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Uralic–Yukaghir languages

Uralic–Yukaghir, also known as Uralo-Yukaghir, is a proposed language family composed of Uralic and Yukaghir.

Uralic–Yukaghir
(hypothetical)
Geographic
distribution
Scandinavia, Finland, Siberia, Eastern Europe
Linguistic classificationProposed language family
Subdivisions
GlottologNone
The Uralic and Yukaghir languages.

Uralic is a large and diverse family of languages spoken in northern and eastern Europe and northwestern Siberia. Among the better-known Uralic languages are Finnish, Estonian, and Hungarian.

Yukaghir is a small family of languages spoken in eastern Siberia. It formerly extended over a much wider area (Collinder 1965:30). It consists of two surviving languages, Tundra Yukaghir and Kolyma Yukaghir.

Proponents of the Uralo-Siberian language family include Uralo-Yukaghir as one of its two branches, alongside the Siberian languages (Nivkh, (formerly) Chukotko-Kamchatkan and Eskimo-Aleut).[1]

History edit

Similarities between Uralic and Yukaghir were first pointed out by Paasonen (1907) and Lewy (1928), although they did not consider these to be sufficient evidence for a genetic relationship between the two.[2][3] Holger Pedersen (1931) included Uralic and Yukaghir in his proposed Nostratic language family, and also noted some similarities between them.[4] A genetic relationship between Uralic and Yukaghir was first argued for in detail in 1940, independently by Karl Bouda and Björn Collinder.[5][6][7] The hypothesis was further elaborated by Collinder in subsequent publications,[8][9][10] and also by other scholars including Harms (1977), Nikolaeva (1988) and Piispanen (2013).[11][12][13]

Uralic–Yukaghir is listed as a language family in A Guide to the World's Languages by Merritt Ruhlen (1987), and is accepted as a unit in controversial long-range proposals such as "Eurasiatic" by Joseph Greenberg (2000, 2002) and "Nostratic" by Allan Bomhard (2008), both based on evidence collected by earlier scholars like Collinder.[14][15]

Proposed evidence edit

Collinder based his case for a genetic relationship between Uralic and Yukaghir on lexical and grammatical evidence; the latter included according to him similarities between pronouns, nominal case suffixes, and verb inflection.[16]

The following list of lexical correspondences is taken from Nikolaeva (2006).[17]

Proto-Yukaghir Proto-Uralic /
Proto-Finno-Ugric
Meaning
*čupo- *ćuppa 'sharp' / 'narrow, thin'
*eme *emä 'mother'
*iw- *ime- 'suck'
*köj *koje 'young man' / 'man'
*leɣ *sewe-/*seɣe- 'eat'
*mon- *monV- 'say'
*ńu: *nime 'name'
*olo- *sala- 'steal'
*ör- *or- 'shout'
*pe: *pije 'mountain, rock' / 'stone'
*pöɣ- *pukta- 'run, jump'
*qa:r/*qajr *kore/*ko:re 'skin'
*qol- *kule- 'hear'
*wonč- *wacV/*wančV 'root'

The following list of lexical correspondences is taken from Aikio (2019).[18]: 52 

Proto-Uralic Proto-Yukaghir
*aŋi ‘mouth, opening’ *aŋa ‘mouth’
*emä / *ämä *eme ‘mother’
*̮ila- *āl- ‘place under or below’
*kälä- ‘wade / rise’ *kile- ‘wade’
*käliw ‘brother- or sister-in-law’ *keľ- ‘brother-in-law’
*kani- ‘go away’ *qon- ‘go’
*koji ‘male, man, husband’ *köj ‘fellow, boy, young man’
*mälki *mel- ‘breast’
*nimi *ńim / *nim ‘name’
*ńali- *ńel- ‘lick’
*pidi- ‘long / high’ *puδe ‘place on or above’, *puδe-nmē- ‘tall, high’
*pi̮ni- ‘put’ *pöń- / *peń- ‘put; leave’
*sala- *olo- ‘steal’
*sula- *aľ- ‘melt, thaw’
*wanča(w) *wonč- ‘root’
*wixi- ‘take, transport’ *weɣ- ‘lead, carry’

In Yukaghir numbers also share similarities such as Proto-Uralic "ükte/*ikte" and Yukaghir "irke" 'one' and Tundra Yukaghir kiti 'two' resembles Mansi kitiγ 'two' and proto-Uralic *käktä 'two'.

Many other common words are similar in Yukaghir and Uralic, such as Proto-Yukaghir kin 'who' and Proto-Uralic ke/ki 'who'.[19]

Criticism edit

The Uralic–Yukaghir hypothesis is rejected by many researchers as unsupported. While most agree that there is a core of common vocabulary that cannot be simply dismissed as chance resemblances, it has been argued that these are not the result of common inheritance, but rather due to contact between Yukaghir and Uralic speakers, which resulted in borrowing of vocabulary from Uralic languages (especially Samoyedic) into Yukaghir. Rédei (1999) assembled a large corpus of what he considered as loans from Uralic into Yukaghir.[20] Häkkinen (2012) argues that the grammatical systems show too few convincing resemblances, especially the morphology, and proposes that putative Uralic–Yukaghir cognates are in fact borrowings from an early stage of Uralic (c. 3000 BC; he dates Proto-Uralic to c. 2000 BC) into an early stage of Yukaghir, while Uralic was (according to him) spoken near the Sayan region and Yukaghir near the Upper Lena River and near Lake Baikal.[21] Aikio (2014) agrees with Rédei and Häkkinen that Uralic–Yukaghir is unsupported and implausible, and that common vocabulary shared by the two families is best explained as the result of borrowing from Uralic into Yukaghir, although he rejects many of their (especially Rédei's) examples as spurious or accidental resemblances and puts the date of borrowing much later, arguing that the loanwords he accepts as valid were borrowed from an early stage of Samoyedic (preceding Proto-Samoyedic; thus roughly in the 1st millennium BC) into Yukaghir, in the same general region between the Yenisei River and Lake Baikal.[22]

Criticism of the loaning theory edit

Uralic correspondences are found very extensively in function words and in the most used vocabulary which, as is well-known, is very rarely borrowed. In particular, demonstrative pronouns, personal pronouns, numbers, kinship terms, and many verbs - these kinds of words are very rarely borrowed from other languages and are very resistant to loaning. Also everyday prestige words are very rarely loaned, as an example Yukaghir first and second person singular pronouns: mət ‘I’ and tət ‘you' are potentially related to the Proto-Uralic words: *mE/*mon ‘I’ and *tE/*ton ‘you,’. An -i- infix obeserved in Uralic may also be found in Yukaghir: 1st person. pl. mit ‘we’ and 2nd person. pl. tit ‘you’. This has been argued as giving evidence for a direct relationship instead of a sprachbund.[19]

Urheimat edit

According to Vladimir Napolskikh, the split between Finno-Ugric and Samoyedic branches might have occurred somewhere in the area between the Ob River and the Irtysh River, following an earlier split between Proto-Uralic and Proto-Yukaghir somewhere in Eastern Siberia.[23]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Correlating Palaeo-Siberian languages and populations: recent advances in the Uralo-Siberian hypothesis". ResearchGate. Retrieved 22 March 2019.
  2. ^ Paasonen (1907), pp. 19.
  3. ^ Lewy (1928), pp. 287: "Das Jukagirische zeigt zahlreiche Anklänge an das Finnougrische [...] Beweisen tut das zunächst gar nichts, aber es kann veranlassen, weiter zu prüfen." ('Yukaghir shows numerous points of resemblance to Finno-Ugric [...] For the moment, this does not prove anything, but it can motivate further research.')
  4. ^ Pedersen (1931), p. 338.
  5. ^ Bouda (1940), p. 92: "Wir haben gesehen, daß das Jukagirische eine so starke uralische Schicht besitzt, daß man es als diesem Sprachgebiet zugehörig ansehen kann." ('We have seen that Yukhagir has such a strong Uralic stratum, that we can consider it to belong the latter's speech area.')
  6. ^ Collinder (1940).
  7. ^ Piispanen (2013), p. 167.
  8. ^ Collinder (1957).
  9. ^ Collinder (1965a).
  10. ^ Collinder (1965b).
  11. ^ Harms (1977).
  12. ^ Nikolaeva (1988).
  13. ^ Piispanen (2013).
  14. ^ Greenberg (2000), pp. 279–81.
  15. ^ Bomhard (2008), p. 176.
  16. ^ Collinder (1965b), p. 30: "The features common to Yukagir and Uralic are so numerous and so characteristic that they must be remainders of a primordial unity. The case system of Yukagir is almost identical with that of Northern Samoyed. The imperative of the verbs is formed with the same suffixes as in Southern Samoyed and the most conservative of the Fenno-Ugric languages. The two negative auxiliary verbs of the Uralic languages are also found in Yukagir. There are striking common traits in verb derivation. Most of the pronominal stems are more or less identical. Yukagir has half a hundred words in common with Uralic, in addition to those that may fairly be suspected of being loanwords. This number is not lower than should be expected on the assumption that Yukagir is akin to Uralic. In Yukagir texts one may find sentences of up to a dozen words that consist exclusively or almost exclusively of words that also occur in Uralic. Nothing in the phonologic or morphologic structure of Yukagir contradicts the hypothesis of affinity, and Yukagir agrees well with Uralic as far as the syntax is concerned."
  17. ^ Nikolaeva (2006), pp. 146, 158, 178, 215, 238, 274, 300, 325, 336, 344, 354, 379, 384, 458.
  18. ^ Aikio, Ante (2019). "Proto-Uralic". In Bakró-Nagy, Marianne; Laakso, Johanna; Skribnik, Elena (eds.). Oxford Guide to the Uralic Languages. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
  19. ^ a b Peter S. Piispanen (Stockholm). . SUSA/JSFOu 94, 2013
  20. ^ Rédei (1999).
  21. ^ Häkkinen (2012).
  22. ^ Aikio (2014).
  23. ^ Предыстория народов уральской языковой семьи (in Russian).

Bibliography edit

Works cited edit

  • Aikio, Ante (2014). "The Uralic–Yukaghir lexical correspondences: genetic inheritance, language contact or chance resemblance?". Finnisch-Ugrische Forschungen [Finno-Ugric research]. 2014 (62): 7–76. doi:10.33339/fuf.86078.
  • Bomhard, Allan R. (2008). Reconstructing Proto-Nostratic: Comparative Phonology, Morphology, and Vocabulary. Leiden: Brill.
  • Bouda, Karl (1940). "Die finnisch-ugrisch-samojedische Schicht des Jukagirischen". Ungarische Jahrbücher (in German). 20: 80–101.
  • Collinder, Björn (1940). Jukagirisch und Uralisch [Yukagirian and Uralic]. Uppsala Universitets Årsskrift 8. Uppsala: Almqvist & Wiksell.
  • Collinder, Björn (1957). "Uralo-jukagirische Nachlese". Uppsala Universitets Årsskrift. 12: 105–130.
  • Collinder, Björn (1965a). "Hat das Uralische Verwandte? Eine sprachvergleichende Untersuchung". Acta Societatis Linguisticae Upsaliensis. 1: 109–180.
  • Collinder, Björn (2021) [First published 1965]. An Introduction to the Uralic Languages. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. ISBN 978-052036929-0.
  • Greenberg, Joseph H. (2000). Indo-European and Its Closest Relatives: The Eurasiatic Language Family, Volume 1: Grammar. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-080473812-5.
  • Greenberg, Joseph H. (2002). Indo-European and Its Closest Relatives: The Eurasiatic Language Family, Volume 2: Lexicon. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-080474624-3.
  • Greenberg, Joseph H. (2005). Croft, William (ed.). Genetic Linguistics: Essays on Theory and Method. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-019925771-3.
  • Häkkinen, Jaakko (2012). "Early contacts between Uralic and Yukaghir". Suomalais-Ugrilaisen Seuran Toimituksia − Mémoires de la Société Finno-Ougrienne. 264: 91–101.
  • Harms, Robert (1977). Hopper, Paul J. (ed.). Studies in descriptive and historical linguistics. Festschrift for Winfred P. Lehmann. Current Issues in Linguistic Theory. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. pp. 301–316. ISBN 978-902720905-4.
  • Lewy, Ernst (1928). "Possessivisch und Passivisch. Bemerkungen zum Verbalausdruck in der sprachlichen Typenlehre" [Possessive and passive. Notes on verbal expression in linguistic type theory]. Ungarische Jahrbücher. 8: 274–289.
  • Nikolaeva, Irina (1988). Проблема урало-юкагирских генетических связей [The Problem of Uralo-Yukaghir Genetic Relationship] (PhD dissertation) (in Russian). Moscow: Institute of Linguistics.
  • Nikolaeva, Irina (2006). A Historical Dictionary of Yukaghir. Trends in Linguistics. Documentation. Berlin/New York: Mouton de Gruyter. ISBN 978-311018689-5.
  • Paasonen, Heikki (1907). "Zur Frage von der Urverwandschaft der finnisch-ugrischen und indoeuropäischen Sprachen" [On the question of the original relationship of the Finnish-Ugric and Indo-European languages]. Finnisch-Ugrische Forschungen. 7: 13–31 – via Internet Archive.
  • Pedersen, Holger (1931). Linguistic Science in the Nineteenth Century: Methods and Results. Translated by John Webster Spargo. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
  • Pedersen, Holger (1933). "Zur Frage nach der Urverwandtschaft des Indoeuropäischen mit dem Ugrofinnischen" [On the question of the original relationship between Indo-European and Ugro-Finnish]. Mémoires de la Société finno-ougrienne. 67: 308–325.
  • Piispanen, Peter (2013). "The Uralic-Yukaghiric Connection Revisited: Sound Correspondences of Geminate Clusters". Journal de la Société Finno-Ougrienne. 2013 (94): 165–197. doi:10.33340/susa.82515.
  • Rédei, Károly (1999). "Zu den uralisch-jukagirischen Sprachkontakten" [On Uralic-Yukagirian language contacts]. Finnisch-Ugrische Forschungen. 55: 1–58.[permanent dead link]
  • Ruhlen, Merritt (1987). A Guide to the World's Languages, Volume 1: Classification. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-080471894-3.


Further reading edit

  • Angere, J. 1956. Die uralo-jukagirische Frage. Ein Beitrag zum Problem der sprachlichen Urverwandschaft. Stockholm: Almqvist & Viksell.
  • Bouda, Karl. 1940. "Die finnisch-ugrisch-samojedische Schicht des Jukagirischen." Ungarische Jahrbücher 20, 80–101.
  • Fortescue, Michael. 1998. Language Relations Across Bering Strait: Reappraising the Archaeological and Linguistic Evidence. London and New York: Cassell.
  • Hyllested, Adam. 2010. "Internal Reconstruction vs. External Comparison: The Case of the Indo-Uralic Laryngeals." Internal Reconstruction in Indo-European, eds. J.E. Rasmussen & T. Olander, 111–136. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press.
  • Janhunen, Juha. 2009. "Proto-Uralic—what, where, and when?" Suomalais-Ugrilaisen Seuran Toimituksia 258. pp. 57–78. Online article.
  • Mithen, Steven. 2003. After the Ice: A Global Human History 20,000 – 5000 BC. Orion Publishing Co.
  • Nikolaeva, Irina. 1986. "Yukaghir-Altaic parallels" (in Russian). Istoriko-kul'turnye kontakty narodov altajskoj jazykovoj obshchnosti: Tezisy dolkadov XXIX sessii Postojannoj Mezhdunarodnoj Altaisticheskoj Konferencii PIAC, Vol. 2: Lingvistika, pp. 84–86. Tashkent: Akademija Nauk.
  • Nikolaeva, Irina. 1987. "On the reconstruction of Proto-Yukaghir: Inlaut consonantism" (in Russian). Jazyk-mif-kul'tura narodov Sibir, 43–48. Jakutsk: JaGU.
  • Nikolaeva, Irina. 1988. "On the correspondence of Uralic sibilants and affricates in Yukaghir" (in Russian). Sovetskoe Finnougrovedenie 2, 81–89.
  • Rédei, K. 1990. "Zu den uralisch-jukagirischen Sprachkontakten." Congressus septimus internationalis Fenno-Ugristarum. Pars 1 A. Sessiones plenares, 27–36. Debrecen.
  • Sauvegeot, Au. 1963. "L'appartenance du youkaguir." Ural-altaische Jahrbücher 35, 109–117.
  • Sauvegeot, Au. 1969. "La position du youkaguir." Ural-altaische Jahrbücher 41, 344–359.
  • Swadesh, Morris. 1962. "Linguistic relations across the Bering Strait." American Anthropologist 64, 1262–1291.
  • Tailleur, O.G. 1959. "Plaidoyer pour le youkaghir, branche orientale de la famille ouralienne." Lingua 6, 403–423.

External links edit

  • Bibliography at Online Documentation of Kolyma Yukaghir by Irina Nikolaeva

uralic, yukaghir, languages, uralic, yukaghir, also, known, uralo, yukaghir, proposed, language, family, composed, uralic, yukaghir, uralic, yukaghir, hypothetical, geographicdistributionscandinavia, finland, siberia, eastern, europelinguistic, classificationp. Uralic Yukaghir also known as Uralo Yukaghir is a proposed language family composed of Uralic and Yukaghir Uralic Yukaghir hypothetical GeographicdistributionScandinavia Finland Siberia Eastern EuropeLinguistic classificationProposed language familySubdivisionsUralic YukaghirGlottologNoneThe Uralic and Yukaghir languages Uralic is a large and diverse family of languages spoken in northern and eastern Europe and northwestern Siberia Among the better known Uralic languages are Finnish Estonian and Hungarian Yukaghir is a small family of languages spoken in eastern Siberia It formerly extended over a much wider area Collinder 1965 30 It consists of two surviving languages Tundra Yukaghir and Kolyma Yukaghir Proponents of the Uralo Siberian language family include Uralo Yukaghir as one of its two branches alongside the Siberian languages Nivkh formerly Chukotko Kamchatkan and Eskimo Aleut 1 Contents 1 History 2 Proposed evidence 3 Criticism 4 Criticism of the loaning theory 5 Urheimat 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Bibliography 8 1 Works cited 8 2 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editSimilarities between Uralic and Yukaghir were first pointed out by Paasonen 1907 and Lewy 1928 although they did not consider these to be sufficient evidence for a genetic relationship between the two 2 3 Holger Pedersen 1931 included Uralic and Yukaghir in his proposed Nostratic language family and also noted some similarities between them 4 A genetic relationship between Uralic and Yukaghir was first argued for in detail in 1940 independently by Karl Bouda and Bjorn Collinder 5 6 7 The hypothesis was further elaborated by Collinder in subsequent publications 8 9 10 and also by other scholars including Harms 1977 Nikolaeva 1988 and Piispanen 2013 11 12 13 Uralic Yukaghir is listed as a language family in A Guide to the World s Languages by Merritt Ruhlen 1987 and is accepted as a unit in controversial long range proposals such as Eurasiatic by Joseph Greenberg 2000 2002 and Nostratic by Allan Bomhard 2008 both based on evidence collected by earlier scholars like Collinder 14 15 Proposed evidence editCollinder based his case for a genetic relationship between Uralic and Yukaghir on lexical and grammatical evidence the latter included according to him similarities between pronouns nominal case suffixes and verb inflection 16 The following list of lexical correspondences is taken from Nikolaeva 2006 17 Proto Yukaghir Proto Uralic Proto Finno Ugric Meaning cupo cuppa sharp narrow thin eme ema mother iw ime suck koj koje young man man leɣ sewe seɣe eat mon monV say nu nime name olo sala steal or or shout pe pije mountain rock stone poɣ pukta run jump qa r qajr kore ko re skin qol kule hear wonc wacV wancV root The following list of lexical correspondences is taken from Aikio 2019 18 52 Proto Uralic Proto Yukaghir aŋi mouth opening aŋa mouth ema ama eme mother ila al place under or below kala wade rise kile wade kaliw brother or sister in law keľ brother in law kani go away qon go koji male man husband koj fellow boy young man malki mel breast nimi nim nim name nali nel lick pidi long high pude place on or above pude nme tall high pi ni put pon pen put leave sala olo steal sula aľ melt thaw wanca w wonc root wixi take transport weɣ lead carry In Yukaghir numbers also share similarities such as Proto Uralic ukte ikte and Yukaghir irke one and Tundra Yukaghir kiti two resembles Mansi kitig two and proto Uralic kakta two Many other common words are similar in Yukaghir and Uralic such as Proto Yukaghir kin who and Proto Uralic ke ki who 19 Criticism editThe Uralic Yukaghir hypothesis is rejected by many researchers as unsupported While most agree that there is a core of common vocabulary that cannot be simply dismissed as chance resemblances it has been argued that these are not the result of common inheritance but rather due to contact between Yukaghir and Uralic speakers which resulted in borrowing of vocabulary from Uralic languages especially Samoyedic into Yukaghir Redei 1999 assembled a large corpus of what he considered as loans from Uralic into Yukaghir 20 Hakkinen 2012 argues that the grammatical systems show too few convincing resemblances especially the morphology and proposes that putative Uralic Yukaghir cognates are in fact borrowings from an early stage of Uralic c 3000 BC he dates Proto Uralic to c 2000 BC into an early stage of Yukaghir while Uralic was according to him spoken near the Sayan region and Yukaghir near the Upper Lena River and near Lake Baikal 21 Aikio 2014 agrees with Redei and Hakkinen that Uralic Yukaghir is unsupported and implausible and that common vocabulary shared by the two families is best explained as the result of borrowing from Uralic into Yukaghir although he rejects many of their especially Redei s examples as spurious or accidental resemblances and puts the date of borrowing much later arguing that the loanwords he accepts as valid were borrowed from an early stage of Samoyedic preceding Proto Samoyedic thus roughly in the 1st millennium BC into Yukaghir in the same general region between the Yenisei River and Lake Baikal 22 Criticism of the loaning theory editUralic correspondences are found very extensively in function words and in the most used vocabulary which as is well known is very rarely borrowed In particular demonstrative pronouns personal pronouns numbers kinship terms and many verbs these kinds of words are very rarely borrowed from other languages and are very resistant to loaning Also everyday prestige words are very rarely loaned as an example Yukaghir first and second person singular pronouns met I and tet you are potentially related to the Proto Uralic words mE mon I and tE ton you An i infix obeserved in Uralic may also be found in Yukaghir 1st person pl mit we and 2nd person pl tit you This has been argued as giving evidence for a direct relationship instead of a sprachbund 19 Urheimat editAccording to Vladimir Napolskikh the split between Finno Ugric and Samoyedic branches might have occurred somewhere in the area between the Ob River and the Irtysh River following an earlier split between Proto Uralic and Proto Yukaghir somewhere in Eastern Siberia 23 See also editIndo Uralic languages Ural Altaic languages Uralo Siberian languages Borean languagesNotes edit Correlating Palaeo Siberian languages and populations recent advances in the Uralo Siberian hypothesis ResearchGate Retrieved 22 March 2019 Paasonen 1907 pp 19 Lewy 1928 pp 287 Das Jukagirische zeigt zahlreiche Anklange an das Finnougrische Beweisen tut das zunachst gar nichts aber es kann veranlassen weiter zu prufen Yukaghir shows numerous points of resemblance to Finno Ugric For the moment this does not prove anything but it can motivate further research Pedersen 1931 p 338 Bouda 1940 p 92 Wir haben gesehen dass das Jukagirische eine so starke uralische Schicht besitzt dass man es als diesem Sprachgebiet zugehorig ansehen kann We have seen that Yukhagir has such a strong Uralic stratum that we can consider it to belong the latter s speech area Collinder 1940 Piispanen 2013 p 167 Collinder 1957 Collinder 1965a Collinder 1965b Harms 1977 Nikolaeva 1988 Piispanen 2013 Greenberg 2000 pp 279 81 Bomhard 2008 p 176 Collinder 1965b p 30 The features common to Yukagir and Uralic are so numerous and so characteristic that they must be remainders of a primordial unity The case system of Yukagir is almost identical with that of Northern Samoyed The imperative of the verbs is formed with the same suffixes as in Southern Samoyed and the most conservative of the Fenno Ugric languages The two negative auxiliary verbs of the Uralic languages are also found in Yukagir There are striking common traits in verb derivation Most of the pronominal stems are more or less identical Yukagir has half a hundred words in common with Uralic in addition to those that may fairly be suspected of being loanwords This number is not lower than should be expected on the assumption that Yukagir is akin to Uralic In Yukagir texts one may find sentences of up to a dozen words that consist exclusively or almost exclusively of words that also occur in Uralic Nothing in the phonologic or morphologic structure of Yukagir contradicts the hypothesis of affinity and Yukagir agrees well with Uralic as far as the syntax is concerned Nikolaeva 2006 pp 146 158 178 215 238 274 300 325 336 344 354 379 384 458 Aikio Ante 2019 Proto Uralic In Bakro Nagy Marianne Laakso Johanna Skribnik Elena eds Oxford Guide to the Uralic Languages Oxford UK Oxford University Press a b Peter S Piispanen Stockholm The Uralic Yukaghiric connection revisited Sound Correspondences of Geminate Clusters SUSA JSFOu 94 2013 Redei 1999 Hakkinen 2012 Aikio 2014 Predystoriya narodov uralskoj yazykovoj semi in Russian Bibliography editWorks cited edit Aikio Ante 2014 The Uralic Yukaghir lexical correspondences genetic inheritance language contact or chance resemblance Finnisch Ugrische Forschungen Finno Ugric research 2014 62 7 76 doi 10 33339 fuf 86078 Bomhard Allan R 2008 Reconstructing Proto Nostratic Comparative Phonology Morphology and Vocabulary Leiden Brill Bouda Karl 1940 Die finnisch ugrisch samojedische Schicht des Jukagirischen Ungarische Jahrbucher in German 20 80 101 Collinder Bjorn 1940 Jukagirisch und Uralisch Yukagirian and Uralic Uppsala Universitets Arsskrift 8 Uppsala Almqvist amp Wiksell Collinder Bjorn 1957 Uralo jukagirische Nachlese Uppsala Universitets Arsskrift 12 105 130 Collinder Bjorn 1965a Hat das Uralische Verwandte Eine sprachvergleichende Untersuchung Acta Societatis Linguisticae Upsaliensis 1 109 180 Collinder Bjorn 2021 First published 1965 An Introduction to the Uralic Languages Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press ISBN 978 052036929 0 Greenberg Joseph H 2000 Indo European and Its Closest Relatives The Eurasiatic Language Family Volume 1 Grammar Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 080473812 5 Greenberg Joseph H 2002 Indo European and Its Closest Relatives The Eurasiatic Language Family Volume 2 Lexicon Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 080474624 3 Greenberg Joseph H 2005 Croft William ed Genetic Linguistics Essays on Theory and Method Oxford University Press ISBN 978 019925771 3 Hakkinen Jaakko 2012 Early contacts between Uralic and Yukaghir Suomalais Ugrilaisen Seuran Toimituksia Memoires de la Societe Finno Ougrienne 264 91 101 Harms Robert 1977 Hopper Paul J ed Studies in descriptive and historical linguistics Festschrift for Winfred P Lehmann Current Issues in Linguistic Theory Amsterdam John Benjamins pp 301 316 ISBN 978 902720905 4 Lewy Ernst 1928 Possessivisch und Passivisch Bemerkungen zum Verbalausdruck in der sprachlichen Typenlehre Possessive and passive Notes on verbal expression in linguistic type theory Ungarische Jahrbucher 8 274 289 Nikolaeva Irina 1988 Problema uralo yukagirskih geneticheskih svyazej The Problem of Uralo Yukaghir Genetic Relationship PhD dissertation in Russian Moscow Institute of Linguistics Nikolaeva Irina 2006 A Historical Dictionary of Yukaghir Trends in Linguistics Documentation Berlin New York Mouton de Gruyter ISBN 978 311018689 5 Paasonen Heikki 1907 Zur Frage von der Urverwandschaft der finnisch ugrischen und indoeuropaischen Sprachen On the question of the original relationship of the Finnish Ugric and Indo European languages Finnisch Ugrische Forschungen 7 13 31 via Internet Archive Pedersen Holger 1931 Linguistic Science in the Nineteenth Century Methods and Results Translated by John Webster Spargo Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press Pedersen Holger 1933 Zur Frage nach der Urverwandtschaft des Indoeuropaischen mit dem Ugrofinnischen On the question of the original relationship between Indo European and Ugro Finnish Memoires de la Societe finno ougrienne 67 308 325 Piispanen Peter 2013 The Uralic Yukaghiric Connection Revisited Sound Correspondences of Geminate Clusters Journal de la Societe Finno Ougrienne 2013 94 165 197 doi 10 33340 susa 82515 Redei Karoly 1999 Zu den uralisch jukagirischen Sprachkontakten On Uralic Yukagirian language contacts Finnisch Ugrische Forschungen 55 1 58 permanent dead link Ruhlen Merritt 1987 A Guide to the World s Languages Volume 1 Classification Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 080471894 3 Further reading edit Angere J 1956 Die uralo jukagirische Frage Ein Beitrag zum Problem der sprachlichen Urverwandschaft Stockholm Almqvist amp Viksell Bouda Karl 1940 Die finnisch ugrisch samojedische Schicht des Jukagirischen Ungarische Jahrbucher 20 80 101 Fortescue Michael 1998 Language Relations Across Bering Strait Reappraising the Archaeological and Linguistic Evidence London and New York Cassell Hyllested Adam 2010 Internal Reconstruction vs External Comparison The Case of the Indo Uralic Laryngeals Internal Reconstruction in Indo European eds J E Rasmussen amp T Olander 111 136 Copenhagen Museum Tusculanum Press Janhunen Juha 2009 Proto Uralic what where and when Suomalais Ugrilaisen Seuran Toimituksia 258 pp 57 78 Online article Mithen Steven 2003 After the Ice A Global Human History 20 000 5000 BC Orion Publishing Co Nikolaeva Irina 1986 Yukaghir Altaic parallels in Russian Istoriko kul turnye kontakty narodov altajskoj jazykovoj obshchnosti Tezisy dolkadov XXIX sessii Postojannoj Mezhdunarodnoj Altaisticheskoj Konferencii PIAC Vol 2 Lingvistika pp 84 86 Tashkent Akademija Nauk Nikolaeva Irina 1987 On the reconstruction of Proto Yukaghir Inlaut consonantism in Russian Jazyk mif kul tura narodov Sibir 43 48 Jakutsk JaGU Nikolaeva Irina 1988 On the correspondence of Uralic sibilants and affricates in Yukaghir in Russian Sovetskoe Finnougrovedenie 2 81 89 Redei K 1990 Zu den uralisch jukagirischen Sprachkontakten Congressus septimus internationalis Fenno Ugristarum Pars 1 A Sessiones plenares 27 36 Debrecen Sauvegeot Au 1963 L appartenance du youkaguir Ural altaische Jahrbucher 35 109 117 Sauvegeot Au 1969 La position du youkaguir Ural altaische Jahrbucher 41 344 359 Swadesh Morris 1962 Linguistic relations across the Bering Strait American Anthropologist 64 1262 1291 Tailleur O G 1959 Plaidoyer pour le youkaghir branche orientale de la famille ouralienne Lingua 6 403 423 External links editBibliography at Online Documentation of Kolyma Yukaghir by Irina Nikolaeva Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Uralic Yukaghir languages amp oldid 1179466531, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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