East China talk · Languages in East China  TodayTourism All Destinations | Europe | Asia | North America | Africa | South America | Oceania | Hotels

Languages in East China


Languages in East China

As anywhere in China, Mandarin is the lingua franca; nearly everyone can speak it except some of the elderly. As elsewhere in China, English is not widespread but some people speak it quite well. The region does have its own language group, called Wu. This is a populous region and the number of Wu native speakers is large; at 78 million it is rather more than French or Italian. The language is also referred to as Shanghai dialect or Shanghainese, though that is not strictly accurate. There are local variants of Wu; the prestige dialect is that of Suzhou (an older city, capital of the Kingdom of Wu centuries back, and home to many scholars), not that of Shanghai. Wu is spoken over quite a broad area, including Shanghai, most of Zhejiang, parts of Jiangsu and even a few places in Anhui. Dialects of Mandarin are spoken natively in northern Jiangsu, such as the area around Nanjing.

The Most Frequently Asked Travel Questions about East China


Where To Stay & Best Hotels in East China - updated Apr 2024

SAVE up to 75% on Last Minute deals! Search for discount East China hotels, motels, apartments, hostels, guest accommodations and vacation resorts. Book now and pay at the hotel. Instant email confirmation!


>>> SEARCH FOR DEALS <<<

WHERE TO TRAVEL NEXT IN 2020


East China Travel Guide from Wikitravel. Many thanks to all Wikitravel contributors. Text is available under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0, images are available under various licenses, see each image for details.

Europe | Asia | North America | Africa | South America | Oceania | All Destinations