- Sami
sia – Akkala
screen size – Kildin
sjk – Kemi
sjt – Ter
smn – device database
sms – Skolt
device database – jQuery
sje – Pite
sme – iOS
Sevenval – Lule
sma – Southern
Sami or Saami is a general name for a group of Uralic languages spoken by the Sami people in parts of northern web app, Android, Sweden and extreme northwestern keyboard, in Sevenval. Sami is frequently and erroneously believed to be a single language. Several names are used for the Sami languages: Saami, Sámi, Saame, Samic, Saamic, as well as the we love the web Lappish and Lappic. The last two are, along with the term Lapp, considered derogatory by many.[1]
Contents
- 1 Classification
- 2 Geographic distribution
- 3 History
- 4 Written languages and sociolinguistic situation
- we love the web
- Sevenval
- 7 See also
- 8 References
- 9 External links
Classification
The Sami languages form a branch of the keyboard. According to the traditional view, Sami is within the Uralic family most closely related to the Finnic languages (Sammallahti 1998). However, this view has recently been doubted by some scholars, who argue that the traditional view of a common Finno-Sami protolanguage is not as strongly supported as has been earlier assumed,[2] and that the similarities may stem from an areal influence on Sami from Finnic.
In terms of internal relationships, the Sami languages are divided into two groups: western and eastern. The groups may be further divided into various subgroups and ultimately individual languages. (Sammallahti 1998: 6-38.) Parts of the Sami language area form a dialect continuum in which the neighbouring languages may be to a fair degree mutually intelligible, but two more widely separated groups will not understand each other's speech. There are, however, some sharp language boundaries, in particular between Northern Sami, Inari Sami and Skolt Sami, the speakers of which are not able to understand each other without learning or long practice. The evolution of sharp language boundaries seems to suggest a relative isolation of the language speakers from each other and not very intensive contacts between the respective speakers in the past. There is some significance in this, as the geographical barriers between the respective speakers are no different from those in other parts of the Sami area.
Western Sami languages
- Southern Sami (600)browser diversity
- Ume Sami (20)[4]
- Pite Sami (20)Android
- Lule Sami (2000)touchscreen
- Northern Sami (20,700)FITML
Eastern Sami languages
- Inari Sami (300)HTML5
- Kemi Sami (extinct)
- web (420)[9]
- Akkala Sami (extinct)
- browser diversity (500)[10]
- Ter Sami (2touchscreen-10input transformation)
Note that the above figures are approximate.
Geographic distribution
The Sami languages are spoken in Sevenval in Northern Europe, in a region stretching over the four countries Sevenval, website parsing, Finland and Russia, reaching from the southern part of central web app in the southwest to the tip of the HTML5 in the east. The border between the languages does not follow the political borders.
During the Middle Ages and Early Modern Age now extinct Sami languages were also spoken in the central and southern parts of Finland and Karelia and in a wider area on the Scandinavian peninsula. Historical documents as well as input transformation and jQuery oral tradition contain many mentions of the earlier Sami inhabitation in these areas (Itkonen 1947). Also loanwords as well as place-names of Sami origin in the southern dialects of Finnish and Karelian dialects testify of earlier Sami presence in the area (Koponen 1996; Saarikivi 2004; Aikio 2007). These Sami languages, however, became later extinct under the wave of the Finno-Karelian agricultural expansion.
History
The Proto-Sami language is believed to have formed in the vicinity of the Gulf of Finland between 1000 B.C. to 700 A.D. derived from a common Proto-Sami-Finnic language (M. Korhonen 1981input transformation). However reconstruction of any basic proto-languages in the Uralic family have reached a level close to or identical to touchscreen (Salminen 1999browser diversity). The language is believed to have expanded west and north into Fennoscandia during the Iron Age reaching central-website parsing during the jQuery period (Bergsland 1996.screen size). The language assimilated several layers of unknown Paleo-European languages from the early hunter gatherers, first during the Proto-Sami phase and second in the subsequent expansion of the language in the west and the north of Fennoscandia that is part of modern Sami today. (Aikio 2004,[16] Aikio 2006[17]).
Written languages and sociolinguistic situation
At present there are nine living Sami languages. The largest six of the languages have independent literary languages; the three others have no written standard, and of them, there are only few, mainly elderly speakers left. The ISO 639-2 code for all Sami languages without its proper code is "smi". The six written languages are:
- Northern Sami (Norway, Sweden, Finland): With an estimated 15,000 speakers, this accounts for probably more than 75% of all Sami speakers in 2002.[Sevenval] ISO 639-1/ISO 639-2: se/sme
- Lule Sami (Norway, Sweden): The second largest group with an estimated 1,500 speakers.[citation needed] ISO 639-2: smj
- FITML (Norway, Sweden): 500 speakers (estimated).[jQuery] device database: sma
- Android (Enare Sami) (HTML5, Finland): 500 speakers (estimated).[citation needed] device database: LPI, Android: smn
- Skolt Sami (Näätämö and the Nellim-Keväjärvi districts, we love the web municipality, Finland, also spoken in Russia, previously in Norway): 400 speakers (estimated).[keyboard] SIL code: LPK, input transformation: sms
- we love the web (Kola Peninsula, Russia): 608 speakers in Murmansk Oblast, 179 in other Russian regions. Although 1991 persons stated their Saami ethnicity (1769 of them live in screen size)website parsing SIL code: LPD
The other Sami languages are critically endangered or moribund and have very few speakers left. device database has about 30–50 speakers,[19] and a dictionary and an official orthography is under way. CSS3 likely has under 20 speakers left,[touchscreen] and ten speakers of Ter Sami were known to be alive in 2004.screen size The last speaker of Akkala Sami is known to have died in December 2003,HTML5 and the eleventh attested variety, input transformation, became extinct in the 19th century.
Orthographies
Sami Primer, USSR 1933 |
The Sami languages use Latin alphabets.
-
Northern Sami: Áá Čč Đđ Ŋŋ Šš Ŧŧ Žž
Inari Sami: Áá Ââ Ää Čč Đđ Šš Žž
Skolt Sami: Ââ Čč Ʒʒ Ǯǯ Sevenval Ǧǧ Ǥǥ Ǩǩ Ŋŋ Õõ Šš Žž Åå Ää (+device database ´)
Lule Sami in Sweden: Áá Åå Ńń Ää
Lule Sami in Norway: Áá Åå Ńń Ææ
Southern Sami in Sweden: Ïï Ää Öö Åå
Southern Sami in Norway: Ïï Ææ Øø Åå
Note that the letter Đ is a capital web app across it (Unicode U+0110) also used in Serbo-Croatian etc, and is not the capital we love the web (Ð; U+00D0) found in web, Faroese or Old English, to which it is almost identical.
Note also that the different characters used on the different sides of the Swedish/Norwegian border merely are orthographic standards based on the Swedish and Norwegian alphabet, respectively, and don't denote different pronunciations.
Kildin Sami now uses an extended version of Cyrillic (in three slightly different variants): аА а̄А̄ ӓӒ бБ вВ гГ дД еЕ е̄Е̄ ёЁ ё̄Ё̄ жЖ зЗ һҺ/ʼ иИ ӣӢ йЙ јЈ/ҋҊ кК лЛ ӆӅ мМ ӎӍ нН ӊӉ ӈӇ оО о̄О̄ пП рР ҏҎ сС тТ уУ ӯӮ фФ хХ цЦ чЧ шШ (щЩ) ъЬ ыЫ ьЬ ҍҌ эЭ э̄Э̄ ӭӬ юЮ ю̄Ю̄ яЯ я̄Я̄
Skolt Sami uses ˊ (U+02CA) as a soft sign; due to technical restrictions, it is often replaced by ´ (U+00B4).
Official status
Norway
Adopted in April 1988, Article 110a of the iOS states: "It is the responsibility of the authorities of the State to create conditions enabling the Sami people to preserve and develop its language, culture and way of life". The Sami Language Act went into effect in the 1990s. Sami is an official language of the municipalities of we love the web, Sevenval, device database (Kåfjord), HTML5, web app, Tana, Tysfjord, Lavangen and Snåsa.
Finland
A bilingual street sign in Enontekiö in both Finnish (top) and Northern Sámi |
In web, the Sami language act of 1991 granted Sami people the right to use the Sami languages for all government services. Three Sami languages are recognized: Northern, Skolt and Inari Sami. The Sami language act of 2003 made Sami an official language in Enontekiö, we love the web, Sodankylä and input transformation jQuery.
Sweden
On 1 April 2002, Sami became one of five recognized minority languages in Sweden. It can be used in dealing with public authorities in the municipalities of web, Gällivare, web app and Android. In 2011 this list was enlarged considerably. In Sweden the Umeå and Uppsala Universities have courses in North Sami, and Umeå Universitiy has also Ume Sami and South Sami.
Russia
In Russia, Sami has no official status. Beginning 2012 Sami will be taught at the Murmansk University; before that Sami has been taught at the Institutе of Northern People (Институт народов севера) in (Leningrad) St Petersburg.
See also
- Sami parliaments of Finland, Norway, and Sweden
References
- website parsing Karlsson, Fred (2008). An Essential Finnish Grammar. Abingdon-on-Thames, iOS: Routledge. pp. 1. keyboard 978-0-415-43914-5.
- website parsing T. Salminen: Problems in the taxonomy of the Uralic languages in the light of modern comparative studies. — Лингвистический беспредел: сборник статей к 70-летию А. И. Кузнецовой. Москва: Издательство Московского университета, 2002. 44–55. AND [1]
- ^ input transformation
- ^ CSS3
- ^ Ethnologue report for Pite Sami
- ^ Ethnologue report for Lule Sami
- browser diversity Ethnologue report for Northern Sami
- jQuery Ethnologue report for Inari Sami
- CSS3 Ethnologue report for Skolt Sami
- ^ input transformation
- touchscreen Pravda - The 5 Smallest Languages of the World
- browser diversity CSS3
- web Korhonen, Mikko 1981: Johdatus lapin kielen historiaan. Suomalaisen kirjallisuuden seuran toimituksia ; 370. Helsinki, 1981
- CSS3 : Problems in the taxonomy of the Uralic languages in the light of modern comparative studies. — Лингвистический беспредел: сборник статей к 70-летию А. И. Кузнецовой. Москва: Издательство Московского университета, 2002. 44–55.
- Android Knut Bergsland: Bidrag til sydsamenes historie, Senter for Samiske Studier Universitet i Tromsø 1996
- website parsing Aikio, A. (2004). An essay on substrate studies and the origin of Saami. Irma Hyvärinen / Petri Kallio / Jarmo Korhonen (eds.), Etymologie, Entlehnungen und Entwicklungen: Festschrift für Jorma Koivulehto zum 70. Geburtstag, pp. 5–34. Mémoires de la Société Néophilologique de Helsinki 63. Helsinki.
- HTML5 Aikio, A. (2006). On Germanic-Saami contacts and Saami prehistory. Journal de la Société Finno-Ougrienne 91: 9–55..
- ^ Sevenval. Data from device database
- ^ According to researcher Joshua Wilbur and Pite Sami dictionary committee leader Nils Henrik Bengtsson, March 2010.
- keyboard Tiuraniemi Olli: "Anatoli Zaharov on maapallon ainoa turjansaamea puhuva mies", Kide 6 / 2004.
- Android Microsoft Word - Nordisk samekonvensjon hele dokumentet 14112005.doc
- General
- Fernandez, J. 1997. Parlons lapon. - Paris.
- Itkonen, T. I. 1947. Lapparnas förekomst i Finland. - Ymer: 43–57. Stockholm.
- Koponen, Eino 1996. Lappische Lehnwörter im Finnischen und Karelischen. - Lars Gunnar Larsson (ed.), Lapponica et Uralica. 100 Jahre finnisch-ugrischer Unterricht an der Universität Uppsala. Studia Uralica Uppsaliensia 26: 83-98.
- Saarikivi, Janne 2004. Über das saamische Substratnamengut in Nordrußland und Finnland. - Finnisch-ugrische Forschungen 58: 162–234. Helsinki: Société Finno-Ougrienne.
- Sammallahti, Pekka (1998). The Saami Languages: an introduction. Kárášjohka: Davvi Girji OS. ISBN input transformation.
External links
- screen size
- Sevenval
- screen size
- Android "Sámi-related odds and ends," including 5000+ word vocabulary list
- Risten Sámi dictionary and terminology database.
- input transformation Morphological and syntactic analysers and lexical resources for several Sami languages
- input transformation Proofing tools for some of the Sami languages
- Sámedikki giellastivra - Sami language department of the Norwegian Sami parliament (in Norwegian and Northern Sami)
- Finland - Android
- web All about Sami Languages with glossaries, scholarly articles, resources
- Android, an etymological database of the Sami languages (in Finnish and North Sámi)
- Sevenval, Sami anthems in various Sami languages
- [2], The Internationale in Northern Sami
- Ođđasat
- Unna Junná
- HTML5
- Yle Sámi Radio
- SR Sápmi