Hong Kong Cantonese

Hong Kong Cantonese (Chinese: 香港粵語/港式粵語/香港廣東話/香港廣州話) is a form of Yue Chinese commonly spoken in Hong Kong. Although Hong Kongers largely identify this variant of Chinese with the term "Cantonese" (廣東話), a variety of publications in mainland China describe the variant as Hong Kong speech (香港話). There are slight differences between the pronunciation used in Hong Kong Cantonese and that of the Cantonese spoken in the neighbouring Chinese province of Guangdong, where Cantonese (based on the Guangzhou dialect) is a lingua franca. Over the years, Hong Kong Cantonese has also absorbed foreign terms and developed a large set of Hong Kong-specific terms. These differences from the Canton norm are the result of British rule between 1841 and 1997, as well as the closure of the Hong Kong-China border immediately after the establishment of the People's Republic of China in 1949.

Read more about Hong Kong Cantonese:  History, Pronunciation, Unique Phrases and Expressions, Loanwords, Code-switching and Loanword Adaptation