Dukha
[别称 Tuha, Tsaatan]语系:Turkic
·濒危
语系:Turkic
·濒危
Tuha, Tsaatan |
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Turkic, Siberian Turkic, Sayan Turkic |
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LINGUIST List |
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1hv |
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文件格式: csv |
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Dukha is closely related to but clearly distinct from Tuvan. |
信息不完整 “Dukhan, a Turkic variety of Northern Mongolia: Description and analysis” . Elisabetta Ragagnin (2011)
"Today, all Dukhans are bilingual in Dukhan and Darkhat Mongolian... all Dukhans over 30 years of age are bilingual in Dukhan and Darkhat Mongolian. They use one idiom or the other depending on the addressee. Dukhans between 20 and 30 years of age have various degrees of Dukhan proficiency, depending on the internal structure of the family. Dukhans between 15 and 20 years of age tend to use Mongolian for all spheres of communication, even if they, in many instances, master Dukhan perfectly. Dukhan below 15 years of age speak only Darkhat Mongolian, but have a passive knowledge of Dukhan. Their Dukhan speech is strongely adapted to Mongolian constructions.
Within the Dukhan community, there are many households where parents speak more Mongolian than Dukhan with their children. In mixed families, where one of the parents is Mongol, the children rarely master Dukhan. Only in rare cases do Mongols who are married to a Dukhan-speaking person learn the language...
Finally, it should be pointed out that the use of Dukhan is more common in the taiga areas, whereas it is decreasing in the river areas and in the village of Tsagaan-Nuur." (p.31-32)
Darkhat Mongolian
within the district of Tsagaan-Nuur
"The Dukhan people can be divided into three groups according to their geographical location:
a. reindeer-breeding families of the East Taiga
b. reindeer-breeding families of the West Taiga
c. families living in the village of Tsagaan-Nuur and in the river areas nearby" (p.13)
信息不完整 “Europe and North Asia” (211-282) . Tapani Salminen (2007) , C. Moseley · London & New York: Routledge
The number of speakers lies between 100 and 200, and because of the geographic isolation and the traditional way of life, practically all of the members of the group continue to speak the native language, and at least until the 1970s children used to be monolingual in it. Given the very small population, Dukha must nevertheless be regarded as definitely endangered.
Spoken by a semi-nomadic group living to the northwest of Lake Kho ̈vsgo ̈l, mainly in the Tsaagannuur district of Kho ̈vsgo ̈l League in the northernmost region of Mongolia, in an area bordering the Republic of Tuva in the west and the Republic of Buryatia in the northeast.
信息不完整 “Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger” . Christopher Moseley (ed.) (2010) UNESCO Publishing