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Komi language

The Komi language (Komi: коми кыв, komi kyv), also known as Zyran, Zyrian or Komi-Zyryan (Komi: зыран коми кыв, zyran komi kyv),[2] is one of the two regional varieties of the pluricentric Komi language, the other regional variety being Permyak.

Komi language
коми кыв
komi kyv
Native toRussia
RegionKomi Republic, Nenetsia, Permyakia, Yamalia, Yugra, elsewhere in Russia
Native speakers
99,609 (2020 census)[1]
Cyrillic, Old Permic (formerly)
Official status
Official language in
 Russia
Language codes
ISO 639-1kv
ISO 639-3kpv
Glottologkomi1268
Komi is classified as Definitely Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger (2010)
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Komi is natively spoken by the Komi peoples native to the Komi Republic and other parts of Russia such as Nenetsia and Yamalia. There were 285,000 speakers in 1994, which decreased to 160,000 in 2010. Komi has a standardized form.

It was written in the Old Permic alphabet (Komi: 𐍐𐍝𐍑𐍣𐍠‎, Анбур, Anbur) for liturgical purposes in the 14th century, though very few texts exist in this script. The Cyrillic script was introduced by Russian missionaries in the 17th century, replacing it. A tradition of secular works of literature in the modern form of the language dates back to the 19th century.

Dialects edit

Komi has ten dialects: Syktyvkardin (Sysola), Lower Ežva (Vychegda), Central Ežva (Vychegda), Upper Ežva (Vychegda), Luz-let, Upper Sysola, Pećöra, Iźva, Vym, and Udora dialects. Syktyvkardin is spoken in the region of Syktyvkar and forms the model for the generic standard dialect of the language. Dialects are divided based primarily on their use of /v/ and /l/:[3]

  • Older */l/ remains unchanged in Upper Ežva and Pećöra dialects (also in most dialects of Komi-Permyak).
  • In Central dialects, /*l/ changed to /v/ syllable-finally; for instance, in literary Komi */kɯl//kɯv/ "tongue".
  • In Northern dialects, changes of /l/ continued with complete vocalization of syllable-final /l/, resulting in long vowels.

The start of the change date to the 17th century. It is not seen in the oldest Komi texts from the 14th century, nor in loanwords from Komi to Khanty, dated to the 16th; though it fully occurred before Russian loanwords that entered the language in the 18th century as /l/ remains unchanged in these.

Some dialects are further distinguished based on the palatalized alveolars /dʲ tʲ/, which have unpacked in syllable-final position as clusters /jd jt/.[3]

 
Komi language

Writing system edit

 
A sample of the Komi language words. Upper "Улица Коммунистическая" is in Russian, lower "Коммунистическӧй улича" is in Komi. Both mean "Communist street". This picture was taken in Syktyvkar, the capital of Komi Republic
 
Trilingual (Russian, Komi, and English) sign in a hotel in Ukhta, Komi Republic

The Old Permic script is the first writing system for Komi. It was invented in the 14th century by the missionary Stepan Khrap. The alphabet resembled medieval Greek and Cyrillic. The script was also known as Anbur (Komi: 𐍐𐍝𐍑𐍣𐍠‎, Анбур), named for the first 2 letters of the script, "an" & "bur" (𐍐 & 𐍑, respectively). It is no longer in use today, though it has received Unicode Support as "Old Permic" in recent times.[4] The script saw use in Komi-inhabited areas, primarily the Principality of Great Perm and parts of Bjarmaland.

In the 16th century, this alphabet was replaced by the Russian alphabet with certain modifications for affricates. In the 1920s, the language was written in the Molodtsov alphabet, which also derived from Cyrillic. In the 1930s, during the Latinisation in the Soviet Union, Komi was briefly written with a version of the Latin script. Since the 1940s it uses the Russian-based Cyrillic alphabet with the additional letters І, і and Ӧ, ӧ.

Komi alphabet (Коми анбур)[5]
Anbur Cyrillic Cyrillic (Molodtsov) Latin IPA Letter name Notes
𐍐 А а A a /a/ а
𐍑 Б б B b /b/ бе
𐍮 В в V v /v/ ве
𐍒 Г г G g /g/ ге
𐍓 Д д Ԁ ԁ

Ԃ ԃ

D d
Ď ď
/d/
/ɟ/ before е, ё, и, ю, я, ь
дэ
𐍖 Дж дж Җ җ Dž dž // дже
𐍘 Дз дз Ԇ ԇ Dź dź // дзе
- Е е - Je je
E e
/e/
[je] word-initially and after vowels
/e/ after /c, ɟ, ɕ, ʑ, ɲ, ʎ/
е
- Ё ё - Jo jo

O o

[jo] word-initially and after vowels
/o/ after /c, ɟ, ɕ, ʑ, ɲ, ʎ/
ё
𐍕 Ж ж Ž ž /ʒ/ же
𐍗 З з З з

Ԅ ԅ

Z z
Ź ź
/z/
/ʑ/ before е, ё, и, ю, я, ь
зэ
𐍙 И и - I i /i/
/i/ after /c, ɟ, ɕ, ʑ, ɲ, ʎ/
небыд и ("soft i")
𐍙 І і I i /i/ after /t, d, s, z, n, l/ чорыд и ("hard i") Non-palatalizing form of и.
𐍙 Й й Ј ј J j /j/ дженьыд и
𐍚 К к K k /k/ ка
𐍛 Л л Л л

Ԉ ԉ

L l
Ľ ľ
/ɫ/
/ʎ/ before е, ё, и, ю, я, ь
эл
𐍜 М м M m /m/ эм
𐍝 Н н Н н

Ԋ ԋ

N n
Ń ń
/n/
/ɲ/ before е, ё, и, ю, я, ь
эн
𐍞𐍩 О о

-

O o

-

/o/

/ɔ/

о

"open o"

Open "o" is absent in the literary Komi language.
- Ӧ ӧ Ö ö /ɘ/ ӧ
𐍟 П п P p /p/ пе
𐍠 Р р R r /r/ эр
𐍡 С с С с

Ԍ ԍ

S s
Ś ś
/s/
/ɕ/ before е, ё, и, ю, я, ь
эс
𐍢 Т т Т т

Ԏ ԏ

T t
Ť ť
/t/
/c/ before е, ё, и, ю, я, ь
тэ
𐍤 Тш тш Щ щ Č č // тше
𐍣 У у U u /u/ у
𐍫 Ф ф - F f /f/ эф In loanwords.
𐍬 Х х - H h /x/ ха In loanwords.
𐍭 Ц ц - C c /ts/ це In loanwords.
- Ч ч Ć ć // че
𐍥 Ш ш Š š /ʃ/ ша
𐍦 Щ щ - Šč šč /ʃtʃ~ʃː/ ща In loanwords.
𐍯 Ъ ъ - - - чорыд пас ("hard sign") Same usage as Russian.
𐍨 Ы ы Y y /ɨ/ ы
𐍰 Ь ь - - /ʲ/ небыд пас ("soft sign") Same usage as Russian.
-

𐍔

Э э

-

Ее E e

-

/e/

/ɛ/

э

"open e"

Non-palatalizing form of "е".

Open "e" is absent in the modern Komi language.

𐍳 Ю ю - Ju ju

U u

[ju]
/u/ after /c, ɟ, ɕ, ʑ, ɲ, ʎ/
ю
𐍴, 𐍵 Я я - Ja ja

A a

[ja]
/a/ after /c, ɟ, ɕ, ʑ, ɲ, ʎ/
я

Letters particular to the Molodtsov alphabet include ԁ, ԃ, ԅ, ԇ, ԉ, ԋ, ԍ, ԏ, most of which represent palatalized consonants.

The Molodtsov alphabet
А а Б б В в Г г Ԁ ԁ Ԃ ԃ Е е Ж ж Җ җ З з Ԅ ԅ Ԇ ԇ
І і Ј ј К к Л л Ԉ ԉ М м Н н Ԋ ԋ О о Ӧ ӧ П п Р р
С с Ԍ ԍ Т т Ԏ ԏ У у Ф ф Х х Ц ц Ч ч Ш ш Щ щ Ы ы

Phonology edit

Consonants edit

Vowels edit

There are no diphthongs, although vowel sequences can occur at morpheme boundaries.

The phoneme /ɨ/ is phonetically [ɯ̈], and /a/ is phonetically [ä]. There is noticeable positional allophony, depending on the surrounding consonants, however no allophone overlaps with another vowel phoneme.[6]

Grammar edit

Komi has 17 cases, with a rich inventory of locative cases. Like other Uralic languages, Komi has no gender. Verbs agree with subjects in person and number (sg/pl). Negation is expressed with an auxiliary verb, which is inflected for person, number and tense.

Komi is an agglutinative language and adheres to a subject–object–verb order.[7] Most modern texts, however, possess a subject-verb-object word order, due to heavy Russian language influence and the resulting calques.

Sample text edit

The following sample text displays the Anbur, Cyrillic (modern) and Latin lyrical text from the Komi-Zyryan folk song "Kačaśinjas" (Daisies).

The first verse of the song and the refrain, as written in the Anbur Script:

𐍚𐍩𐍠𐍚𐍩 𐍣𐍗𐍛𐍐𐍝𐍝𐍯𐍓 𐍩𐍝, 𐍚𐍐𐍤𐍐𐍥𐍙𐍝𐍙𐍐𐍡, 𐍜𐍯𐍙𐍛𐍐 𐍮𐍩𐍥𐍡𐍐𐍩𐍥 𐍟𐍯𐍠 𐍢𐍙𐍙𐍐𐍝 𐍥𐍙𐍝𐍙𐍐𐍡; 𐍜𐍔𐍝𐍩 𐍟𐍯𐍠 𐍡𐍩𐍜𐍯𐍝 𐍢𐍙 𐍓𐍙𐍝𐍩 𐍝𐍣𐍩 𐍛𐍯𐍓𐍢𐍩𐍜 𐍘𐍩𐍠𐍙𐍘𐍩𐍝 𐍢𐍯𐍠 𐍚𐍩𐍜𐍙 𐍜𐍣𐍩 𐍚𐍐𐍤𐍐𐍥𐍙𐍝𐍙𐍐𐍡, 𐍚𐍐𐍤𐍐𐍥𐍙𐍝𐍙𐍐𐍡, 𐍜𐍯𐍙𐍛𐍐 𐍮𐍩𐍥𐍡𐍐𐍩𐍥 𐍟𐍯𐍠 𐍢𐍙𐍙𐍐𐍝 𐍥𐍙𐍝𐍙𐍐𐍡;

The second verse and refrain, as written in the Zyryan Cyrillic Alphabet:

Эмöсь лунвылын мичаджык муяс, Сэнi кывтöны визувджык юяс. Сöмын мыйлакö пыр медся матыс Эзысь лысваöн дзирдалысь асыв. Катшасинъяс, Катшасинъяс, Мыйла восьсаöсь пыр тiян синъяс?

The third and final verse and refrain, as written in the modern Latin Alphabet:[citation needed]

Una śylankyv tatyś mi kyvlim, Kodös śiöny raďejtan nyvly. Lovja dźoridźyś myj burys śurö Syly puktyny kudria jurö. Kačaśinjas, Kačaśinjas, Myjla vośsaöś pyr tijan śinjas?

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Росстат — Всероссийская перепись населения 2020". rosstat.gov.ru. Retrieved 2023-01-03.
  2. ^ Komi language Britannica.
  3. ^ a b Bartens 2000, p. 47-49
  4. ^ Everson, Michael (2012-04-26). "Revised proposal for encoding the Old Permic script in the SMP of the UCS" (PDF).
  5. ^ Everson, Michael (2012-04-26). "Revised proposal for encoding the Old Permic script in the SMP of the UCS" (PDF). unicode.org. Retrieved 2022-07-10.
  6. ^ "Лыткин В.И. (ред.) Современный коми язык. Часть первая. Фонетика. Лексика. Морфология". www.studmed.ru. Retrieved 2023-09-02.
  7. ^ Grenoble, L. A. (31 July 2003). Language Policy in the Soviet Union. Springer. ISBN 9781402012983.

Bibliography edit

  • Bartens, Raija (2000). Permiläisten kielten rakenne ja kehitys (in Finnish). Helsinki: Suomalais-Ugrilainen Seura. ISBN 952-5150-55-0.
  • Abondolo, Daniel (2015). The Uralic Languages. Routledge
  • R. M. Batalova. 1993. Komi(-Zyryanskij) Jazyk. In V. N. Jartseva (ed.), Jazyki Mira: Ural'skie Jazyki, 214–229. Moskva: Nauka.
  • Feďuňova, G.V. Önija komi kyv ('The Modern Komi Language'). Morfologija/Daśtöma filologijasa kandidat G.V.Feďuňova kipod ulyn. Syktyvkar: Komi ňebög ledźanin, 2000. 544 pp. ISBN 5-7555-0689-2.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Komi language at Wikimedia Commons
  • (by the Finno-Ugric Information Center in Syktyvkar, Komi Republic (interface in Russian and English, texts in Mari, Komi, Udmurt, Erzya and Moksha languages))
  • Komi–Russian & Russian–Komi Online Dictionaries
  • Tarabukin I.I. Komi–Russian Phraseological Dictionary.
  • Komi-language courses
  • Books in Komi-Zyrian language (by the Finno-Ugric Information Center in Syktyvkar, Komi Republic (interface in Komi-Zyrian))
  • Books in Komi-Permyak language (by the Finno-Ugric Information Center in Syktyvkar, Komi Republic (interface in Komi-Permyak))
  • Komi media collection (by the Finno-Ugric Information Center in Syktyvkar, Komi Republic (interface in English))

komi, language, komi, коми, кыв, komi, also, known, zyran, zyrian, komi, zyryan, komi, зыран, коми, кыв, zyran, komi, regional, varieties, pluricentric, other, regional, variety, being, permyak, коми, кывkomi, kyvnative, torussiaregionkomi, republic, nenetsia,. The Komi language Komi komi kyv komi kyv also known as Zyran Zyrian or Komi Zyryan Komi zyran komi kyv zyran komi kyv 2 is one of the two regional varieties of the pluricentric Komi language the other regional variety being Permyak Komi languagekomi kyvkomi kyvNative toRussiaRegionKomi Republic Nenetsia Permyakia Yamalia Yugra elsewhere in RussiaNative speakers99 609 2020 census 1 Language familyUralic Finno UgricPermicKomi languageWriting systemCyrillic Old Permic formerly Official statusOfficial language in Russia Komi RepublicLanguage codesISO 639 1 span class plainlinks kv span ISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code kpv class extiw title iso639 3 kpv kpv a Glottologkomi1268Komi is classified as Definitely Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World s Languages in Danger 2010 This article contains IPA phonetic symbols Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Unicode characters For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA You may need rendering support to display the uncommon Unicode characters in this article correctly Komi is natively spoken by the Komi peoples native to the Komi Republic and other parts of Russia such as Nenetsia and Yamalia There were 285 000 speakers in 1994 which decreased to 160 000 in 2010 Komi has a standardized form It was written in the Old Permic alphabet Komi 𐍐𐍝𐍑𐍣𐍠 Anbur Anbur for liturgical purposes in the 14th century though very few texts exist in this script The Cyrillic script was introduced by Russian missionaries in the 17th century replacing it A tradition of secular works of literature in the modern form of the language dates back to the 19th century Contents 1 Dialects 2 Writing system 3 Phonology 3 1 Consonants 3 2 Vowels 4 Grammar 5 Sample text 6 Notes 7 Bibliography 8 External linksDialects editKomi has ten dialects Syktyvkardin Sysola Lower Ezva Vychegda Central Ezva Vychegda Upper Ezva Vychegda Luz let Upper Sysola Pecora Izva Vym and Udora dialects Syktyvkardin is spoken in the region of Syktyvkar and forms the model for the generic standard dialect of the language Dialects are divided based primarily on their use of v and l 3 Older l remains unchanged in Upper Ezva and Pecora dialects also in most dialects of Komi Permyak In Central dialects l changed to v syllable finally for instance in literary Komi kɯl kɯv tongue In Northern dialects changes of l continued with complete vocalization of syllable final l resulting in long vowels The start of the change date to the 17th century It is not seen in the oldest Komi texts from the 14th century nor in loanwords from Komi to Khanty dated to the 16th though it fully occurred before Russian loanwords that entered the language in the 18th century as l remains unchanged in these Some dialects are further distinguished based on the palatalized alveolars dʲ tʲ which have unpacked in syllable final position as clusters jd jt 3 nbsp Komi languageWriting system editMain article Komi alphabets nbsp A sample of the Komi language words Upper Ulica Kommunisticheskaya is in Russian lower Kommunisticheskӧj ulicha is in Komi Both mean Communist street This picture was taken in Syktyvkar the capital of Komi Republic nbsp Trilingual Russian Komi and English sign in a hotel in Ukhta Komi RepublicThe Old Permic script is the first writing system for Komi It was invented in the 14th century by the missionary Stepan Khrap The alphabet resembled medieval Greek and Cyrillic The script was also known as Anbur Komi 𐍐𐍝𐍑𐍣𐍠 Anbur named for the first 2 letters of the script an amp bur 𐍐 amp 𐍑 respectively It is no longer in use today though it has received Unicode Support as Old Permic in recent times 4 The script saw use in Komi inhabited areas primarily the Principality of Great Perm and parts of Bjarmaland In the 16th century this alphabet was replaced by the Russian alphabet with certain modifications for affricates In the 1920s the language was written in the Molodtsov alphabet which also derived from Cyrillic In the 1930s during the Latinisation in the Soviet Union Komi was briefly written with a version of the Latin script Since the 1940s it uses the Russian based Cyrillic alphabet with the additional letters I i and Ӧ ӧ Komi alphabet Komi anbur 5 Anbur Cyrillic Cyrillic Molodtsov Latin IPA Letter name Notes𐍐 A a A a a a𐍑 B b B b b be𐍮 V v V v v ve𐍒 G g G g g ge𐍓 D d Ԁ ԁ Ԃ ԃ D dD d d ɟ before e yo i yu ya de𐍖 Dzh dzh Җ җ Dz dz dʒ dzhe𐍘 Dz dz Ԇ ԇ Dz dz dʑ dze E e Je jeE e e je word initially and after vowels e after c ɟ ɕ ʑ ɲ ʎ e Yo yo Jo jo O o jo word initially and after vowels o after c ɟ ɕ ʑ ɲ ʎ yo𐍕 Zh zh Z z ʒ zhe𐍗 Z z Z z Ԅ ԅ Z zZ z z ʑ before e yo i yu ya ze𐍙 I i I i i i after c ɟ ɕ ʑ ɲ ʎ nebyd i soft i 𐍙 I i I i i after t d s z n l choryd i hard i Non palatalizing form of i 𐍙 J j Ј ј J j j dzhenyd i𐍚 K k K k k ka𐍛 L l L l Ԉ ԉ L lĽ ľ ɫ ʎ before e yo i yu ya el𐍜 M m M m m em𐍝 N n N n Ԋ ԋ N nN n n ɲ before e yo i yu ya en𐍞 𐍩 O o O o o ɔ o open o Open o is absent in the literary Komi language Ӧ ӧ O o ɘ ӧ𐍟 P p P p p pe𐍠 R r R r r er𐍡 S s S s Ԍ ԍ S sS s s ɕ before e yo i yu ya es𐍢 T t T t Ԏ ԏ T tT t t c before e yo i yu ya te𐍤 Tsh tsh Sh sh C c tʃ tshe𐍣 U u U u u u𐍫 F f F f f ef In loanwords 𐍬 H h H h x ha In loanwords 𐍭 C c C c ts ce In loanwords Ch ch C c tɕ che𐍥 Sh sh S s ʃ sha𐍦 Sh sh Sc sc ʃtʃ ʃː sha In loanwords 𐍯 choryd pas hard sign Same usage as Russian 𐍨 Y y Y y ɨ y𐍰 ʲ nebyd pas soft sign Same usage as Russian 𐍔 E e Ee E e e ɛ e open e Non palatalizing form of e Open e is absent in the modern Komi language 𐍳 Yu yu Ju ju U u ju u after c ɟ ɕ ʑ ɲ ʎ yu𐍴 𐍵 Ya ya Ja ja A a ja a after c ɟ ɕ ʑ ɲ ʎ yaLetters particular to the Molodtsov alphabet include ԁ ԃ ԅ ԇ ԉ ԋ ԍ ԏ most of which represent palatalized consonants The Molodtsov alphabet A a B b V v G g Ԁ ԁ Ԃ ԃ E e Zh zh Җ җ Z z Ԅ ԅ Ԇ ԇI i Ј ј K k L l Ԉ ԉ M m N n Ԋ ԋ O o Ӧ ӧ P p R rS s Ԍ ԍ T t Ԏ ԏ U u F f H h C c Ch ch Sh sh Sh sh Y yPhonology editConsonants edit Consonant phonemes of Zyrian Labial Dental Post alveolar Palatal VelarNasal m n ɲPlosive voiceless p t c kvoiced b d ɟ ɡAffricate voiceless t ʃ t ɕvoiced d ʒ d ʑFricative voiceless s ʃ ɕvoiced v z ʒ ʑTrill rApproximant lateral l ʎcentral jVowels edit Vowels Front Central BackClose i ɨ uMid e e oOpen aThere are no diphthongs although vowel sequences can occur at morpheme boundaries The phoneme ɨ is phonetically ɯ and a is phonetically a There is noticeable positional allophony depending on the surrounding consonants however no allophone overlaps with another vowel phoneme 6 Grammar editFurther information Komi grammar Komi has 17 cases with a rich inventory of locative cases Like other Uralic languages Komi has no gender Verbs agree with subjects in person and number sg pl Negation is expressed with an auxiliary verb which is inflected for person number and tense Komi is an agglutinative language and adheres to a subject object verb order 7 Most modern texts however possess a subject verb object word order due to heavy Russian language influence and the resulting calques Sample text editThe following sample text displays the Anbur Cyrillic modern and Latin lyrical text from the Komi Zyryan folk song Kacasinjas Daisies The first verse of the song and the refrain as written in the Anbur Script 𐍚𐍩𐍠𐍚𐍩 𐍣𐍗𐍛𐍐𐍝𐍝𐍯𐍓 𐍩𐍝 𐍚𐍐𐍤𐍐𐍥𐍙𐍝𐍙𐍐𐍡 𐍜𐍯𐍙𐍛𐍐 𐍮𐍩𐍥𐍡𐍐𐍩𐍥 𐍟𐍯𐍠 𐍢𐍙𐍙𐍐𐍝 𐍥𐍙𐍝𐍙𐍐𐍡 𐍜𐍔𐍝𐍩 𐍟𐍯𐍠 𐍡𐍩𐍜𐍯𐍝 𐍢𐍙 𐍓𐍙𐍝𐍩 𐍝𐍣𐍩 𐍛𐍯𐍓𐍢𐍩𐍜 𐍘𐍩𐍠𐍙𐍘𐍩𐍝 𐍢𐍯𐍠 𐍚𐍩𐍜𐍙 𐍜𐍣𐍩 𐍚𐍐𐍤𐍐𐍥𐍙𐍝𐍙𐍐𐍡 𐍚𐍐𐍤𐍐𐍥𐍙𐍝𐍙𐍐𐍡 𐍜𐍯𐍙𐍛𐍐 𐍮𐍩𐍥𐍡𐍐𐍩𐍥 𐍟𐍯𐍠 𐍢𐍙𐍙𐍐𐍝 𐍥𐍙𐍝𐍙𐍐𐍡 The second verse and refrain as written in the Zyryan Cyrillic Alphabet Emos lunvylyn michadzhyk muyas Seni kyvtony vizuvdzhyk yuyas Somyn myjlako pyr medsya matys Ezys lysvaon dzirdalys asyv Katshasinyas Katshasinyas Myjla vossaos pyr tiyan sinyas The third and final verse and refrain as written in the modern Latin Alphabet citation needed Una sylankyv tatys mi kyvlim Kodos siony radejtan nyvly Lovja dzoridzys myj burys suro Syly puktyny kudria juro Kacasinjas Kacasinjas Myjla vossaos pyr tijan sinjas Notes edit Rosstat Vserossijskaya perepis naseleniya 2020 rosstat gov ru Retrieved 2023 01 03 Komi language Britannica a b Bartens 2000 p 47 49 Everson Michael 2012 04 26 Revised proposal for encoding the Old Permic script in the SMP of the UCS PDF Everson Michael 2012 04 26 Revised proposal for encoding the Old Permic script in the SMP of the UCS PDF unicode org Retrieved 2022 07 10 Lytkin V I red Sovremennyj komi yazyk Chast pervaya Fonetika Leksika Morfologiya www studmed ru Retrieved 2023 09 02 Grenoble L A 31 July 2003 Language Policy in the Soviet Union Springer ISBN 9781402012983 Bibliography editBartens Raija 2000 Permilaisten kielten rakenne ja kehitys in Finnish Helsinki Suomalais Ugrilainen Seura ISBN 952 5150 55 0 Abondolo Daniel 2015 The Uralic Languages Routledge R M Batalova 1993 Komi Zyryanskij Jazyk In V N Jartseva ed Jazyki Mira Ural skie Jazyki 214 229 Moskva Nauka Fedunova G V Onija komi kyv The Modern Komi Language Morfologija Dastoma filologijasa kandidat G V Fedunova kipod ulyn Syktyvkar Komi nebog ledzanin 2000 544 pp ISBN 5 7555 0689 2 External links edit nbsp Media related to Komi language at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Komi edition of Wikipedia the free encyclopedia Books in Komi Zyrian from Finno Ugric Electronic Library by the Finno Ugric Information Center in Syktyvkar Komi Republic interface in Russian and English texts in Mari Komi Udmurt Erzya and Moksha languages Komi Russian amp Russian Komi Online Dictionaries Tarabukin I I Komi Russian Phraseological Dictionary Komi Grammar in Russian Komi language courses Books in Komi Zyrian language by the Finno Ugric Information Center in Syktyvkar Komi Republic interface in Komi Zyrian Books in Komi Permyak language by the Finno Ugric Information Center in Syktyvkar Komi Republic interface in Komi Permyak Komi media collection by the Finno Ugric Information Center in Syktyvkar Komi Republic interface in English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Komi language amp oldid 1195439719, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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