Sakha language
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sakha Саха тыла Saxa tyla |
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Spoken in: | Russia | |
Region: | Sakha | |
Total speakers: | 456,288 (2002 census)[1] | |
Language family: | Altaic[2] (controversial) Turkic Northern Turkic Sakha |
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Writing system: | Cyrillic alphabet | |
Official status | ||
Official language in: | Sakha Republic | |
Regulated by: | no official regulation | |
Language codes | ||
ISO 639-1: | none | |
ISO 639-2: | sah | |
ISO 639-3: | sah | |
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Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. |
Sakha, or Yakut, is a Turkic language with around 460,000 speakers spoken in the Sakha Republic in the Russian Federation by the Sakha or Yakuts.
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[edit] Classification
Sakha is a member of the Northern Turkic family of languages, which includes Shor, Tuvan, and Dolgan in addition to Sakha. The Northern Turkic family is a subgroup of the Turkic languages, which some linguists believe to be member of the disputed Altaic language family. [3]
Like Finnish, Hungarian, and Turkish, Sakha has vowel harmony, is agglutinative and has no grammatical gender. Word order is usually Subject Object Verb.
[edit] Geographic distribution
Sakha is spoken mainly in the Sakha Republic. It is also used by ethnic Sakha in Khabarovsk Region and a small diaspora in other parts of the Russian Federation, Turkey, and other parts of the world. Dolgan, a close relative of Sakha, considered by some a dialect, is spoken by Dolgans in Krasnoyarsk Region. Sakha is widely used as a lingua franca by other ethnic minorities in the Sakha Republic - more Dolgans, Evenks, Evens and Yukagirs speak Yakut than their own languages. About 8% of the people of other ethnicities than Yakut living in Sakha claimed knowledge of Yakut language during the 2002 census.[4]
[edit] Sounds
One characteristic feature of Sakha is vowel harmony. For example, if the first vowel of a Sakha word is a front vowel, the second and other vowels of the same word are usually the same vowel or another front vowel: кэлин (kelin) "back": э (e) is open unrounded front, и (i) is close unrounded front.
- Sakha Open World - mp3's of Sakha Radio
[edit] Consonants
Bilabial | Dental | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |||||||
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Plosives | p | b | t | d | c | ɟ | k | ɡ | ||||
Nasals | m | n | ɲ | ŋ | ||||||||
Fricatives | s | x | ɣ | h | ||||||||
Tap | ɾ | |||||||||||
Approximant | j, j̃ | |||||||||||
Lateral approximants |
l |
[edit] Vowels
Short | Long | Diphthong | ||||
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Close | Open | Close | Open | |||
Front | Unrounded | i | e | iː | eː | ie |
Rounded | y | ø | yː | øː | yø | |
Back | Unrounded | ɯ | a | ɯː | aː | ɯa |
Rounded | u | o | uː | oː | uo |
[edit] Writing system
Sakha is written using the Cyrillic script: the modern Sakha alphabet, established in 1939 by the Soviet Union, consists of the usual Russian characters but with 5 additional letters: Ҕҕ, Ҥҥ, Өө, Һһ, Үү.
Сахалыы сурук-бичигэ
Cyrillic | Name | IPA | |
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А а | /a/ | ||
Б б | /b/ | ||
В в | /v/ | found only in Russian loanwords [3] | |
Г г | /ɡ/ | ||
Ҕ ҕ | /ɣ, ʁ/ | ||
Д д | /d/ | ||
Дь дь | /ɟ/ | ||
Е е | /e, je/ | found only in Russian loanwords | |
Ё ё | /jo/ | found only in Russian loanwords | |
Ж ж | /ʒ/ | found only in Russian loanwords | |
З з | /z/ | found only in Russian loanwords | |
И и | /i/ | ||
Й й | йот | /j, j̃/ | Nasalization of the glide is not indicated in the orthography |
К к | /k, q/ | ||
Л л | /l/ | ||
М м | /m/ | ||
Н н | /n/ | ||
Ҥ ҥ | /ŋ/ | ||
Нь нь | /ɲ/ | ||
О о | /o/ | ||
Ө ө | /ø/ | ||
П п | /p/ | ||
Р р | /ɾ/ | ||
С с | /s/ | ||
Һ һ | ha | /h/ | |
Т т | /t/ | ||
У у | /u/ | ||
Ү ү | /y/ | ||
Ф ф | /f/ | found only in Russian loanwords | |
Х х | ха | /x/ | |
Ц ц | /ʦ/ | found only in Russian loanwords | |
Ч ч | /c/ | ||
Ш ш | /ʃ/ | found only in Russian loanwords | |
Щ щ | /ɕː/ | found only in Russian loanwords | |
Ъ ъ | кытаатыннарар бэлиэ | /◌./ | found only in Russian loanwords |
Ы ы | /ɯ/ | ||
Ь ь | сымнатыы бэлиэтэ | /◌ʲ/ | found only in Russian loanwords |
Э э | /e/ | ||
Ю ю | /ju/ | found only in Russian loanwords | |
Я я | /ja/ | found only in Russian loanwords |
[edit] Grammar
[edit] Syntax
The typical word order can be summarized as subject adverb - object - verb; possessor - possessed; noun - adjective.
[edit] Nouns
Nouns have plural and singular forms. The plural is formed with the suffix /-LAr/, which may surface as [-лар (-lar)], [-лэр (-ler)], [-лөр (-lør)], [-лор (-lor)], [-тар (-tar)], [-тэр (-ter)], [-төр (-tør)], [-тор (-tor)], [-дар (-dar)], [-дэр (-der)], [-дөр (-dør)], [-дор (-dor)], [-нар (-nar)], [-нэр (-ner)], [-нөр (-nør)], or [-нор (-nor)], depending on the preceding consonants and vowels. The plural is used only when referring to a number of things collectively, not when specifying an amount. Nouns have no gender, but the pronoun system distinguishes between human and non-human in the third person, using кини (kini) to refer to human beings and ол (ol) to refer to all other things. [5]
[edit] Pronouns
Personal pronouns in Sakha distinguish between first, second, and third persons and singular and plural number.
Singular | Plural | |
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1st | мин (min) | биһиги (bihigi) |
2nd | эн (en) | эһиги (ehigi) |
3rd | кини (kini) | кинилэр (kiniler) |
[edit] Questions
Question words in Sakha remain in-situ; they do not move to the front of the sentence. Sample question words include: туох (tuox) "what", ким (kim) "who", хайдах (xaydax) "how", хас (xas) "how much", ханна (xanna) "where", and ханнык (xannɯk) "which".
[edit] Literature
The first printing in Yakut was a part of a Nicolaas Witsen's book published in 1692 in Amsterdam.
In 2005, Marianne Beerle-Moor, director of the Institute for Bible Translation, Russia/CIS, was awarded the “Civil Valour” Order for ... the translation of the New Testament into the Yakut language.[6]
[edit] References
- ^ Russian Census 2002. Распространенность владения языками (кроме русского)(Knowledge of languages other than Russian)(Russian)
- ^ "[1] Ethnologue"
- ^ a b Krueger, John R. (1962). Yakut Manual. Bloomington: Indiana U Press.
- ^ Russian Census 2002. 6. Владение языками (кроме русского) населением отдельных национальностей по республикам, автономной области и автономным округам Российской Федерации (Knowledge of languages other than Russian by the population of republics, autonomous oblast and autonomous districts) (Russian)
- ^ Kirişçioğlu, M. Fatih (1999). Saha (Yakut) Türkçesi Grameri. Ankara: Türk Dil Kurumu. ISBN 975-16-0587-3.
- ^ Библии Перевода Институт
[edit] See also
- Yakuts
- Sakha
- Dolgan language
- Semyon Novgorodov - the inventor of the first IPA-based Yakut alphabet
[edit] External links
[edit] Language-related
- Comparison of Yakut and Mongolian vocabulary
- Yakut texts with Russian translations - heroic poetry, fairy tales, legends, proverbs, etc.
- Sakhalyy suruk - Sakha Unicode fonts and Keyboard Layouts for PC
- Sakhatyla.ru - On-line Yakut-Russian, Russian-Yakut dictionary
- Sakha-English Dictionary
[edit] Content in Sakha
- Sakha Open World - Орто Дойду - A platform to promote the Yakut Language on the web; News, Lyrics, Music, Fonts, Forum, VideoNews (in Yakut, Unicode)
- Baayaga village website - news and stories about and by the people of Baayaga (in Yakut)
- Kyym.ru - site of Yakut newspaper
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