Английская Википедия:Ingrian language

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Hatnote Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Infobox language

Файл:2.4b-Ingrian-and-Votic current.png
Ingrian and Votic villages at the beginning of the 21st century[1][2]

Ingrian (Шаблон:Lang Шаблон:IPA-all), also called Izhorian (Шаблон:Lang Шаблон:IPA-all Шаблон:IPA-all), is a Finnic language spoken by the (mainly Orthodox) Izhorians of Ingria. It has approximately 70 native speakers left, all of whom are elderly.[3][4]

The Ingrian language should be distinguished from the Ingrian dialect of the Finnish language, which became the majority language of Ingria in the 17th century with the influx of Lutheran Finnish immigrants; their descendants, the Ingrian Finns, are often referred to as Ingrians. The immigration of Lutheran Finns was promoted by Swedish authorities, who gained the area in 1617 from Russia, as the local population was (and remained) Orthodox.

Classification

Ingrian is classified, together with Finnish, Karelian (including Livvi), Ludic and Veps, in the Northern Finnic branch of the Uralic languages.

History

In 1932–1937, a Latin-based orthography for the Ingrian language existed, taught in schools of the Soikino Peninsula and the area around the mouth of the Luga River.[5] Several textbooks were published, including in 1936 a grammar of the language. However, in 1937 the Izhorian written language was abolished and mass repressions of the peasantry began.[5]

Alphabet (1932)

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

[6]

Alphabet (1936)

The order of the 1936 alphabet is similar to the Russian Cyrillic alphabet.

A a Ä ä B b V v G g D d E e Ƶ ƶ
Z z I i J j K k L l M m N n O o
Ö ö P p R r S s T t U u Y y F f
H h C c Ç ç Ş ş ь

Alphabet (2005–present)

The order of the current alphabet matches the Finnish alphabet.

A a B b C c D d E e F f G g H h
I i J j K k L l M m N n O o P p
R r S s Š š T t U u V v Y y Z z
Ž ž Ä ä Ö ö

Dialects

Four dialects groups of Ingrian have been attested, two of which are probably extinct by now:[7][8]

A fifth dialect may have once been spoken on the Karelian Isthmus in northernmost Ingria, and may have been a substrate of local dialects of southeastern Finnish.[7]

Grammar

Шаблон:Main Like other Uralic languages, Ingrian is a highly agglutinative language. Ingrian inflection is exclusively performed using inflectional suffixes, with prefixes being only used in derivation.

Ingrian nouns and adjectives are inflected for number (singular and plural) and case. Ingrian nominals distinguish between twelve cases, with a thirteenth (the comitative) only being present in nouns. Like Finnish, Ingrian has two cases used for the direct object: the nominative-genitive (used in telic constructions) and the partitive (used in atelic constructions). Ingrian adjectives often have a separate comparative form, but lack a morphologically distinct superlative.

Ingrian distinguishes between three persons. There is no distinction in gender, but there is an animacy distinction in interrogative pronouns.

Ingrian verbs feature four moods: indicative, conditional, imperative and the now rare potential. Verbs are inflected for three persons, two numbers and a special impersonal form for each of the moods, although the imperative lacks a first person form. The indicative has both present and past forms. Negation in Ingrian is expressed by means of a negative verb that inflects by person and has separate imperative forms.

Phonology

Шаблон:Main

Vowels

The Ingrian language has 8 vowels:

Front Back
unrounded rounded unrounded rounded
Close i Шаблон:IPA link y Шаблон:IPA link u Шаблон:IPA link
Mid e Шаблон:IPA link ö Шаблон:IPA link o Шаблон:IPA link
Open ä Шаблон:IPA link a Шаблон:IPA link

Ingrian vowels can be phonologically long and short. Furthermore, these vowels can combine into a total of 14 diphthongs.

Consonants

The Ingrian language has 22 consonant sounds:

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Plosive voiceless p Шаблон:IPAslink t Шаблон:IPAslink k Шаблон:IPAslink
voiced b Шаблон:IPAslink d Шаблон:IPAslink g Шаблон:IPAslink
Affricate ts Шаблон:IPAslink c Шаблон:IPAslink
Fricative voiceless f Шаблон:IPAslink s Шаблон:IPAslink š Шаблон:IPAslink h Шаблон:IPAslink, Шаблон:IPAslink
voiced z Шаблон:IPAslink ž Шаблон:IPAslink
Nasal m Шаблон:IPAslink n Шаблон:IPAslink (n Шаблон:IPAslink)
Approximant v Шаблон:IPAslink l Шаблон:IPAslink j Шаблон:IPAslink
Rhotic r Шаблон:IPAslink
  • The consonant ⟨h⟩ is realized as [h] when short and as [xː] when long (this distinction isn't present in the Ala-Laukaa dialect).
  • The consonant ⟨n⟩ is realized as [ŋ] when followed by the phoneme Шаблон:IPA or Шаблон:IPA.
  • Phonetic palatalization [ʲ] may occur among different dialects before close-front vowels Шаблон:IPA.
  • The voiced plosives (Шаблон:IPA) and fricatives (Шаблон:IPA), as well as the postalveolar fricative Шаблон:IPA are not phonemic in the Soikkola dialect's native words.

The Soikkola dialect has a three-way distinction of consonant length (Шаблон:IPA, Шаблон:IPA, Шаблон:IPA). Both the long and halflong geminates are shown double in writing (⟨tt⟩). Other dialects only differentiate between long (Шаблон:IPA) and short (Шаблон:IPA) consonants.

Stress

Primary stress in Ingrian by rule comes on the first syllable, while the secondary stresses come on every further uneven syllable, with the exception of a final syllable.

puu ("wood") is realized as /ˈpuː/
kana ("chicken") is realized as /ˈkɑnɑ/
orava ("squirrel") is realized as /ˈorɑʋɑ/
cirkkulaiset ("sparrows") is realised as /ˈt͡ʃirkːuˌlɑi̯set/

Morphophonology

The Ingrian language has several morphophonological processes.

Vowel harmony is the process that the affixes attached to a lemma may change depending on the stressed vowel of the word. This means that if the word is stressed on a back vowel, the affix would contain a back vowel as well, while if the word's stress lies on a front vowel, the affix would naturally contain a front vowel. Thus, if the stress of a word lies on an "a", "o" or "u", the possible affix vowels would be "a", "o" or "u", while if the stress of a word lies on an "ä", "ö" or "y", the possible affix vowels to this word would then be "ä", "ö" or "y":

nappi (button, nominativa); nappia (button, partitiva)
näppi (pinch, nominativa); näppiä (pinch, partitiva)

The vowels "e" and "i" are neutral, that is to say that they can be used together with both types of vowels.

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Bibliography

  • Paul Ariste 1981. Keelekontaktid. Tallinn: Valgus. [pt. 2.6. Kolme läänemere keele hääbumine lk. 76 – 82] Шаблон:In lang
  • A. Laanest. 1993. Ižorskij Jazyk. In V. N. Jartseva (ed.), Jazyki Mira: Ural'skie Jazyki, 55–63. Moskva: Nauka.

External links

Шаблон:Wtc Шаблон:Incubator

Шаблон:Uralic languages Шаблон:Authority control

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  3. Шаблон:Cite web
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  5. 5,0 5,1 Kurs, Ott (1994). Ingria: The broken landbridge between Estonia and Finland. GeoJournal 33.1, 107–113.
  6. Шаблон:Cite book
  7. 7,0 7,1 Шаблон:Cite encyclopedia
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