |
| Wuzhou division | ??? |
| Jinhua dialect | ??? |
| Lanxi dialect | ??? |
| Pujiang dialect | ??? |
| Yiwu dialect | ??? |
| Dongyang dialect | ??? |
| Pan'an dialect | ??? |
| Yongkang dialect | ??? |
| Wuyi dialect | ??? |
| Jiande dialect | ??? |
| Chuqu division | ??? |
| Lishui dialect | ??? |
| Qingtian dialect | ??? |
| Quzhou dialect | ??? |
| Shangrao dialect | ??? |
| Xuanzhou division | ??? |
| Xuancheng dialect | ??? |
Xiang - テ?⁄テ
| Chang Yi division | |
| Changsha dialect | ??? |
| Hengyang dialect | ??? |
| Hengnan dialect | ??? |
| Hengshan dialect | ??? |
| Hengdong dialect | ??? |
| Qidong dialect | ??? |
| Qiyang dialect | ??? |
| Leiyang dialect | ??? |
| Changning dialect | ??? |
| Yiyang dialect | ??? |
| Ningxiang dialect | ??? |
| Zhuzhou dialect | ??? |
| Changde dialect | ??? |
| Lou Shao division | |
| Loudi dialect | ??? |
| Shaoyang dialect | ??? |
| Shuangfeng dialect | ??? |
| Chen Xu division | |
| Chenxi dialect | ??? |
| Xupu dialect | ??? |
Yue (Cantonese) - ?⁄?
Unclassified
| Danzhou dialect | ??? ⁄ ??? |
| Linghua | |
| Maojiahua | |
| Pingdi Yaohua | |
| Shaozhou Tuhua | ???? ⁄ ???? |
| Wutunhua | |
| Xianghua |

Tibetan Language
http:⁄⁄en.wikipedia.org⁄wiki⁄Tibetan_language
| Tibetan is typically classified as a Tibeto-Burman language. Spoken Tibetan includes numerous regional varieties which, in many cases, are not mutually intelligible. Moreover, the boundaries between Tibetan and certain other Himalayan languages are sometimes unclear. In general, the dialects of central Tibet (including Lhasa), Kham, Amdo, and some smaller nearby areas are considered Tibetan dialects, while other forms, particularly Dzongkha, Sikkimese, Sherpa, and Ladakhi, are considered for political reasons by their speakers to be separate languages. Ultimately, taking into consideration this wider understanding of Tibetan dialects and forms, what we might call "greater Tibetan" is spoken by approximately 6 million people across the Tibetan Plateau. Tibetan is also spoken by approximately 150,000 exile speakers who have moved from modern-day Tibet to India and other countries. |
Uyghur Language
http:⁄⁄en.wikipedia.org⁄wiki⁄Uyghur_language
Uyghur (ニ?ロ?ム?⁄Uy?urq?⁄モ??, or ニ?ロ?ム ハ⁄Uy?ur tili⁄モ? )[1] is a Turkic language spoken by the Uyghur people in Xinjiang (also called East Turkestan or Uyghurstan), formerly also Sinkiang and Chinese Turkestan, a Central Asian region administered by China. In English, the name of the ethnicity and its language is spelled variously as Uyghur, Uighur, Uygur and Uigur, with the preferred spelling being Uyghur. Many English speakers pronounce it as "wEEger" (IPA: ['wi.g?]) but the pronunciation "ooygOOr" (IPA: [uj.'gur]) is closer to native [???'???].
Uyghur is spoken by 8.5 million (2004) in China, mostly in the far western Xinjiang Autonomous Region. Uyghur is also spoken by 300,000 in Kazakhstan, and there are Uyghur-speaking communities in Afghanistan, Albania, Australia, Belgium, Canada, Germany, Indonesia, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sweden, Taiwan, Tajikistan, Turkey, United Kingdom, USA, and Uzbekistan.
The dialects of Uyghur identified by the Ethnologue are Central Uyghur, Hotan (Hetian), and Lop (Luobu). There are two main languages in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region: Uyghur and Mandarin Chinese. Mandarin Chinese is not used widely in southern Xinjiang. About 80 newspapers and magazines are available in Uyghur; five TV channels and ten publishers serve as the Uyghur media. The same as in all China, all of the information and news provided has to be censored by the government.
Mongolian Language
http:⁄⁄en.wikipedia.org⁄wiki⁄Mongolian_language
Over two million people speak Mongolian throughout Mongolia. There are also up to three million speakers in Northern China, who, however, form only a shrinking minority of the overall population of Inner Mongolia, especially of its cities. Khalkha Mongolian is the national language of Mongolia. In Inner Mongolia, the standard Mongolian language is based on Chahar Mongolian.
Dialects