Kolyma Yukaghir
[aka Forest Yukagir, Southern Yukagir, южноюкагирский язык]Classification: Yukaghir
·critically endangered
Classification: Yukaghir
·critically endangered
Forest Yukagir, Southern Yukagir, южноюкагирский язык, Forest Yukaghir, Jukagirisch, Odul, Kolyma, Kolym, Southern Yukaghir, Одул, Одун ажуу, |
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Yukaghir |
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Cryllic script |
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ISO 639-3 |
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yux |
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As csv |
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Information from: “Online Documentation of Kolyma Yukaghir” . Irina Nikolaeva & Thomas Mayer (2004)
Kolyma Yukaghir is now spoken by "a few elderly people." In the late 1980s, there were unofficially estimated to be 50 speakers of Kolyma Yukaghir, with the average age of fluent native speakers at 64 years old.
THe use of Yukaghir languages is "strongly connected with the traditional activities of the population, and is typically practised only in the taiga during hunting and fishing, and on the tundra during reindeer herding." The Kolyma Yukaghir language is considered to be almost one generation further along the road to dormancy than the Tundra Yukaghir language.
Russian
Yakut
"The Yukaghir languages have no official status and fulfill limited functions. They are not used in legislation, business, theater, religious ceremonies or the mass media, except for occasional broadcasts on local radio."
An orthography was created in the 1970s/80s by linguist and author Gavril Kurilov, a native speaker of Tundra Yukaghir. The writing system uses the Cyrillic alphabet with some additional symbols. In 1987, it was accepted as the official Yukaghir orthography by the Yakut Ministry of Education.
“The Kolyma Yukaghirs mostly live in the Verxnekolymsk district of the Yakut (Saxa) Republic of the Russian Federation. The main settlements are Nelemnoe (on the river Jasachnaja) and Zyrjanka (on the river Kolyma). A few Kolyma Yukaghirs live in Srednekolymsk in the Srednekolymsk district of the Yakut (Saxa) Republic, as well as in the settlements of Sejmchan and Balygychan in the Serednekansk district of the Magadan Region.”
Information from: “The World Atlas of Language Structures” . Bernard Comrie and David Gil and Martin Haspelmath and Matthew S. Dryer · Oxford University Press
Information from: “Red Book on Endangered Languages: Northeast Asia” . Juha Janhunen; Tapani Salminen (2000)
~400
0
0
0?
mean age of youngest speakers: mainly from 60 years up
among the two extant Yukagiric languages, Forest Yukagir seems to be dying even more rapidly than Tundra Yukagir
degree of speakers' competence: mainly rudimentary, with massive multilingualism
Attempts are currently being made to create a written standard (in Cyrillic script, with either Russian or Yakut-based orthographical principles) for both Tundra Yukagir and Forest Yukagir.
in the forest zone, on the sources of the Kolyma; administratively divided between the Yakut (Sakha) Republic (Yakutia) and Magadan Oblast of Russia; previously in a much wider area in the upper Kolyma region
Information from: “A Grammar of Kolyma Yukaghir” . Maslov, Elena (2003) , Bossong, Georg & Comrie, Bernard & Dryer, Matthew · Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter
According to Vakhtin (1992), of the 133 Yukaghirs living in Nelemnoye (the village where the majority of Yukaghirs live), 9 named Yukaghir as their first language, and 50 learned Yukaghir in childhood from their parents.
In Nelemnoye, Kolyma Yukaghir is used for everyday communication. However, for all Yukaghirs under 60 their first language is Russian (although they may have learned Yukaghir from their parents). The youngest generation is "practically monolingual" in Russian.
Russian
Yakut
Even
Russian is the language of education. Although Yukaghir has been taught in schools since the mid-80s, the language situation has not changed significantly.
NE Russia in the basin of the Kolyma River