A term used to describe the Sinicized Baiyue or Asian languages, such as Cantonese, Taishanese (Sze Yap), and Goulou, of Kwangtung, South
China (Baiyue Land), Hong Kong, and Macau. Another Sinicized Baiyue language, Hakka, shares some loansome
words, some pronunciation, and some Hanzi characters with Cantonese and Hokkien, which is lumped under the Min language family of Fujian, South
China and Taiwan. However, Hakka is viewed as a different Vietic language, and it is mostly related to the Gan language of Jiangxi, South
China. In fact, Yue is also used to describe a group of indigenous people inhabiting South
China under the Yangtze River and to a certain degree, Southeast Asia, particularity Vietnam, and most of them are not Chinese or not descendants of the Yellow Emperor from North
China's Yellow River genetically and culturally.