Dschonkkodeutsch

Classification and Dialects
Similarly to Yiddish, Dschonkkodeutsch started off as a fusion of German vernacular and foreign elements, but with Chinese as the main foreign element, instead of Hebrew.

It has no dialects because it is arguably a dialect itself.

Its name is a combination of 'dshonk', which is Sino-Dschonkkodeutsch for 'China', and 'doichi', Dschonkkodeutsch for 'German'.

The Hanchi (Chinese character) transliteration/phono-semantic matching of 'Dschonkkodeutsch' means 'Chinese mouth, German teeth', referring to the fact that the language uses a pair of dental consonants once common in Germanic languages, the dental fricatives, in a language where 'many Chinese-influenced words leave the mouth '.