Home

lâng

Lâng is a word found in several Southern Chinese languages, most notably in Minnan varieties such as Taiwanese Hokkien and Teochew, meaning “person” or “human being.” In these dialects the term is typically written with the Chinese character 人 and romanized as lâng in Hokkien and lang in Teochew. The form is a cognate of the Mandarin 人 (rén) and of related terms in other East Asian languages that share the same semantic core.

Pronunciation and tone vary by dialect, but the sense remains the same: it refers to a person

Lâng also appears in ethnolinguistic and regional identity expressions, reflecting its role in everyday referential language

See also: Ren (Chinese), Minnan language, Teochew language, Taiwanese language, Cantonese yàhn.

or
people
in
general,
or
to
an
individual
when
the
context
makes
the
reference
clear.
It
is
used
as
a
common
noun
in
everyday
speech
and
can
appear
in
phrases
dealing
with
identity,
nationality,
or
social
role,
as
well
as
in
simple
predication
where
the
subject
is
a
person.
In
writing,
speakers
often
choose
the
Chinese
character
人
in
formal
contexts,
while
the
native
romanization
is
preferred
in
informal
or
educational
material.
within
Taiwan
and
southern
China.
The
term
helps
distinguish
local,
community,
or
group
identities,
separate
from
standard
Mandarin
usage.