Old Yue language
| Old Yue | |
|---|---|
| Yue | |
| Native to | Yue, Dong'ou, Minyue, Nanyue, Ou Yue |
| Region | Southern China |
| Ethnicity | Baiyue |
| Extinct | c. 1st century AD |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | None (mis) |
| Glottolog | None |
Map of the Chinese plain at the start of the Warring States Period in the 5th century BC. | |
The Old Yue language is an unclassified language or set of languages spoken in the state of Yue during the Eastern Zhou dynasty. It may also refer broadly to the languages spoken by Yue peoples in any of the Yue polities in southern China and northern Vietnam c. 700 BCE – c. 100 BCE.
Knowledge of Yue speech is limited to fragmentary references and possible loanwords in Sinitic languages. The longest attestation is the Song of the Yue Boatman, a short song transcribed phonetically in Chinese characters in 528 BC and included, with a Chinese translation, in the Garden of Stories compiled by Liu Xiang five centuries later. Scholars disagree about which languages the Yue spoke, and draw candidates from the non-Sinitic language families still represented in areas of southern China.