Map showing the locations of the Northern and Southern Altai varieties in Russia
Northern Altai or Northern Altay is the several tribal Turkic dialects spoken in the Altai Republic of Russia .[2] Though traditionally considered one language, Southern Altai and the Northern varieties are not fully mutually intelligible. Written Altai is based on Southern Altai, and is rejected by Northern Altai children.[3]
Northern Altai is written in Cyrillic. In 2006, in the Altay kray, an alphabet was created for the Kumandin variety.[4]
Contents
1Phonology
1.1Vowels
1.2Consonants
2Demographics
3Varieties
4Linguistic features
5References
6External links
Phonology
Northern Altai has 8 vowels, which may be long or short, and 20 consonants, plus marginal consonants that occur only in loan words.[5]
Vowels
Northern Altai vowels
Front
Back
High
iy
ɯu
Low
eø
ao
Consonants
Northern Altai consonants
Labial
Alveolar
Post-alveloar
Velar
Uvular
Plosive
pb
td
cdʒ
kɡ
q
Affricate
ts[lower-alpha 1]
Fricative
fv
sz
ʃʒ
x[lower-alpha 1]ɣ
Nasal
m
n
ŋ
Trill
r
Approximant
l
j
↑ 1.01.1Phoneme occurs only in Russian loanwords.
Demographics
According to data from the 2002 Russian Census, 65,534 people in Russia stated that they have command of the Altay language.[6] Only around 10% of them speak Northern Altay varieties, while the remaining speak Southern Altay varieties. Furthermore, according to some data, only 2% of Altays fluently speak the Altay language.[7]
Varieties
Northern Altay consists of the following varieties:
Kumandy dialect [ru; tr; tt] (also Qubandy/Quwandy). 1,862 Kumandins claim to know their national language,[8] but 1,044 people were registered as knowing Kumandy.[9] Kumandy has the following three sub-varieties:[10]
Turačak
Solton
Starobardinian
Chelkan dialect [ru; pt] (also Kuu/Quu, Chalkandu/Shalkanduu, Lebedin). 466 Chelkans claim to speak their national language, and 539 people in all claim to know Chelkan.
The Tubalar language [ru; tr] (also known as Tuba language), is also often ascribed to belong to the Northern Altai group, but its relation to other languages is dubious and it may belong to Kipchak languages.[11] 408 Tubalars claim to know their national language, and 436 people in all reported knowing Tuba.
Closely related to the northern varieties of Altay are the Kondoma dialect [ru; tr] of the Shor language and the Lower Chulym dialect [ru; tr] of the Chulym language.[11]
Linguistic features
The following features refer to the outcome of commonly used Turkic isoglosses in Northern Altay.[12][13][14]
*/ag/ — Proto-Turkic */ag/ is found in three variations throughout Northern Altay: /u/, /aw/, /aʁ/
*/eb/ — Proto-Turkic */eb/ is found as either /yj/ or /yg/, depending on the variety
*/VdV/ — With a few lexical exceptions (likely borrowings), proto-Turkic intervocalic */d/ results in /j/.
References
↑Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds (2017). "Northern Altai". Glottolog 3.0. Jena, Germany: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History. http://glottolog.org/resource/languoid/id/nort2686.
↑"Northern Altai". ELP Endangered Languages Project. http://www.endangeredlanguages.com/lang/3869.
↑Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named e25
↑В Алтайском крае издана азбука кумандинского языка. 2006
↑Baskakov, N.A. (1997). "Altaysky yazyk". in Institut Jazykoznanija. Tyurkskie yazyki. Jazyki mira / Rossijskaja Akademija Nauk, Institut Jazykoznanija. [Glav. red. koll.: V. N. Jarceva (otv. red.) ...]. Biškek: Kyrgyzstan. ISBN 978-5-655-01214-1. OCLC 42579926.
↑Всероссийская перепись населения 2002 года. Том 13. «Коренные малочисленные народы Российской Федерации»
↑Энциклопедия «Кругосвет»
↑Russian census figures
↑Russian census figures
↑BASKAKOV, N. A. (1958). "LA CLASSIFICATION DES DIALECTES DE LA LANGUE TURQUE D'ALTAÏ". Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae8 (1): 9–15. ISSN 0001-6446. https://www.jstor.org/stable/23682215.
↑ 11.011.1Tubalarskie ėti︠u︡dy. Tatevosov, S. G. (Sergeĭ Georgievich), Татевосов, С. Г. (Сергей Георгиевич), Moskovskiĭ gosudarstvennyĭ universitet im. M.V. Lomonosova. Filologicheskiĭ fakulʹtet., Московский государственный университет им. М.В. Ломоносова. Филологический факультет.. Moskva: IMLI RAN. 2009. ISBN 9785920803504. OCLC 613983309.
↑Baskakov, Nikolay Aleksandrovich (1966). Диалект Черневых Татар (Туба-Кижи): грамматический очерк и словарь.. Moscow: Наука.
↑Baskakov, Nikolay Aleksandrovich (1972). Диалект Кумандинцев (Куманды-Кижи): грамматический очерк, тексты, переводы и словарь.. Москва: Наука.
↑Baskakov, Nikolay Aleksandrovich (1985). Диалект Лебединских Татар-Чалканцев (Куу-Кижи). Москва: Наука.
External links
"Кумандинский язык" (in ru). https://minlang.iling-ran.ru/lang/kumandinskiy-yazyk. Page about the Kumandy variety with maps and grammatical information.
"Челканский язык" (in ru). https://minlang.iling-ran.ru/lang/chelkanskiy-yazyk. Page about the Chelkan variety with maps and grammatical information.
"Тубаларский" (in ru). https://minlang.iling-ran.ru/lang/tubalarskiy. Page about the Tubalar variety with maps and grammatical information.
Northern Altai language test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator
v
t
e
Turkic languages
Proto-language
Proto-Turkic
Common Turkic
Arghu
Khalaj
Karluk
Äynu1
Ili Turki
Uyghur
Uzbek
Extinct
Middle Turkic
Khorezmian
Chagatai
Kipchak
Ponto-Caspian
Crimean Tatar
Karachay-Balkar
Karaim
Krymchak
Kumyk
Urum
Extinct
Kipchak
Cuman
Aralo-Caspian
Siberian Tatar
Karakalpak
Kazakh
Kyrgyz
Nogai
Extinct
Fergana Kipchak
Uralo-Caspian
Bashkir
Tatar
Extinct
Old Tatar
Oghuz
Azerbaijani
Gagauz
Khorasani Turkic
Qashqai
Rumelian Turkish
Salar
Turkish
Turkmen
Extinct
Pecheneg2
Old Anatolian Turkish
Ottoman Turkish
Siberian
Altai
Chulym
Dolgan
Khakas
Shor
Tofa
Tuvan
Yakut
Western Yugur2
Extinct
Orkhon Turkic
Old Turkic
Old Uyghur
Fuyu Girgis
Dukhan
Oghur
Chuvash
Extinct
Khazar2
Bulgar
1 Mixed language.
2 Classification disputed.
v
t
e
Languages of Russia
Federal language
Russian
State languages of federal subjects
Abaza
Adyghe
Aghul
Altai
Southern Altai
Avar
Azerbaijani
Bashkir
Buryat
Chechen
Chuvash
Crimean Tatar
Dargwa
Erzya
Ingush
Kabardian
Kalmyk
Karachay-Balkar
Khakas
Komi
Kumyk
Lak
Lezgian
Mari
Hill
Meadow
Moksha
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Tat
Tatar
Tsakhur
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Chukchi
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Even
Evenki
Finnish
Karelian
Kazakh
Khanty
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Nenets
Selkup
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Yukaghir
Scripts
Cyrillic
Cyrillic Braille
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Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern Altai language. Read more