fbpx
Wikipedia

Southern Sámi

Southern or South Sámi (Southern Sami: Åarjelsaemien gïele, Norwegian: Sørsamisk, Swedish: Sydsamiska) is the southwesternmost of the Sámi languages, and is spoken in Norway and Sweden. It is an endangered language; the strongholds of this language are the municipalities of Snåsa, Røyrvik, Røros (Trøndelag, Central Norway) and Hattfjelldal (Nordland, Northern Norway) in Norway. Of the approximately 2000 Southern Sami, only about 500 still speak fluent Southern Sami. This language belongs to the Saamic group within the uralic language family and the family comprises nine groups, Saami, Finnic, Mordvin, Mari, Permic, Mansi, Khanty, Samoyed and Hungarian.

Southern Sámi
åarjelsaemien gïele
RegionNorway, Sweden
Native speakers
(600 cited 1992)[1]
Uralic
Latin
Official status
Official language in
Norway[2]
Recognised minority
language in
Language codes
ISO 639-2sma
ISO 639-3sma
Glottologsout2674
ELPSouth Saami
Southern Sami language area (red) within Sápmi (grey)
South Saami is classified as Severely 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.
Åarjel-saemiej skuvle (Southern Sámi school) and maanagierte (kindergarten) in Snåsa.

In Sweden, Saami is one of five recognized minority languages, but the term "Saami" comprises differnt Saami varieties/languages but this different Saamic languages are not individually recognized, and in Norway the South Saami is recognized as a minority language in its own right.

It is possible to study Southern Sámi at Nord University in Levanger, Umeå University in Umeå, and Uppsala University in Uppsala. In 2018, two master's degrees were written in the language at Umeå University.[4] Language courses are also offered in different Sámi language centres throughout the south Sámi area.

Writing system Edit

Southern Sámi is one of the six Sámi languages that has an official written standard, but only a few books have been published for the language, one of which is an adequate-sized Southern Sámi–Norwegian dictionary. This language has had an official written language since 1978. The spelling is closely based on Swedish and Norwegian and uses the following Latin alphabet:

A a B b D d E e F f G g H h I i
Ï ï J j K k L l M m N n O o P p
R r S s T t U u V v Y y Æ æ Ö ö
Å å

The Sámi Language Council recommended in 1976 to use ⟨æ⟩ and ⟨ö⟩, but in practice the latter is replaced by ⟨ø⟩ in Norway and the former by ⟨ä⟩ in Sweden.[5] This is in accordance with the usage in Norwegian and Swedish, based on computer or typewriter availability. The ⟨Ï ï⟩ represents a back version of ⟨I i⟩, however many texts fail to distinguish between the two.

⟨C c⟩, ⟨Q q⟩, ⟨W w⟩, ⟨X x⟩, ⟨Z z⟩ are only used in words of foreign origin.

Long sounds are represented with double letter for both vowels and consonants.

Phonology Edit

Southern Sámi has 15 consonant and 11 vowel phonemes, there are six places of articulation for consonants (bilabial, labio-dental, denti-alveolar, palatal, velar and glottal) and six manners of articulation.

There are also two dialects, the northern and the southern dialect. The phonological differences between the dialects are relatively small; the phonemic system of the northern dialect is explained below.

The typical word in South Saami is dysillabbic with a long stem vowel and ends in a vowel, like in the word /pa:ko/ 'word'. Functional words are monosyllabic as are the copula and the negative auxiliarity. Stress is fixed and always word initial. Words with more than 3 syllables get a secondary stress in the penultimate syllable.

Vowels Edit

The 11 vowel phonemes comprise four phonologically short and long vowels (i-i:, e-e:, a-a:, u-u:) and three vowel phonemes which do not distinguish length (ø, ae, o).

The vowel phonemes of the northern dialect are the following; orthographic counterparts are given in italics:

front central back
unrounded rounded unrounded rounded
close i ⟨i⟩ y ⟨y⟩ ɨ ⟨ï⟩, ⟨i⟩[a] ʉ ⟨u⟩ u ⟨o⟩
mid e ⟨e⟩, ⟨ee⟩ øː ⟨öö⟩ o ⟨å⟩, ⟨åå⟩
near-open æ ⟨æ⟩, ⟨ä⟩,[b] ⟨ee⟩[c]
open ⟨ae⟩ ɑ ⟨a⟩, ɑː ⟨aa⟩
  1. ^ The distinction between the vowels /i/ and /ɨ/ is normally not indicated in spelling: both of these sounds are written with the letter ⟨i⟩. However, dictionaries and other linguistically precise sources use the character ⟨ï⟩ for the latter vowel.
  2. ^ The spelling ⟨æ⟩ is used in Norway, and ⟨ä⟩ in Sweden.
  3. ^ Long /æː/ is written ⟨ee⟩.

The non-high vowels /e/, /æ/, /o/ and /ɑ/ contrast in length: they may occur as both short and long. High vowels only occur as short.

The vowels may combine to form ten different diphthongs:

front front to back central to back central to front back to front back
close to mid /ie/ ⟨ie⟩ /yo/ ⟨yø⟩, ⟨yö⟩ /ʉe/ ⟨ue⟩; /ɨe/ ⟨ïe⟩, ⟨ie⟩ /uo/ ⟨oe⟩
close to open /ʉɑ/ ⟨ua⟩
mid /oe/ ⟨øø⟩, ⟨öö⟩
mid to open /eæ/ ⟨ea⟩ /oæ/ ⟨åe⟩ /oɑ/ ⟨åa⟩

Consonants Edit

In South Sámi, all consonants occur as geminates in word medial position.

Labial Dental Alveolar Postalveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m ⟨m⟩ n ⟨n⟩ ɲ ⟨nj⟩ ŋ ⟨ng⟩
Plosive unaspirated p ⟨b⟩, ⟨p⟩ t ⟨d⟩, ⟨t⟩ ts ⟨ts⟩ ⟨tj⟩ c ⟨gi⟩, ⟨ki⟩ k ⟨g⟩, ⟨k⟩
aspirated ⟨p⟩ ⟨t⟩ ⟨ki⟩ ⟨k⟩
Fricative voiceless f ⟨f⟩ s ⟨s⟩ ʃ ⟨sj⟩ h ⟨h⟩
voiced v ~ ʋ ⟨v⟩
Approximant j ⟨j⟩
Lateral l ⟨l⟩
Trill r ⟨r⟩

Grammar Edit

Sound alternations Edit

In Southern Sámi, the vowel in the second syllable of a word causes changes to the vowel in the first syllable, a feature called umlaut. The vowel in the second syllable can change depending on the inflectional ending being attached, and the vowel in the first vowel will likewise alternate accordingly. Often there are three different vowels that alternate with each other in the paradigm of a single word, for example as follows:

  • ⟨ae⟩ ~ ⟨aa⟩ ~ ⟨ee⟩: vaedtsedh 'to walk' : vaadtsam 'I walk' : veedtsim 'I walked'
  • ⟨ue⟩ ~ ⟨ua⟩ ~ ⟨öö⟩: vuelkedh 'to leave' : vualkam 'I leave' : vöölkim 'I left'

The following table gives a full overview of the alternations:

Proto-Samic
first vowel
Followed by
*ā
Followed by
*ē
Followed by
*ō
Followed by
*ë
Followed by
*i
*ā aa ae aa aa ee
*ea ea ie ea aa ee
*ie ea ie ea ïe ie
*oa åa åe åa oe öö
*uo ua ue åa oe öö
*ë a e æ, å a, ï e
*i æ, ij i æ ïj i
*o å u å, a o, a, ov u
*u å, a u å o, ov u

On the other hand, Southern Sami is the only Sami language that does not have consonant gradation. Hence consonants in the middle of words never alternate in Southern Sami, even though such alternations are frequent in other Sami languages. Compare, for instance, Southern Sami nomme 'name' : nommesne 'in the name' to Northern Sami namma : namas, with the consonant gradation mm : m.

Cases Edit

Southern Sami has eight cases:

Case (kaasuse) Singular (aktentaale) Plural (gellientaale)
Nominative (nominatijve) -h
Accusative (akkusatijve) -m -i·te; -i·die; -j·te
Genitive (genitijve) -n -i; -j
Illative (illatijve) -se; -sse; -n -i·te; -i·die; -j·te
Inessive (inessijve) -sne; -snie -i·ne; -i·nie; -j·ne
Elative (elatijve) -ste; -stie -i·ste; -i·stie; -j·ste
Comitative (komitatijve) -i·ne; -i·nie; -j·ne -i·gujmie; -j·gujmie
Essive (essijve) -i·ne; -i·nie; -j·ne

Morphology: Edit

Nouns Edit

Southern Sami's nouns inflect for singular and plural and has eight cases: nominative, accusative, genitive, illative, locative, elative, comitative and essive, but number is not distinguishesd in the essive. The inflection is essentially agglutinative, but the case endings are not always the same in the plural as in the singular. The plural sign is -h in the nominative case, otherwise -i/j-, to which the case endings are added. There are five different inflection classes but no declension classes. All nouns take the same case markers.

The function of the nominative is to mark the subject and the accusative marks the object. The nominative plural is also used to mark plural objects, also calles differntial object marking and here, the object gets an indefinite reading, while the accusative plural marks definite objects. The genitive is used in adnominal possession and marks the dependet of postpositions. Illative is a spatial case marking the recipient, while locative and elative are also spatial cases, but the locative is also used in existential constructions and the elative in partitive constructions. And comitative expresses participation and instrumental and the essiev marks a stare or a function.

Four stem classes can be distinguished: ie-stems, e-stems, a-stems, and oe-stems.

Overview of the modern inflection of guelie 'fish':

Nominative Genitive Accusative Illative Locative Ablative Comitative Essive
Singular guelie guelien gueliem gualan guelesne gueleste gueline gueline
Plural guelieh gueliej guelide guelide gueline guelijste gueliejgujmie -

Earlier, in the comitative singular and in the plural, besides the nominative i, umlaut of the root vowel to öö took place: Gen. Pl. göölij etc.

Pronouns Edit

The personal pronouns inflect for singular, dual annd plural and seven cases which are all of the above with exception of the essive. A demonstrative pronoun without specific deictic bias is employed as the third person pronoun, treating dual and plural forms as indistinguishable. Additional pronouns encompass pronominal and adnominal demonstratives, along with interrogative and relative pronouns, reflexive, logophoric, reciprocal and a variety of indefinite pronouns. The majority of these pronouns change based on whether they refer to a singular or plural entity, and some also adapt to different cases. Demonstratives make distinctions across three distances relative to the speaker.

South Saami personal pronouns:
Person Singular Dual Plural
1 manne monnah mijjieh
2 datne dotnah dijjieh
3 dihte dah dah

Verbs Edit

The South Sami verbs inflect for person and number, singular, dual and plural, whereby, dual is an optional category. And, there are also two finite inflectional categories, the present and the past tense. The subject suffiexes are the same and there are three different inflectional classes which are based on the thematic vowels and their behaviour in inflecion. Furthermore, there are 4 non-finite forms, the perfect participle, the progressive, the infinitive and the connegative and imperative form. Meanwhile, the verbs express the TMA categories present tense indicative, past tense indicative, perfect, plurperfect, progressive and imperative but additionally, the copula also inflects for the conditional.

In the verbum, a distinction must be made between odd-syllable and even-syllable verbs; in the latter, there are six different stem classes.

Overview of the forms of the ie stems using the example of båetedh 'to come':

Present Past Tense Imperative
1.Sg. båatam böötim
2.Sg. båatah böötih båetieh
3.Sg. båata bööti
1.Du. båetien böötimen
2.Du. båeteden böötiden båeteden
3.Du. båetiejægan böötigan
1.Pl. båetebe böötimh
2.Pl. båetede böötidh båetede
3.Pl båetieh böötin
Participle båetije båateme
Negative Form båetieh Gerund båetieminie
Infinitive båetedh Verbal noun båeteme

Adjectives Edit

The morphollogy of adjectives is restricted to comparative and superlative forms. Some have different forms in attributive and predicative position but the most are invariable.

Person Edit

Southern Sámi verbs conjugate for three grammatical persons:

  • first person
  • second person
  • third person

Mood Edit

Tense Edit

Grammatical number Edit

Southern Sámi verbs conjugate for three grammatical numbers:

Negative verb Edit

Southern Sámi, like Finnish, the other Sámi languages, and Estonian, has a negative verb. In Southern Sámi, the negative verb conjugates according to tense (past and non-past), mood (indicative and imperative), person (1st, 2nd and 3rd) and number (singular, dual and plural). This differs from some other Sámi languages, e.g. from Northern Sámi, which do not conjugate according to tense.

Southern Sámi negative verb, indicative forms
Non-past indicative Past indicative
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1st im ean ibie idtjim idtjimen idtjimh
2nd ih idien idie idtjih idtjiden idtjidh
3rd ij eakan eah idtji idtjigan idtjin
Southern Sámi negative verb, imperative forms
Non-past imperative Past imperative
Singular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural
1st aelliem aellien aellebe ollem ollen ollebe
2nd aellieh aelleden aellede ollh olleden ollede
3rd aellis aellis aellis olles olles olles

Syntax Edit

Like Skolt Sámi and unlike other Sámi languages, Southern Sámi has the basic structure SOV (Subject-Object.-Verb). Only the copula ('to be') and auxiliary verbs appear second. The case allignment system is nominative-accusative. But, plural objects are also marked with the nominative. Objects in the nominative plural get an indefinite reading while objects in the accusative plural are definite. This applies for nouns as well as pronouns. An exaple for plural object in the nominative:

dellie manne naarra-h tjeegk-i-m

then 1.SG.NOM snare-NOM.PL set.up-PST-1SG

"Then I set up snares".

Subject and agent are always marked identically, with the nominative and the marking of the object depends on definiteness.

Different marking strategies
Subject Object Reading of object
NOM ACC.SG definite or indefinite
NOM ACC.PL definite
NOM NOM.PL indefinite

The verb agrees with the subject in person an number. The TAM-categories mentioned above are based on non-finite verb forms and expressed in periphrastic constructions with an auxiliary. Subject agrees with auxiliary but it is not obligatory. Subject is either marked on the pronoun or inferred from context. Imperative second singular uses the same non-finite irrealis form also used in negation constructions.

Verbal Agreement
Verb form Auxiliarity Agreement
PRESENT finite - person/number
PAST finite - person/number
IMPERATIVE non-finite - 2SG
PERFECT non-finite yes-PRS person/number with AUX
PLUPERFECT non-finite yes-PST person/number with AUX
PROGRESSIVE non-finite yes-PRS person/number with AUX
PAST PROGRESSIVE non-finite yes-PST person/number with AUX

South Saami has some features that separate it from it closest relatives, like SOV instead of SVO as basic constituent order, no stem gradation and a genitive possessive. Nevertheless, most features in the language are commonly found in other Uralic languages.

References Edit

  1. ^ Southern Sámi at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
  2. ^ "Samelovens språkregler og forvaltningsområdet for samisk språk". Regjeringen.no (in Norwegian). Statsministerens kontor. 2014-08-12. Retrieved 2018-01-30. Forvaltningsområdet for samisk språk omfatter [...] Snåasen tjïelte/Snåsa kommune og Raarvihke Tjielte/Røyrvik kommune i Nord-Trøndelag.
  3. ^ . European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages. Council of Europe. p. 5. Archived from the original on 2013-12-27. Retrieved 2014-04-03.
  4. ^ "Umeå University". Retrieved 2019-07-06.
  5. ^ Magga, Ole Henrik; Magga, Lajla Mattsson (2012). Sørsamisk grammatikk [A Grammar of South Sami] (in Norwegian). Kautokeino: Davvi Girji. p. 12. ISBN 978-82-7374-855-3.
  • Bergsland, Knut. Røroslappisk grammatikk, 1946.
  • Jussi Ylikoski. South Saami, 2022.
  • Knut Bergsland. Sydsamisk grammatikk, 1982.
  • Knut Bergsland and Lajla Mattson Magga. Åarjelsaemien-daaroen baakoegærja, 1993.
  • Hasselbrink, Gustav. Südsamisches Wörterbuch I–III

External links Edit

  • The Children's TV series Binnabánnaš in Southern Sámi
  • Sámi lottit Names of birds found in Sápmi in a number of languages, including Skolt Sámi and English. Search function only works with Finnish input though.
  • Southern Sámi grammatical resources
  • Samien Sijte – Southern Sámi Museum and Cultural Center
  • – Universitetet i Tromsø

southern, sámi, southern, south, sámi, southern, sami, Åarjelsaemien, gïele, norwegian, sørsamisk, swedish, sydsamiska, southwesternmost, sámi, languages, spoken, norway, sweden, endangered, language, strongholds, this, language, municipalities, snåsa, røyrvik. Southern or South Sami Southern Sami Aarjelsaemien giele Norwegian Sorsamisk Swedish Sydsamiska is the southwesternmost of the Sami languages and is spoken in Norway and Sweden It is an endangered language the strongholds of this language are the municipalities of Snasa Royrvik Roros Trondelag Central Norway and Hattfjelldal Nordland Northern Norway in Norway Of the approximately 2000 Southern Sami only about 500 still speak fluent Southern Sami This language belongs to the Saamic group within the uralic language family and the family comprises nine groups Saami Finnic Mordvin Mari Permic Mansi Khanty Samoyed and Hungarian Southern Samiaarjelsaemien gieleRegionNorway SwedenNative speakers 600 cited 1992 1 Language familyUralic SamiWesternSouthern SamiWriting systemLatinOfficial statusOfficial language inNorway 2 Hattfjelldal Roros Snasa RoyrvikRecognised minoritylanguage inSweden 3 Language codesISO 639 2 span class plainlinks sma span ISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code sma class extiw title iso639 3 sma sma a Glottologsout2674ELPSouth SaamiSouthern Sami language area red within Sapmi grey South Saami is classified as Severely 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 Aarjel saemiej skuvle Southern Sami school and maanagierte kindergarten in Snasa In Sweden Saami is one of five recognized minority languages but the term Saami comprises differnt Saami varieties languages but this different Saamic languages are not individually recognized and in Norway the South Saami is recognized as a minority language in its own right It is possible to study Southern Sami at Nord University in Levanger Umea University in Umea and Uppsala University in Uppsala In 2018 two master s degrees were written in the language at Umea University 4 Language courses are also offered in different Sami language centres throughout the south Sami area Contents 1 Writing system 2 Phonology 2 1 Vowels 2 2 Consonants 3 Grammar 3 1 Sound alternations 3 2 Cases 4 Morphology 4 1 Nouns 4 2 Pronouns 4 3 Verbs 4 4 Adjectives 4 4 1 Person 4 4 2 Mood 4 4 3 Tense 4 4 4 Grammatical number 4 4 5 Negative verb 5 Syntax 6 References 7 External linksWriting system EditSouthern Sami is one of the six Sami languages that has an official written standard but only a few books have been published for the language one of which is an adequate sized Southern Sami Norwegian dictionary This language has had an official written language since 1978 The spelling is closely based on Swedish and Norwegian and uses the following Latin alphabet A a B b D d E e F f G g H h I iI i J j K k L l M m N n O o P pR r S s T t U u V v Y y AE ae O oA aThe Sami Language Council recommended in 1976 to use ae and o but in practice the latter is replaced by o in Norway and the former by a in Sweden 5 This is in accordance with the usage in Norwegian and Swedish based on computer or typewriter availability The I i represents a back version of I i however many texts fail to distinguish between the two C c Q q W w X x Z z are only used in words of foreign origin Long sounds are represented with double letter for both vowels and consonants Phonology EditSouthern Sami has 15 consonant and 11 vowel phonemes there are six places of articulation for consonants bilabial labio dental denti alveolar palatal velar and glottal and six manners of articulation There are also two dialects the northern and the southern dialect The phonological differences between the dialects are relatively small the phonemic system of the northern dialect is explained below The typical word in South Saami is dysillabbic with a long stem vowel and ends in a vowel like in the word pa ko word Functional words are monosyllabic as are the copula and the negative auxiliarity Stress is fixed and always word initial Words with more than 3 syllables get a secondary stress in the penultimate syllable Vowels Edit The 11 vowel phonemes comprise four phonologically short and long vowels i i e e a a u u and three vowel phonemes which do not distinguish length o ae o The vowel phonemes of the northern dialect are the following orthographic counterparts are given in italics front central backunrounded rounded unrounded roundedclose i i y y ɨ i i a ʉ u u o mid e e eː ee oː oo o a oː aa near open ae ae a b ee c open aː ae ɑ a ɑː aa The distinction between the vowels i and ɨ is normally not indicated in spelling both of these sounds are written with the letter i However dictionaries and other linguistically precise sources use the character i for the latter vowel The spelling ae is used in Norway and a in Sweden Long aeː is written ee The non high vowels e ae o and ɑ contrast in length they may occur as both short and long High vowels only occur as short The vowels may combine to form ten different diphthongs front front to back central to back central to front back to front backclose to mid ie ie yo yo yo ʉe ue ɨe ie ie uo oe close to open ʉɑ ua mid oe oo oo mid to open eae ea oae ae oɑ aa Consonants Edit In South Sami all consonants occur as geminates in word medial position Labial Dental Alveolar Postalveolar Palatal Velar GlottalNasal m m n n ɲ nj ŋ ng Plosive unaspirated p b p t d t ts ts tʃ tj c gi ki k g k aspirated pʰ p tʰ t cʰ ki kʰ k Fricative voiceless f f s s ʃ sj h h voiced v ʋ v Approximant j j Lateral l l Trill r r Grammar EditSound alternations Edit In Southern Sami the vowel in the second syllable of a word causes changes to the vowel in the first syllable a feature called umlaut The vowel in the second syllable can change depending on the inflectional ending being attached and the vowel in the first vowel will likewise alternate accordingly Often there are three different vowels that alternate with each other in the paradigm of a single word for example as follows ae aa ee vaedtsedh to walk vaadtsam I walk veedtsim I walked ue ua oo vuelkedh to leave vualkam I leave voolkim I left The following table gives a full overview of the alternations Proto Samicfirst vowel Followed by a Followed by e Followed by ō Followed by e Followed by i a aa ae aa aa ee ea ea ie ea aa ee ie ea ie ea ie ie oa aa ae aa oe oo uo ua ue aa oe oo e a e ae a a i e i ae ij i ae ij i o a u a a o a ov u u a a u a o ov uOn the other hand Southern Sami is the only Sami language that does not have consonant gradation Hence consonants in the middle of words never alternate in Southern Sami even though such alternations are frequent in other Sami languages Compare for instance Southern Sami nomme name nommesne in the name to Northern Sami namma namas with the consonant gradation mm m Cases Edit Southern Sami has eight cases Case kaasuse Singular aktentaale Plural gellientaale Nominative nominatijve hAccusative akkusatijve m i te i die j teGenitive genitijve n i jIllative illatijve se sse n i te i die j teInessive inessijve sne snie i ne i nie j neElative elatijve ste stie i ste i stie j steComitative komitatijve i ne i nie j ne i gujmie j gujmieEssive essijve i ne i nie j neMorphology EditNouns Edit Southern Sami s nouns inflect for singular and plural and has eight cases nominative accusative genitive illative locative elative comitative and essive but number is not distinguishesd in the essive The inflection is essentially agglutinative but the case endings are not always the same in the plural as in the singular The plural sign is h in the nominative case otherwise i j to which the case endings are added There are five different inflection classes but no declension classes All nouns take the same case markers The function of the nominative is to mark the subject and the accusative marks the object The nominative plural is also used to mark plural objects also calles differntial object marking and here the object gets an indefinite reading while the accusative plural marks definite objects The genitive is used in adnominal possession and marks the dependet of postpositions Illative is a spatial case marking the recipient while locative and elative are also spatial cases but the locative is also used in existential constructions and the elative in partitive constructions And comitative expresses participation and instrumental and the essiev marks a stare or a function Four stem classes can be distinguished ie stems e stems a stems and oe stems Overview of the modern inflection of guelie fish Nominative Genitive Accusative Illative Locative Ablative Comitative EssiveSingular guelie guelien gueliem gualan guelesne gueleste gueline guelinePlural guelieh gueliej guelide guelide gueline guelijste gueliejgujmie Earlier in the comitative singular and in the plural besides the nominative i umlaut of the root vowel to oo took place Gen Pl goolij etc Pronouns Edit The personal pronouns inflect for singular dual annd plural and seven cases which are all of the above with exception of the essive A demonstrative pronoun without specific deictic bias is employed as the third person pronoun treating dual and plural forms as indistinguishable Additional pronouns encompass pronominal and adnominal demonstratives along with interrogative and relative pronouns reflexive logophoric reciprocal and a variety of indefinite pronouns The majority of these pronouns change based on whether they refer to a singular or plural entity and some also adapt to different cases Demonstratives make distinctions across three distances relative to the speaker South Saami personal pronouns Person Singular Dual Plural1 manne monnah mijjieh2 datne dotnah dijjieh3 dihte dah dahVerbs Edit The South Sami verbs inflect for person and number singular dual and plural whereby dual is an optional category And there are also two finite inflectional categories the present and the past tense The subject suffiexes are the same and there are three different inflectional classes which are based on the thematic vowels and their behaviour in inflecion Furthermore there are 4 non finite forms the perfect participle the progressive the infinitive and the connegative and imperative form Meanwhile the verbs express the TMA categories present tense indicative past tense indicative perfect plurperfect progressive and imperative but additionally the copula also inflects for the conditional In the verbum a distinction must be made between odd syllable and even syllable verbs in the latter there are six different stem classes Overview of the forms of the ie stems using the example of baetedh to come Present Past Tense Imperative1 Sg baatam bootim2 Sg baatah bootih baetieh3 Sg baata booti1 Du baetien bootimen2 Du baeteden bootiden baeteden3 Du baetiejaegan bootigan1 Pl baetebe bootimh2 Pl baetede bootidh baetede3 Pl baetieh bootinParticiple baetije baatemeNegative Form baetieh Gerund baetieminieInfinitive baetedh Verbal noun baetemeAdjectives Edit The morphollogy of adjectives is restricted to comparative and superlative forms Some have different forms in attributive and predicative position but the most are invariable Person Edit Southern Sami verbs conjugate for three grammatical persons first person second person third personMood Edit Tense Edit Grammatical number Edit Southern Sami verbs conjugate for three grammatical numbers singular dual pluralNegative verb Edit Southern Sami like Finnish the other Sami languages and Estonian has a negative verb In Southern Sami the negative verb conjugates according to tense past and non past mood indicative and imperative person 1st 2nd and 3rd and number singular dual and plural This differs from some other Sami languages e g from Northern Sami which do not conjugate according to tense Southern Sami negative verb indicative forms Non past indicative Past indicativeSingular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural1st im ean ibie idtjim idtjimen idtjimh2nd ih idien idie idtjih idtjiden idtjidh3rd ij eakan eah idtji idtjigan idtjinSouthern Sami negative verb imperative forms Non past imperative Past imperativeSingular Dual Plural Singular Dual Plural1st aelliem aellien aellebe ollem ollen ollebe2nd aellieh aelleden aellede ollh olleden ollede3rd aellis aellis aellis olles olles ollesSyntax EditLike Skolt Sami and unlike other Sami languages Southern Sami has the basic structure SOV Subject Object Verb Only the copula to be and auxiliary verbs appear second The case allignment system is nominative accusative But plural objects are also marked with the nominative Objects in the nominative plural get an indefinite reading while objects in the accusative plural are definite This applies for nouns as well as pronouns An exaple for plural object in the nominative dellie manne naarra h tjeegk i mthen 1 SG NOM snare NOM PL set up PST 1SG Then I set up snares Subject and agent are always marked identically with the nominative and the marking of the object depends on definiteness Different marking strategies Subject Object Reading of objectNOM ACC SG definite or indefiniteNOM ACC PL definiteNOM NOM PL indefiniteThe verb agrees with the subject in person an number The TAM categories mentioned above are based on non finite verb forms and expressed in periphrastic constructions with an auxiliary Subject agrees with auxiliary but it is not obligatory Subject is either marked on the pronoun or inferred from context Imperative second singular uses the same non finite irrealis form also used in negation constructions Verbal Agreement Verb form Auxiliarity AgreementPRESENT finite person numberPAST finite person numberIMPERATIVE non finite 2SGPERFECT non finite yes PRS person number with AUXPLUPERFECT non finite yes PST person number with AUXPROGRESSIVE non finite yes PRS person number with AUXPAST PROGRESSIVE non finite yes PST person number with AUXSouth Saami has some features that separate it from it closest relatives like SOV instead of SVO as basic constituent order no stem gradation and a genitive possessive Nevertheless most features in the language are commonly found in other Uralic languages References EditThis article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations August 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Southern Sami at Ethnologue 18th ed 2015 subscription required Samelovens sprakregler og forvaltningsomradet for samisk sprak Regjeringen no in Norwegian Statsministerens kontor 2014 08 12 Retrieved 2018 01 30 Forvaltningsomradet for samisk sprak omfatter Snaasen tjielte Snasa kommune og Raarvihke Tjielte Royrvik kommune i Nord Trondelag To which languages does the Charter apply European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages Council of Europe p 5 Archived from the original on 2013 12 27 Retrieved 2014 04 03 Umea University Retrieved 2019 07 06 Magga Ole Henrik Magga Lajla Mattsson 2012 Sorsamisk grammatikk A Grammar of South Sami in Norwegian Kautokeino Davvi Girji p 12 ISBN 978 82 7374 855 3 Bergsland Knut Roroslappisk grammatikk 1946 Jussi Ylikoski South Saami 2022 Knut Bergsland Sydsamisk grammatikk 1982 Knut Bergsland and Lajla Mattson Magga Aarjelsaemien daaroen baakoegaerja 1993 Hasselbrink Gustav Sudsamisches Worterbuch I IIIExternal links Edit Southern Sami test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator Wikimedia Commons has media related to Southern Sami language The Children s TV series Binnabannas in Southern Sami Sami lottit Names of birds found in Sapmi in a number of languages including Skolt Sami and English Search function only works with Finnish input though Southern Sami grammatical resources Samien Sijte Southern Sami Museum and Cultural Center Sorsamisk forskning og undervisning Universitetet i Tromso Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Southern Sami amp oldid 1169719049, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.