Hakka (Hak-k?-ng?), referred to as Hakka (Hak-ng?), is also called Hakka, Hakka, etc. in informal situations. In some areas, it is also called Yahua, Xinmin dialect, Cantonese (or native Cantonese), Huaiyuan dialect, Huizhou dialect (Guangxi and other places), etc., are a tonal language within the Chinese family of the Sino-Tibetan language family. It is generally believed that Hakka was initially finalized in the Southern Song Dynasty[1], and it was only in the 20th century that it was named Hakka.
Hakka is generally defined as a language (not a dialect) with an independent language code (ISO 639-3 hak). Despite this, there is still some debate among linguists about whether it should be classified as a Chinese dialect or a language; especially in China, it is considered one of the seven major dialects of Chinese.
Hakka is mainly distributed in eastern Guangdong, western Fujian, and southern Jiangxi, and is widely spoken in southern China (including Taiwan), as well as some Chinese communities in Malaysia and other countries. In academic language research, it is represented by Meixian dialect[2], but in reality Huiyang dialect has a greater influence; in Taiwan, it is generally represented by Sixian dialect.
Refer to Baidu Encyclopedia: /view/2038937.htm?fromtitle=%E5%AE%A2%E5%AE%B6%E8%AF%9D&fromid=2582897&type=syn