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Languages of Russia

Of all the languages of Russia, Russian, the most widely spoken language, is the only official language at the national level. There are 35 languages which are considered official languages in various regions of Russia, along with Russian. There are over 100 minority languages spoken in Russia today.[5] From 2020, amendments to the Russian Constitution stipulate that Russian is the language of the "state forming people". With president Vladimir Putin’s signing of an executive order on 3 July 2020 to insert the amendments into the constitution, they took effect on 4 July 2020.[6]

Languages of Russia
Memorial in Vyborg in Russian, German, Swedish and Finnish.
OfficialRussian[1]
Semi-officialThirty-five languages
MinorityDozens of languages of the Indo-European, Northeast Caucasian, Northwest Caucasian, Uralic, Turkic, Mongolic, Tungusic and Paleosiberian language families
Foreign13–15% have foreign language knowledge[2][3]
  1. English (80% out of all foreign language speakers or 11% of the population; 30% to some degree.[4]
  2. German (16%)
  3. French (4%)
  4. Turkic (2%)
SignedRussian Sign Language
Keyboard layout

History

Russian lost its status in many of the new republics that arose following the 1991 dissolution of the Soviet Union. In Russia, however, the dominating status of the Russian language continued. Today, 97% of the public school students of Russia receive their education only or mostly in Russian, even though Russia is made up of approximately 80% ethnic Russians.[citation needed]

Russification

On 19 June 2018, the Russian State Duma adopted a bill that made education in all languages but Russian optional, overruling previous laws by ethnic autonomies, and reducing instruction in minority languages to only two hours a week.[7][8][9] This bill has been likened by some commentators, such as in Foreign Affairs, to a policy of Russification.[7]

When the bill was still being considered, advocates for the minorities warned that the bill could endanger their languages and traditional cultures.[9][10] The law came after a lawsuit in the summer of 2017, where a Russian mother claimed that her son had been "materially harmed" by learning the Tatar language, while in a speech Vladimir Putin argued that it was wrong to force someone to learn a language that is not their own.[9] The later "language crackdown" in which autonomous units were forced to stop mandatory hours of native languages was also seen as a move by Putin to "build identity in Russian society".[9]

Protests and petitions against the bill by either civic society, groups of public intellectuals or regional governments came from Tatarstan (with attempts for demonstrations suppressed),[11] Chuvashia,[9] Mari El,[9] North Ossetia,[11][12] Kabardino-Balkaria,[11][13] the Karachays,[11] the Kumyks,[11][14] the Avars,[11][15] Chechnya,[7][16] and Ingushetia.[17][7] Although the "hand-picked" Duma representatives from the Caucasus did not oppose the bill,[7] it prompted a large outcry in the North Caucasus[11] with representatives from the region being accused of cowardice.[7] The law was also seen as possibly destabilizing, threatening ethnic relations and revitalizing the various North Caucasian nationalist movements.[7][9][11] The International Circassian Organization called for the law to be rescinded before it came into effect.[18] Twelve of Russia's ethnic autonomies, including five in the Caucasus called for the legislation to be blocked.[7][19]

On 10 September 2019, Udmurt activist Albert Razin self-immolated in front of the regional government building in Izhevsk as it was considering passing the controversial bill to reduce the status of the Udmurt language.[20] Between 2002 and 2010 the number of Udmurt speakers dwindled from 463,000 to 324,000.[21] Other languages in the Volga region recorded similar declines in the number of speakers; between the 2002 and 2010 censuses the number of Mari speakers declined from 254,000 to 204,000[10] while Chuvash recorded only 1,042,989 speakers in 2010, a 21.6% drop from 2002.[22] This is attributed to a gradual phasing out of indigenous language teaching both in the cities and rural areas while regional media and governments shift exclusively to Russian.

In the North Caucasus, the law came after a decade in which educational opportunities in the indigenous languages was reduced by more than 50%, due to budget reductions and federal efforts to decrease the role of languages other than Russian.[7][11] During this period, numerous indigenous languages in the North Caucasus showed significant decreases in their numbers of speakers even though the numbers of the corresponding nationalities increased, leading to fears of language replacement.[11][23] The numbers of Ossetian, Kumyk and Avar speakers dropped by 43,000, 63,000 and 80,000 respectively.[11] As of 2018, it has been reported that the North Caucasus is nearly devoid of schools that teach in mainly their native languages, with the exception of one school in North Ossetia, and a few in rural regions of Dagestan; this is true even in largely monoethnic Chechnya and Ingushetia.[11] Chechen and Ingush are still used as languages of everyday communication to a greater degree than their North Caucasian neighbours, but sociolinguistics argue that the current situation will lead to their degradation relative to Russian as well.[11]

In 2020, a set of amendments to the Russian constitution was approved by the State Duma[24] and later the Federation Council.[25] One of the amendments is to enshrine Russian as the “language of the state-forming nationality” and the Russian people as the ethnic group that created the nation.[26] The amendment has been met with criticism from Russia's minorities[27][28] who argue that it goes against the principle that Russia is a multinational state and will only marginalize them further.[29]

Official languages

Although Russian is the only federally official language of Russia, there are several other officially recognized languages within Russia's various constituencies – article 68 of the Constitution of Russia only allows the various republics of Russia to establish official (state) languages other than Russian. This is a list of the languages that are recognized as official (state) in constitutions of the republics of Russia, as well as the number of native speakers according mostly to the 2010 Census or more recent ones:[30]

Language Language family Federal subject(s) Speakers in Russia[30] Source
Abaza Northwest Caucasian   Karachay-Cherkessia 37,831 (2010 Census-2014)[31][32] [33]
Adyghe Northwest Caucasian   Adygea 128,000 (2015)[34] [35]
Avar Northeast Caucasian   Dagestan 800,000 (2010 Census)[36] [37]
Altai Turkic   Altai Republic 55,720 (2010 Census) [38][39]
Bashkir Turkic   Bashkortostan 1,152,404 (2010 Census)[40] [41] see also regional law
Buryat Mongolic   Buryatia 265,000 (2010 Census)[42] [43]
Chechen Northeast Caucasian   Chechnya
  Dagestan
1,354,705 (2010 Census) [44]
Chuvash Turkic   Chuvashia 1,042,989 (2010 Census) [45]
Crimean Tatar Turkic   Republic of Crimea[a] 308 (2010 Census)

228,000 (2019)[a][46]

[47]
Erzya Uralic   Mordovia 36,726 (2010 Census) [48]
Ingush Northeast Caucasian   Ingushetia 305,868 (2010 Census) [49]
Kabardian Northwest Caucasian   Kabardino-Balkaria
  Karachay-Cherkessia
590,000 (2010 Census) [33][50]
Kalmyk Mongolic   Kalmykia 80,546 (2010 Census) [51]
Karachay-Balkar Turkic   Kabardino-Balkaria
  Karachay-Cherkessia
305,364 (2010 Census) [33][50]
Khakas Turkic   Khakassia 43,000 (2010 Census) [52]
Komi-Zyrian Uralic   Komi Republic 160,000 (2010 Census) [53]
Hill Mari, Meadow Mari Uralic   Mari El 470,000 (2012)[54] [55]
Moksha Uralic   Mordovia 130,000 (2010 Census) [48]
Nogai Turkic   Karachay-Cherkessia
  Dagestan
87,119 (2010 Census) [33]
Ossetian Indo-European (Iranian)   North Ossetia–Alania 451,431 (2010 Census) [56]
Tatar Turkic   Tatarstan 4,280,718 (2010 Census) [57]
Tuvan Turkic   Tuva 280,000 (2010) [58]
Udmurt Uralic   Udmurtia 324,338 (2010 Census) [59]
Ukrainian Indo-European (Slavic)   Republic of Crimea[a] 1,129,838 (2010 Census) [47]
Yakut Turkic   Sakha Republic 450,140 (2010 Census) [60]
  1. ^ a b c Annexed by Russia in 2014; recognized as a part of Ukraine by most of the UN Member States.

The Constitution of Dagestan defines "Russian and the languages of the peoples of Dagestan" as the state languages,[61] though no comprehensive list of the languages was given.[citation needed][dubious ] 14 of these languages (including Russian) are literary written languages; therefore they are commonly considered to be the official languages of Dagestan. These are, besides Russian, the following: Aghul, Avar, Azerbaijani, Chechen, Dargwa, Kumyk, Lak, Lezgian, Nogai, Rutul, Tabasaran, Tat and Tsakhur. All of these, except Russian, Chechen and Nogai, are official only in Dagestan and in no other Russian republic. In the project of the "Law on the languages of the Republic of Dagestan" 32 languages are listed; however, this law project never came to life.[62]

Karelia is the only republic of Russia with Russian as the only official language.[63] However, there exists the special law about state support and protection of the Karelian, Vepsian and Finnish languages in the republic, see next section.[64]

Other recognized languages

The Government of the Republic of Bashkortostan adopted the Law on the Languages of Nations, which is one of the regional laws aimed at protecting and preserving minority languages.[65][66][67] The main provisions of the law include General Provisions, Language names of geographic regions. objects and inscriptions, road and other signs, liability for violations of Bashkortostan in the languages of Bashkortostan. In the Republic of Bashkortostan, equality of languages is recognized. Equality of languages is a combination of the rights of peoples and people to preserve and fully develop their native language, freedom of choice and use of the language of communication. The writing of names of geographical objects and the inscription, road and other signs along with the state language of the Republic of Bashkortostan can be done in the languages of Bashkortostan in the territories where they are concentrated. Similar laws were adopted in Mari El, Tatarstan, Udmurtia, Khakassia and the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug.

The federal law "On the languages of the peoples of the Russian Federation"[68] allows the federal subjects to establish additionally official languages in the areas where minority groups live. The following 15 languages benefit from various degrees of recognition in various regions under this law:

Migrant languages

As a result of mass migration to Russia from the former USSR republics (especially from the Caucasus and Central Asia) many non-indigenous languages are spoken by migrant workers. For example, in 2014 2.4 million Uzbek citizens and 1.2 million Tajik citizens entered Russia.[69]

For comparison, Russian citizens with ethnicities matching these of home countries of migrant workers of are much lower (from 2010 Russian Census, in thousands):

Armenian 830
Azerbaijani 515
Kazakh 472
Uzbek 245
Kyrgyz 247
Tajik 177
Georgian 102
Romanian 90

Endangered languages in Russia

There are many endangered languages in Russia. Some are considered to be near extinction and put on the list of endangered languages in Russia, and some may have gone extinct since data was last reported. On the other hand, some languages may survive even with few speakers.

Some languages have doubtful data, like Serbian whose information in the Ethnologue is based on the 1959 census.

Languages near extinction

Most numbers are according to Michael Krauss, 1995. Given the time that has passed, languages with extremely few speakers might be extinct today. Since 1994, Kerek, Aleut, Medny Aleut, Akkala Sami and Yugh languages have become extinct.

Foreign languages

 
Sign at TyumenNIIgiprogas headquarters reflecting the international nature of the oil industry: it is in Russian, Ukrainian, English, German, Polish, French, Hebrew, Georgian, Chinese and Tatar.

According to the various studies made in 2005-2008 by Levada-Center[2] 15% of Russians know a foreign language. From those who claim knowledge of at least one language:

"Can speak freely":
English 80%
German 16%
French 4%
Turkish 2%
Others 9%
From 1775 respondents aged 15-29, November 2006
"Know enough to read newspapers":
English 44%
German 15%
Ukrainian, Belarusian and other Slavic languages 19%
Other European languages 10%
All others 29%
From 2100 respondents of every age, January 2005

Knowledge of at least one foreign language is predominant among younger and middle-aged population. Among aged 18–24 38% can read and "translate with a dictionary", 11% can freely read and speak. Among aged 25–39 these numbers are 26% and 4% respectively.

Knowledge of a foreign language varies among social groups. It is most appreciable (15-18%) in big cities with 100,000 and more inhabitants, while in Moscow it rises up to 35%. People with higher education and high economical and social status are most expected to know a foreign language.

The new study by Levada-Center in April 2014[3] reveals such numbers:

Can speak freely at least one language:
English 11%
German 2%
Spanish 2%
Ukrainian 1%
French <1%
Chinese <1%
Others 2%
Can speak a foreign language but with difficulty 13%
Do not speak a foreign Language at all 70%
From 1602 respondents from 16 and older, April 2014

The age and social profiling are the same: knowledge of a foreign language is predominant among the young or middle-aged population with higher education and high social status and who live in big cities.

In the 18th and 19th centuries, French was a common language among upper class Russians. The impetus came from Peter the Great's orientation of Russia towards Europe and accelerated after the French Revolution. After the Russians fought France in the Napoleonic Wars, Russia became less inclined towards French.[70]

In 2015, a survey taken in all federal subjects of Russia showed that 70% of Russians could not speak a foreign language. Almost 30% could speak English, 6% could speak German, 1% could speak French, 1% could speak Spanish, 1% could speak Arabic and 0.5% could speak another language.[71]

Language % of speakers in Russia (2003) % of speakers in Russia (2015) Change (%)
English 16 30  29
German 7 6  1
French 1 1  

English

[71]

Knowledge Percentage
Can speak English to a degree 30%
Can read and translate using a dictionary 20%
Can understand colloquial language 7%
Can speak very fluently 3%

Languages of education

Every year the Russian Ministry of Education and Science publishes statistics on the languages used in schools. In 2014/2015 the absolute majority[72] (13.1 million or 96%) of 13.7 million Russian students used Russian as a medium of education. Around 1.6 million or 12% students studied their (non-Russian) native language as a subject. The most studied languages are Tatar, Chechen and Chuvash with 347,000, 253,000 and 107,000 students respectively.

The most studied foreign languages in 2013/2014 were (students in thousands):

English 11,194.2
German 1,070.5
French 297.8
Spanish 20.1
Chinese 14.9
Arabic 3.4
Italian 2.9
Others 21.7

See also

References

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  66. ^ Gabdrafikov I. The law "On the Languages of the peoples of the Republic of Bashkortostan" is adopted // Бюллетень Сети этнологического мониторинга и раннего предупреждения конфликтов, No. 23, 1999
  67. ^ Десять лет назад принят Закон "О языках народов Республики Башкортостан" ru:Башинформ 2009(in Russian)
  68. ^ "Закон РФ от 25.10.1991 N 1807-I "О языках народов Российской Федерации" (с изменениями и дополнениями) | ГАРАНТ". base.garant.ru. Retrieved 16 March 2023.
  69. ^ [Countries leading by the number of arrivals to the territory of the Russian Federation - Top 50 by entry into the RF for 2014 (total)] (in Russian). RussiaTourism.ru. Archived from the original (XLS) on 25 March 2016. Retrieved 11 May 2015.
  70. ^ Yegorov, Oleg (25 May 2017). "Why was French spoken in Russia?". Russia Beyond the Headlines.
  71. ^ a b Percentage of Russian who speak English double to 30
  72. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 August 2018. Retrieved 23 February 2020.

Further reading

  • Offord, Derek, Lara Ryazanova-Clarke, Vladislav Rjéoutski, and Gesine Argent. French and Russian in Imperial Russia: Language Use among the Russian Elite. Edinburgh University Press, 2015. Available at JSTOR.

External links

  • Languages of European Russia (Ethnologue)
  • Languages of Asian Russia (Ethnologue)
  • Minority languages of Russia on the Net project, which aims at presenting the languages of Russia to the Web and at facilitating their usage on the Web (most information is in Russian; it provides scientific references on each individual language as well as links to online language descriptions, educational and scientific institutions related to the language, resources on computer-processing of the language and some sites written in this language)
  • Population by mother tongue and districts in 50 Governorates of the European Russia in 1897
  • "The History of the French Language in Russia." University of Bristol

languages, russia, languages, russia, russian, most, widely, spoken, language, only, official, language, national, level, there, languages, which, considered, official, languages, various, regions, russia, along, with, russian, there, over, minority, languages. Of all the languages of Russia Russian the most widely spoken language is the only official language at the national level There are 35 languages which are considered official languages in various regions of Russia along with Russian There are over 100 minority languages spoken in Russia today 5 From 2020 amendments to the Russian Constitution stipulate that Russian is the language of the state forming people With president Vladimir Putin s signing of an executive order on 3 July 2020 to insert the amendments into the constitution they took effect on 4 July 2020 6 Languages of RussiaMemorial in Vyborg in Russian German Swedish and Finnish OfficialRussian 1 Semi officialThirty five languagesMinorityDozens of languages of the Indo European Northeast Caucasian Northwest Caucasian Uralic Turkic Mongolic Tungusic and Paleosiberian language familiesForeign13 15 have foreign language knowledge 2 3 English 80 out of all foreign language speakers or 11 of the population 30 to some degree 4 German 16 French 4 Turkic 2 SignedRussian Sign LanguageKeyboard layoutRussian keyboard Contents 1 History 1 1 Russification 2 Official languages 3 Other recognized languages 4 Migrant languages 5 Endangered languages in Russia 5 1 Languages near extinction 6 Foreign languages 6 1 English 7 Languages of education 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory EditRussian lost its status in many of the new republics that arose following the 1991 dissolution of the Soviet Union In Russia however the dominating status of the Russian language continued Today 97 of the public school students of Russia receive their education only or mostly in Russian even though Russia is made up of approximately 80 ethnic Russians citation needed Russification Edit On 19 June 2018 the Russian State Duma adopted a bill that made education in all languages but Russian optional overruling previous laws by ethnic autonomies and reducing instruction in minority languages to only two hours a week 7 8 9 This bill has been likened by some commentators such as in Foreign Affairs to a policy of Russification 7 When the bill was still being considered advocates for the minorities warned that the bill could endanger their languages and traditional cultures 9 10 The law came after a lawsuit in the summer of 2017 where a Russian mother claimed that her son had been materially harmed by learning the Tatar language while in a speech Vladimir Putin argued that it was wrong to force someone to learn a language that is not their own 9 The later language crackdown in which autonomous units were forced to stop mandatory hours of native languages was also seen as a move by Putin to build identity in Russian society 9 Protests and petitions against the bill by either civic society groups of public intellectuals or regional governments came from Tatarstan with attempts for demonstrations suppressed 11 Chuvashia 9 Mari El 9 North Ossetia 11 12 Kabardino Balkaria 11 13 the Karachays 11 the Kumyks 11 14 the Avars 11 15 Chechnya 7 16 and Ingushetia 17 7 Although the hand picked Duma representatives from the Caucasus did not oppose the bill 7 it prompted a large outcry in the North Caucasus 11 with representatives from the region being accused of cowardice 7 The law was also seen as possibly destabilizing threatening ethnic relations and revitalizing the various North Caucasian nationalist movements 7 9 11 The International Circassian Organization called for the law to be rescinded before it came into effect 18 Twelve of Russia s ethnic autonomies including five in the Caucasus called for the legislation to be blocked 7 19 On 10 September 2019 Udmurt activist Albert Razin self immolated in front of the regional government building in Izhevsk as it was considering passing the controversial bill to reduce the status of the Udmurt language 20 Between 2002 and 2010 the number of Udmurt speakers dwindled from 463 000 to 324 000 21 Other languages in the Volga region recorded similar declines in the number of speakers between the 2002 and 2010 censuses the number of Mari speakers declined from 254 000 to 204 000 10 while Chuvash recorded only 1 042 989 speakers in 2010 a 21 6 drop from 2002 22 This is attributed to a gradual phasing out of indigenous language teaching both in the cities and rural areas while regional media and governments shift exclusively to Russian In the North Caucasus the law came after a decade in which educational opportunities in the indigenous languages was reduced by more than 50 due to budget reductions and federal efforts to decrease the role of languages other than Russian 7 11 During this period numerous indigenous languages in the North Caucasus showed significant decreases in their numbers of speakers even though the numbers of the corresponding nationalities increased leading to fears of language replacement 11 23 The numbers of Ossetian Kumyk and Avar speakers dropped by 43 000 63 000 and 80 000 respectively 11 As of 2018 it has been reported that the North Caucasus is nearly devoid of schools that teach in mainly their native languages with the exception of one school in North Ossetia and a few in rural regions of Dagestan this is true even in largely monoethnic Chechnya and Ingushetia 11 Chechen and Ingush are still used as languages of everyday communication to a greater degree than their North Caucasian neighbours but sociolinguistics argue that the current situation will lead to their degradation relative to Russian as well 11 In 2020 a set of amendments to the Russian constitution was approved by the State Duma 24 and later the Federation Council 25 One of the amendments is to enshrine Russian as the language of the state forming nationality and the Russian people as the ethnic group that created the nation 26 The amendment has been met with criticism from Russia s minorities 27 28 who argue that it goes against the principle that Russia is a multinational state and will only marginalize them further 29 Official languages EditAlthough Russian is the only federally official language of Russia there are several other officially recognized languages within Russia s various constituencies article 68 of the Constitution of Russia only allows the various republics of Russia to establish official state languages other than Russian This is a list of the languages that are recognized as official state in constitutions of the republics of Russia as well as the number of native speakers according mostly to the 2010 Census or more recent ones 30 Language Language family Federal subject s Speakers in Russia 30 SourceAbaza Northwest Caucasian Karachay Cherkessia 37 831 2010 Census 2014 31 32 33 Adyghe Northwest Caucasian Adygea 128 000 2015 34 35 Avar Northeast Caucasian Dagestan 800 000 2010 Census 36 37 Altai Turkic Altai Republic 55 720 2010 Census 38 39 Bashkir Turkic Bashkortostan 1 152 404 2010 Census 40 41 see also regional lawBuryat Mongolic Buryatia 265 000 2010 Census 42 43 Chechen Northeast Caucasian Chechnya Dagestan 1 354 705 2010 Census 44 Chuvash Turkic Chuvashia 1 042 989 2010 Census 45 Crimean Tatar Turkic Republic of Crimea a 308 2010 Census 228 000 2019 a 46 47 Erzya Uralic Mordovia 36 726 2010 Census 48 Ingush Northeast Caucasian Ingushetia 305 868 2010 Census 49 Kabardian Northwest Caucasian Kabardino Balkaria Karachay Cherkessia 590 000 2010 Census 33 50 Kalmyk Mongolic Kalmykia 80 546 2010 Census 51 Karachay Balkar Turkic Kabardino Balkaria Karachay Cherkessia 305 364 2010 Census 33 50 Khakas Turkic Khakassia 43 000 2010 Census 52 Komi Zyrian Uralic Komi Republic 160 000 2010 Census 53 Hill Mari Meadow Mari Uralic Mari El 470 000 2012 54 55 Moksha Uralic Mordovia 130 000 2010 Census 48 Nogai Turkic Karachay Cherkessia Dagestan 87 119 2010 Census 33 Ossetian Indo European Iranian North Ossetia Alania 451 431 2010 Census 56 Tatar Turkic Tatarstan 4 280 718 2010 Census 57 Tuvan Turkic Tuva 280 000 2010 58 Udmurt Uralic Udmurtia 324 338 2010 Census 59 Ukrainian Indo European Slavic Republic of Crimea a 1 129 838 2010 Census 47 Yakut Turkic Sakha Republic 450 140 2010 Census 60 a b c Annexed by Russia in 2014 recognized as a part of Ukraine by most of the UN Member States The Constitution of Dagestan defines Russian and the languages of the peoples of Dagestan as the state languages 61 though no comprehensive list of the languages was given citation needed dubious discuss 14 of these languages including Russian are literary written languages therefore they are commonly considered to be the official languages of Dagestan These are besides Russian the following Aghul Avar Azerbaijani Chechen Dargwa Kumyk Lak Lezgian Nogai Rutul Tabasaran Tat and Tsakhur All of these except Russian Chechen and Nogai are official only in Dagestan and in no other Russian republic In the project of the Law on the languages of the Republic of Dagestan 32 languages are listed however this law project never came to life 62 Karelia is the only republic of Russia with Russian as the only official language 63 However there exists the special law about state support and protection of the Karelian Vepsian and Finnish languages in the republic see next section 64 Other recognized languages EditThe Government of the Republic of Bashkortostan adopted the Law on the Languages of Nations which is one of the regional laws aimed at protecting and preserving minority languages 65 66 67 The main provisions of the law include General Provisions Language names of geographic regions objects and inscriptions road and other signs liability for violations of Bashkortostan in the languages of Bashkortostan In the Republic of Bashkortostan equality of languages is recognized Equality of languages is a combination of the rights of peoples and people to preserve and fully develop their native language freedom of choice and use of the language of communication The writing of names of geographical objects and the inscription road and other signs along with the state language of the Republic of Bashkortostan can be done in the languages of Bashkortostan in the territories where they are concentrated Similar laws were adopted in Mari El Tatarstan Udmurtia Khakassia and the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug The federal law On the languages of the peoples of the Russian Federation 68 allows the federal subjects to establish additionally official languages in the areas where minority groups live The following 15 languages benefit from various degrees of recognition in various regions under this law Buryat in the Agin Buryat Okrug Chukchi in Yakutia Dolgan in Yakutia Even in Yakutia Evenki in Yakutia Finnish in Karelia Karelian in Karelia Kazakh in Altai Khanty in the Khanty Mansi Autonomous Okrug and the Yamalo Nenets Autonomous Okrug Komi Permyak in the Komi Permyak Okrug Mansi in the Khanty Mansi Autonomous Okrug Nenets in the Khanty Mansi Autonomous Okrug the Nenets Autonomous Okrug and the Yamalo Nenets Autonomous Okrug Selkup in the Yamalo Nenets Autonomous Okrug Veps in Karelia The Yukaghir languages in YakutiaMigrant languages EditAs a result of mass migration to Russia from the former USSR republics especially from the Caucasus and Central Asia many non indigenous languages are spoken by migrant workers For example in 2014 2 4 million Uzbek citizens and 1 2 million Tajik citizens entered Russia 69 For comparison Russian citizens with ethnicities matching these of home countries of migrant workers of are much lower from 2010 Russian Census in thousands Armenian 830Azerbaijani 515Kazakh 472Uzbek 245Kyrgyz 247Tajik 177Georgian 102Romanian 90Endangered languages in Russia EditThere are many endangered languages in Russia Some are considered to be near extinction and put on the list of endangered languages in Russia and some may have gone extinct since data was last reported On the other hand some languages may survive even with few speakers Some languages have doubtful data like Serbian whose information in the Ethnologue is based on the 1959 census Languages near extinction Edit This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information September 2020 Most numbers are according to Michael Krauss 1995 Given the time that has passed languages with extremely few speakers might be extinct today Since 1994 Kerek Aleut Medny Aleut Akkala Sami and Yugh languages have become extinct Enets 70 Ingrian Negidal Orok 30 82 Sami Ter 2 Tofalar 25 30 Udege 100 Votic 8 60 non native Ket 20 speakers 2019 Yukaghir Northern 30 150 Yukaghir Southern 10 50 YupikForeign languages Edit Sign at TyumenNIIgiprogas headquarters reflecting the international nature of the oil industry it is in Russian Ukrainian English German Polish French Hebrew Georgian Chinese and Tatar According to the various studies made in 2005 2008 by Levada Center 2 15 of Russians know a foreign language From those who claim knowledge of at least one language Can speak freely English 80 German 16 French 4 Turkish 2 Others 9 From 1775 respondents aged 15 29 November 2006 Know enough to read newspapers English 44 German 15 Ukrainian Belarusian and other Slavic languages 19 Other European languages 10 All others 29 From 2100 respondents of every age January 2005Knowledge of at least one foreign language is predominant among younger and middle aged population Among aged 18 24 38 can read and translate with a dictionary 11 can freely read and speak Among aged 25 39 these numbers are 26 and 4 respectively Knowledge of a foreign language varies among social groups It is most appreciable 15 18 in big cities with 100 000 and more inhabitants while in Moscow it rises up to 35 People with higher education and high economical and social status are most expected to know a foreign language The new study by Levada Center in April 2014 3 reveals such numbers Can speak freely at least one language English 11 German 2 Spanish 2 Ukrainian 1 French lt 1 Chinese lt 1 Others 2 Can speak a foreign language but with difficulty 13 Do not speak a foreign Language at all 70 From 1602 respondents from 16 and older April 2014The age and social profiling are the same knowledge of a foreign language is predominant among the young or middle aged population with higher education and high social status and who live in big cities In the 18th and 19th centuries French was a common language among upper class Russians The impetus came from Peter the Great s orientation of Russia towards Europe and accelerated after the French Revolution After the Russians fought France in the Napoleonic Wars Russia became less inclined towards French 70 In 2015 a survey taken in all federal subjects of Russia showed that 70 of Russians could not speak a foreign language Almost 30 could speak English 6 could speak German 1 could speak French 1 could speak Spanish 1 could speak Arabic and 0 5 could speak another language 71 Language of speakers in Russia 2003 of speakers in Russia 2015 Change English 16 30 29German 7 6 1French 1 1 English Edit 71 Knowledge PercentageCan speak English to a degree 30 Can read and translate using a dictionary 20 Can understand colloquial language 7 Can speak very fluently 3 Languages of education EditEvery year the Russian Ministry of Education and Science publishes statistics on the languages used in schools In 2014 2015 the absolute majority 72 13 1 million or 96 of 13 7 million Russian students used Russian as a medium of education Around 1 6 million or 12 students studied their non Russian native language as a subject The most studied languages are Tatar Chechen and Chuvash with 347 000 253 000 and 107 000 students respectively The most studied foreign languages in 2013 2014 were students in thousands English 11 194 2German 1 070 5French 297 8Spanish 20 1Chinese 14 9Arabic 3 4Italian 2 9Others 21 7See also EditDemography of Russia List of languages of Russia Languages of the Caucasus Russian Academy of Sciences the language regulator in RussiaReferences Edit The Constitution of the Russian Federation Chapter 3 The Federal Structure Article 68 constitution ru Retrieved 22 April 2015 a b Znanie inostrannyh yazykov v Rossii Knowledge of foreign languages in Russia in Russian Levada Center 16 September 2008 Retrieved 10 May 2015 a b Vladenie inostrannymi yazykami Command of foreign languages in Russian Levada Center 28 May 2014 Retrieved 10 May 2015 Percentage of Russians who speak English doubles to 30 Russia Beyond Retrieved 26 December 2022 Russia Language Culture Customs and Etiquette Kwintessential co uk Archived from the original on 31 May 2013 Language of state forming people Putin signing amendments into law a b c d e f g h i Putin s Plan to Russify the Caucasus Foreign Affairs 1 August 2018 Gosduma prinyala chtenii zakonoproekt ob izuchen i rodnyix yez ikov RIA Novosti 19 June 2018 a b c d e f g Russian minorities fear for languages amid new restrictions Deutsche Welle 5 December 2017 a b Coalson Robert Lyubimov Dmitry Alpaut Ramazan 20 June 2018 A Common Language Russia s Ethnic Republics See Language Bill As Existential Threat Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Retrieved 9 August 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Kaplan Mikail 31 May 2018 How Russian state pressure on regional languages is sparking civic activism in the North Caucasus Open Democracy Archived from the original on 30 November 2018 Tamerlan Kambolov poprosit Putina zashitit osetinskij yazyk Gradus 3 August 2018 Kabardino Balkariya protiv zakonoproekta o dobrovolnom obuchenii rodnym yazykam 23 April 2018 Kumyki potrebovali snyat s povestki dnya Gosdumy zakonoproekt o dobrovolnom izuchenii yazykov Idel Real 10 May 2018 V Hasavyurte proshyol miting v podderzhku prepodavaniya rodnogo yazyka Idel Real 15 May 2018 Chechenskie pedagogi nazvali fakultativnoe izuchenie rodnogo yazyka nepriemlemym Kavkaz Uzel 30 July 2018 Obshestvenniki Ingushetii zakonoproekt o yazykah cinichnaya diskriminaciya narodov Kavkaz Realii 12 June 2018 Mezhdunarodnaya cherkesskaya associaciya prizvala zablokirovat zakon o rodnyh yazykah Kavkaz Uzel 5 July 2018 Predstaviteli nacrespublik Rossii nazvali zakon o rodnyh yazykah antikonstitucionnym Kavkaz Uzel 1 July 2018 Russian Scholar Dies From Self Immolation While Protesting to Save Native Language The Moscow Times 10 September 2019 Retrieved 11 September 2019 Man Dies After Self Immolation Protest Over Language Policies in Russia s Udmurtia Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 10 September 2019 Retrieved 11 September 2019 Blinov Alexander 10 June 2022 Alexander Blinov In state structures the Chuvash language most often performs a symbolic function Realnoe Vremya in Russian Retrieved 5 July 2022 Zhivoj na bumage RFE RL Retrieved 16 March 2023 Seddon Max Foy Henry 10 March 2020 Kremlin denies Russia constitution rewrite is Putin power grab Financial Times Retrieved 11 March 2020 Russian Lawmakers Adopt Putin s Sweeping Constitutional Amendments The Moscow Times 11 March 2020 Retrieved 11 March 2020 Budryk Zack 3 March 2020 Putin proposes gay marriage constitutional ban in Russia The Hill Retrieved 11 March 2020 Jalilov Rustam 11 March 2020 Amendment to state forming people faces criticism in the North Caucasus Caucasian Knot in Russian Retrieved 11 March 2020 Alpout Ramadan 10 March 2020 We are again foreigners but now officially Amendment to the constituent people Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty in Russian Retrieved 11 March 2020 Rakhmatullin Timur 5 March 2020 Who to benefit from Russian article in the Constitution Realnoe Vremya Retrieved 11 March 2020 a b 2010 All Russian Population Census PDF Federal State Statistics Service 142 143 The Red Book of the Peoples of the Russian Empire www eki ee Retrieved 28 March 2022 Abaza Ethnologue 19 November 2019 Retrieved 28 March 2022 a b c d Konstituciya Karachaevo Cherkesskoj Respubliki ot 5 marta 1996 g Glava 1 Osnovy konstitucionnogo stroya st st 1 13 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Adyghe Ethnologue Retrieved 28 March 2022 Konstituciya Respubliki Adygeya prinyata na XIV sessii Zakonodatelnogo Sobraniya Hase Parlamenta Respubliki Adygeya 10 marta 1995 goda Glava 1 Prava i svobody cheloveka i grazhdanina st st 18 46 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Avar Ethnologue 19 November 2019 Retrieved 28 March 2022 Konstituciya Respubliki Dagestan prinyata Konstitucionnym Sobraniem 10 iyulya 2003 g constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Konstituciya Respubliki Altaj Osnovnoj Zakon prinyata 7 iyunya 1997 g Glava I Obshie polozheniya st st 22 26 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Zakon Respubliki Altaj Glava I Obshie polozheniya Statya 4 Pravovoe polozhenie yazykov Law of the Republic of Altai Chapter I General provisions Article 4 Legal status of languages in Russian Ministry of Justice of the Russian Federation Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Bashkir Ethnologue 19 November 2019 Retrieved 28 March 2022 Konstituciya Respubliki Bashkortostan ot 24 dekabrya 1993 g N VS 22 15 Glava 1 Osnovy konstitucionnogo stroya Respubliki Bashkortostan st st 1 16 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Buryat Ethnologue 19 November 2019 Retrieved 28 March 2022 Konstituciya Respubliki Buryatiya prinyata Verhovnym Sovetom Respubliki Buryatiya 22 fevralya 1994 g Glava 3 Gosudarstvenno pravovoj status Respubliki Buryatiya st st 60 68 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Konstituciya Chechenskoj Respubliki prinyata 23 marta 2003 g Glava 1 Osnovy konstitucionnogo stroya st st 1 13 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Konstituciya Chuvashskoj Respubliki prinyata Gosudarstvennym Sovetom Chuvashskoj Respubliki 30 noyabrya 2000 g Glava 1 Osnovy konstitucionnogo stroya Chuvashskoj Respubliki st st 1 13 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Tyers Francis M Washington Jonathan N Kavitskaya Darya Gokirmak Memduh 2019 A Biscriptual Morphological Transducer for Crimean Tatar Proceedings of the Workshop on Computational Methods for Endangered Languages doi 10 33011 computel v1i 423 S2CID 201624024 a b Constitution of the Republic of Crimea Article 10 in Russian State Council Republic of Crimea 11 April 2014 Retrieved 14 October 2014 a b Konstituciya Respubliki Mordoviya prinyata 21 sentyabrya 1995 g Glava 1 Osnovy konstitucionnogo stroya Respubliki Mordoviya p p 1 13 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Konstituciya Respubliki Ingushetiya prinyata 27 fevralya 1994 g constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 a b Konstituciya Kabardino Balkarskoj Respubliki ot 1 sentyabrya 1997 g N 28 RZ prinyata Parlamentom Kabardino Balkarskoj Respubliki 1 sentyabrya 1997 g v redakcii prinyatoj Konstitucionnym Sobraniem 12 iyulya 2006 g respublikanskih zakonov ot 28 iyulya 2001 g Glava III Gosudarstvennoe ustrojstvo st st 67 77 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Stepnoe Ulozhenie Konstituciya Respubliki Kalmykiya ot 5 aprelya 1994 g constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Konstituciya Respubliki Hakasiya prinyata na XVII sessii Verhovnogo Soveta Respubliki Hakasiya pervogo sozyva 25 maya 1995 goda Glava III Status i administrativno territorialnoe ustrojstvo Respubliki Hakasiya st st 58 71 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Konstituciya Respubliki Komi ot 17 fevralya 1994 g Glava III Gosudarstvennyj status Respubliki Komi i administrativno territorialnoe ustrojstvo st st 61 70 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Mari Ethnologue 19 November 2019 Retrieved 28 March 2022 Konstituciya Respubliki Marij El prinyata Konstitucionnym Sobraniem Respubliki Marij El 24 iyunya 1995 g Glava I Osnovy konstitucionnogo stroya st st 1 16 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Konstituciya Respubliki Severnaya Osetiya Alaniya prinyata Verhovnym Sovetom Respubliki Severnaya Osetiya 12 noyabrya 1994 g Glava 1 Osnovy konstitucionnogo stroya st st 1 17 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Konstituciya Respubliki Tatarstan ot 6 noyabrya 1992 g Glava 1 Gosudarstvennyj Sovet Respubliki Tatarstan st st 67 88 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Konstituciya Respubliki Tyva prinyata Referendumom Respubliki Tyva 6 maya 2001 g Glava I Osnovy konstitucionnogo stroya st st 1 17 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Konstituciya Udmurtskoj Respubliki ot 7 dekabrya 1994 g Glava 1 Osnovy Konstitucionnogo stroya st st 1 15 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Konstituciya Osnovnoj Zakon Respubliki Saha Yakutiya Glava 3 Nacionalno gosudarstvennyj status administrativno territorialnoe ustrojstvo st 36 53 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Konstituciya Respubliki Dagestan prinyata Konstitucionnym Sobraniem 10 iyulya 2003 g Glava 1 Osnovy konstitucionnogo stroya st st 1 17 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 V Dagestane sdelayut gosudarstvennymi 32 yazyka Retrieved 16 March 2023 Konstituciya Respubliki Kareliya Glava 1 Osnovnye polozheniya st st 1 15 constitution garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Zakon Respubliki Kareliya O gosudarstvennoj podderzhke karelskogo vepsskogo i finskogo yazykov v Respublike Kareliya Law of the Republic of Bashkortostan On the languages of the peoples of the Republic of Bashkortostan 216 W on February 15 1999 as amended up until 2010 and amendments of 2014 in Russian Gabdrafikov I The law On the Languages of the peoples of the Republic of Bashkortostan is adopted Byulleten Seti etnologicheskogo monitoringa i rannego preduprezhdeniya konfliktov No 23 1999 Desyat let nazad prinyat Zakon O yazykah narodov Respubliki Bashkortostan ru Bashinform 2009 in Russian Zakon RF ot 25 10 1991 N 1807 I O yazykah narodov Rossijskoj Federacii s izmeneniyami i dopolneniyami GARANT base garant ru Retrieved 16 March 2023 Strany lidiruyushie po kolichestvu pribytij na territoriyu Rossijskoj Federacii Top 50 po vezdu v RF za 2014 god vsego Countries leading by the number of arrivals to the territory of the Russian Federation Top 50 by entry into the RF for 2014 total in Russian RussiaTourism ru Archived from the original XLS on 25 March 2016 Retrieved 11 May 2015 Yegorov Oleg 25 May 2017 Why was French spoken in Russia Russia Beyond the Headlines a b Percentage of Russian who speak English double to 30 Statisticheskaya informaciya 2014 Obshee obrazovanie Archived from the original on 9 August 2018 Retrieved 23 February 2020 Further reading EditOfford Derek Lara Ryazanova Clarke Vladislav Rjeoutski and Gesine Argent French and Russian in Imperial Russia Language Use among the Russian Elite Edinburgh University Press 2015 Available at JSTOR External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Languages of Russia Languages of European Russia Ethnologue Languages of Asian Russia Ethnologue Minority languages of Russia on the Net project which aims at presenting the languages of Russia to the Web and at facilitating their usage on the Web most information is in Russian it provides scientific references on each individual language as well as links to online language descriptions educational and scientific institutions related to the language resources on computer processing of the language and some sites written in this language Population by mother tongue and districts in 50 Governorates of the European Russia in 1897 The History of the French Language in Russia University of Bristol Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Languages of Russia amp oldid 1152968021, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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