| Title | Type | Provider | Year |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Bible in the Shanghai Dialect | Bible | 1913 | |
| Taizhou New Testament, Portions (Roman) Gyiu-iah shü Sing-ming kyi | Bible | 1908 | |
| New Testament in the Ningbo Dialect (and Portions) Ngô-he kyiu-cü yia-su kyi-toh-keh sing-iah shü | Bible | 1897 | |
| The Four Gospels and Acts, in Wenchow (Wenzhou) Chaò-chî Yi-sû Chī-tuh Sang Iah Sing Shī | Bible | 1894 | |
| Hangzhou New Testament (Romanised) An Sen Ma-t'ai dzun foh-in sö | Bible | 1880 | |
| Suzhou Old Testament with Portions 舊約全書 | Bible | 1874 | |
| Ningbo New Testament (Romanised) Ah-lah kyiu-cü Yiæ-su Kyi-toh-go Sing Iah Shü | Bible | 1868 | |
| The Gospel of Mark in the Hankou Dialect | Bible | 1821 | |
| JESUS | Films | arclight | |
| My Last Day | Films | arclight | |
| Words of Life | Audio | grn |
Wu is a major group of Chinese languages spoken primarily in Shanghai, Zhejiang province, and parts of Jiangsu province, especially south of the Yangtze River, which make up the Wu cultural region. The Wu languages are at times simply called Shanghainese, especially when introduced to foreigners. The Suzhounese variety was the prestige dialect of Wu as of the 19th century, but had been replaced in status by Shanghainese by the turn of the 20th century, coinciding with a period of rapid language change in the city. The languages of Northern Wu constitute a language family and are mutually intelligible, while those of Southern Wu do not form a phylogenetic language family and are not mutually intelligible.