Today what I want to show you is the dialect of Yue (粤语 yuèyǔ). Yue is a variety of Chinese spoken mostly in Guangdong (广东 Guǎngdōng), Guangxi (广西 Guǎngxī), Hong Kong (香港 Xiānggǎng) and Macau (澳门 Aomén). You can also find significant Yue-speaking communities overseas in Southeast Asia, Canada, Australia, the United kingdom and USA. There are also considerable Yue-speaking communities overseas in Southeast Asia, Canada, Australia, the United Kingdom and USA.

Yue is also referred to Cantonese, which may refer to the Yue varieties of Chinese being a whole. In Guangdong and Guanxi people typically call their language yuhtyúh (粤语 yuèyǔ) or baahkwá (白话 báihuà), which refers especially to the Guangzhou variety.

The pronunciation of Yue is thought to be closer to that of older forms of Chinese, specifically that of the Tang Dynasty (618-907 AD), than Mandarin, as is some of its grammar. For instance, several old poems that do rhyme when read with Yue pronunciation do not rhyme in Mandarin pronunciation. It is believed that officials and other folks who had been exiled or migrated to southern China for the duration of the Tang Dynasty brought their assortment of Chinese with them to Guangdong. As a result of the southern region's relative remoteness and the lack of efficient communications and transport, the Tang selection survived reasonably unchanged.

Varieties of Yue contain:
Cantonese, Guangfu or Yuehai (粤海 Yuèhǎi), which involves the language of Guangzhou (广州 Guǎngzhōu) as well as the surrounding locations of Zhongshan (中山 Zhōngshān), Wuzhou (梧州 Wúzhōu), and Foshan (佛山 Fóshān), too as Hong Kong and Macau
Si-yi, that's spoken mainly in Guangdong. One particular subvariety of Seiyap (四邑方言 Sìyì fāngyán), Taishanese (台山话 Tāishānhuà), was the primary range spoken in Chinese communities while in the USA prior to about 1970.
Gao–Yang, which is spoken in Yangjiang (阳江 Yángjiāng)
Wu–Hua, which is spoken mainly in western Guangdong
Gou–Lou, which is spoken in western Guangdong and eastern Guangxi - includes the dialect of Yulin (玉林 Yùlín), Guangxi
Yong–Xun, which is spoken mainly in Guangxi and its capital Nanning (南宁 Nánníng)
Qin–Lian, which is spoken in southern Guangxi - includes the Beihai (北海 Běihǎi) dialect
Danzhou, which includes the dialect of Changjiang (长江 Chángjiāng)
Haihua, which is spoken in Lianjiang (廉江 Liánjiāng)

As Yue dialect is wildly spoken, if you know how to speak Yue that may help you to get a good job.