Results 171 to 180 of about 1,765 (221)
Abstract All but three of the thirty-nine Uralic languages are endangered, most of them seriously so; of the family’s ten main branches, only two have members considered safe (Finnish and Estonian of the Fennic branch, plus Hungarian).
Daniel Abondolo
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2022
Abstract The chapter provides an up-to-date overview of Uralic minority languages in Russia, the European Union, and Norway. The focus is on the current state of Uralic minorities, and the main goal is twofold. Firstly, this chapter will shed some new light on the sociolinguistic and ethnolinguistic aspects of the severe endangerment and
Pasanen, Annika +2 more
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Abstract The chapter provides an up-to-date overview of Uralic minority languages in Russia, the European Union, and Norway. The focus is on the current state of Uralic minorities, and the main goal is twofold. Firstly, this chapter will shed some new light on the sociolinguistic and ethnolinguistic aspects of the severe endangerment and
Pasanen, Annika +2 more
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American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 1990
AbstractWe have analysed data of three European populations speaking non‐Indoeuropean languages: Hungarians, Lapps, and Finns. Principal coordinate analysis shows that Lapps are almost exactly intermediate between people located geographically near the Ural mountains and speaking Uralic languages, and central and northern Europeans.
C R, Guglielmino +3 more
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AbstractWe have analysed data of three European populations speaking non‐Indoeuropean languages: Hungarians, Lapps, and Finns. Principal coordinate analysis shows that Lapps are almost exactly intermediate between people located geographically near the Ural mountains and speaking Uralic languages, and central and northern Europeans.
C R, Guglielmino +3 more
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Abstract A fundamental characteristic of the Hungarian vocabulary is that certain words exhibit diverse grammatical and/or semantic properties without change of form. The aim of the chapter is to theoretically establish the uses and limits of conversion in Hungarian.
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2014
The Urals Mountains was a key loci of the Palaeolithic and Mesolithic occupation oikumene. The mountain regions with the adjoining areas of the East European Plains and the West Siberian Lowland have principal significance for documenting the processes and natural contexts of the Pleistocene human expansion from the SE parts of the European continent ...
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The Urals Mountains was a key loci of the Palaeolithic and Mesolithic occupation oikumene. The mountain regions with the adjoining areas of the East European Plains and the West Siberian Lowland have principal significance for documenting the processes and natural contexts of the Pleistocene human expansion from the SE parts of the European continent ...
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The Origin and Dispersal of Uralic: Distributional Typological View
Annual Review of Linguistics, 2021Johanna Nichols
exaly

