Mongolian language
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Mongolian is the best-known member of the Mongolic language family, and the primary language of most of the residents of Mongolia. It is also spoken in some of the surrounding areas in provinces of China and the Russian Federation. The majority of speakers in Mongolia speak the Khalkha (or Halh) dialect, while those in China speak the Chahar, Oyirad, and Barghu-Buryat dialect groups.
Classification
Mongolian is a Mongolic language. The Altaic theory proposes that the Mongolic family is a member of the larger Altaic family, which would also include the Turkic and Tungusic languages, and possibly Japanese and Korean. Related languages include Kalmyk spoken near the Caspian Sea and Buryat of East Siberia, as well as a number of minor languages in China and the Mogholi language of Afghanistan.Geographic distribution
Over two million people speak Mongolian throughout Mongolia. There are also up to three million speakers in Northern China, who, however, form only a shrinking minority of the overall population of Inner Mongolia, especially of its cities.Official status
Khalkha Mongolian is the national language of Mongolia. In Inner Mongolia, the standard Mongolian language is based on Chahar Mongolian.Dialects
The most prestigious dialect is Khalkha,[[Citing sources citation needed]] which is spoken in the capital of Mongolia, Ulaanbaatar, and most of Mongolia. In China, the dialect of the Plain Blue Banner in central Inner Mongolia, which belongs to the Chahar dialect group, is the official pronunciation standard.Grammar (of Urban Khalkha Mongolian)
Much of the description of Khalkha Mongolian is also valid for Southern Central Mongolian, for example Chahar. The main differences are phonological and lexical, while slight morphological and a few noteworthy syntactical differences exist as well.Lexicon
In Mongolian, there are loan words especially from Old Turkic, Sanskrit (often through Uigur), Tibetan, Tungusic and Chinese, and, more recently, from Russian, Chinese and English. Commissions in the Mongolian state have been busy translating new terminology into Mongolian, so that Mongolian words such as “president”
No discussion of the phonology of Mongolian would be complete without discussing the language's vowel harmony. Mongolian groups vowels into two groups. Traditionally, these groups have been seen as "front vowels" and "back vowels," but Svantesson et al analyze the groups instead as (what they term) "non-pharyngeal" (e, u, o) and "pharyngeal" (a,ʊ,ɔ). /i/ is a neutral vowel, and does not belong in either group. The type of vowel which occurs in the first syllable of a word determines what vowels can occur in the rest of the word. If the first vowel is pharyngeal, then all the vowels of the word must be either /i/ or a pharyngeal vowel. Similarly, if the first vowel is a non-pharyngeal vowel, then all the vowels of the word must be either /i/ or a non-pharyngeal vowel.
Mongolian also has four diphthongs, /ui/, /ʊi/, /ɔi/, and /ai/. Short /o/ is phonetically [ɵ]. The traditional analysis of the vowel system of Mongolian had /i iː y yː u uː e eː ø øː o oː a aː/. However, /y/ is now analyzed as /u/, while /u/ is analyzed as /ʊ/. Likewise, /ø/ is analyzed as /o/ and /o/ is analyzed as /ɔ/.
Mongolian lacks a true phoneme /l/; instead, it has a voiced lateral fricative, /ɮ/. Syllable-finally, /n/ is realized as [ŋ]. The phonemes /pʰ/, /pʰʲ/, /f/, /k/, and /kʲ/ only occur in loanwords, and so they are not shown in the table.
Modern Mongolian is an agglutinative, exclusively suffixing language the suffixes of which are most often composed of a single morpheme. It has a rich number of morphemes to build up more complex words from simple roots. For example, the word байгууллагынх consists of the root
The nominal phrase has the order: demonstrative pronoun/numeral, adjective, noun. Attributive sentences usually (…) precede the whole NP. Titles or occupations of people, low numerals indicating groups and focus clitics are put behind the head noun. Possessive pronouns (in different forms) may either precede or follow the NP. E.g.
The verbal phrase consists of the predicate’s complements and the adverbials modifying it in front of it and, mainly if the predicate is sentence-final, particles behind it. E.g.
The predicate itself may consist of a noun or an adjective with or without a copula, but if the subject isn’t marked by
Unmarked phrase order is subject, object, predicate. While the predicate generally has to remain in clause-final position, the other phrases are free to change order or to wholly disappear. The topic tends to be placed clause-initially, new information rather before the predicate. Noun phrase heads modified by long attributive clauses will for the sake of understandability be placed clause-initially. Topic can form a phrase of its own (with
Mongolian has passive and causative voice. In a passive sentence the entirely oblique agent takes either dative or instrumental case, the first of which is more common. The verb takes a suffix <-gd->. In the causative, the person caused to do something would take instrumental, or accusative, if the simple verb would have been intransitive, and the verb would take <-uul->. Causative morphology is also used in passive contexts, if the event is especially unpleasant to the subject:
One way to conjoin clauses is to have the first clause end in a converb. An example:
Mongolian has a complementizer auxiliary verb гэ- very similar to Japanese to iu.
Except for clauses governed by certain postpositions, attribute clauses, clauses with complementizer and some very short converbal clauses (which some speakers reject anyway), Mongolian clauses are in strictly paratactic order, such that a hypotactic sentence like “We will, IF you help us, repair the damage.” could in this order with the same semantic roles not be constructed in Mongolian.
In the subordinated clause the subject, if different from the subject of main clause, sometimes has to take accusative or genitive case. Subjects in either instrumental or ablative case marginally occur as well. Subjects of attribute clauses in which the head has a function (as is the case for all English relative clauses) demand that if the subject is not the head it has to take instrumental or rather genitive case, e.g.
Mongolian has been written in a variety of alphabets over the years.
The traditional Mongolian alphabet was adapted from Uyghur script in 1208, although it has undergone transformations, and occasionally been supplemented by other scripts. The Mongolian alphabet was used in Mongolia until 1931, when it was replaced by the Latin alphabet, and again by Cyrillic in 1937. The traditional alphabet was abolished completely by the pro-Soviet government in 1941, and a short-lived attempt to reintroduce the traditional alphabet after 1990 was abolished after some years.
In the People's Republic of China, the Mongolian language is the official language - co-official with Mandarin Chinese - in some regions. The traditional alphabet has always been used there, although Cyrillic was considered briefly before the Sino-Soviet split. There are two types of written Mongolian used in China: the classical script, which is official among Mongols nationwide, and the Todo script, used predominantly among Oirats in Xinjiang.
The modified Cyrillic alphabet used for Mongolian is as follows:
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.Phonology
The full inventory of long and short vowels can only occur in word-initial syllables. In word-internal and word-final syllables, vowels are reduced. Long vowels can only appear in initial syllables. In many non-initial syllables, there is, phonemically, no vowel at all (for example, хоёр, "two," ажил, "work," and саармаг, "neutral" are, phonemically, /xɔjr/, /aʧɮ/, and /saːrmɡ/, respectively (examples from Svantesson et al)). An epenthetic vowel is allophonically inserted, and the form of the epenthetic vowel is predictable from the preceding vowel: the epenthetic vowel is just a centralized version of the vowel in the preceding syllable. In the examples given, the words are phonetically [xɔjɔ̆r], [aʧĭɮ], and [saːrmăɡ]. However, in the epenthetic vowel in a syllable after /u/ is a centralized /e/, and if there is an /i/ in the preceding syllable, then an epenthetic vowel's phonetic form is determined by the vowel in the syllable preceding the /i/, that is, two syllables before the epenthetic vowel. Another factor affecting the form of the epenthetic vowel is the preceding consonant: if it is postalveolar or palatalized, then the epenthetic vowel is a centralized /i/, as in [aʧĭɮ].Vowels
Front
Central
Back
Short
Long
Short
Long
Short
Long
Close
i
iː
u
uː
Near-Close
ʊ
ʊː
Close-Mid
e
eː
o
oː
Open-mid
ɔ
ɔː
Open
a
aː
Consonants
Labial
Dental
Postalveolar
Velar
Uvular
Palatalized
Plain
Palatalized
Plain
Palatalized
Plain
Plosive
Voiceless aspirated
tʰʲ
tʰ
Voiceless
pʲ
p
tʲ
t
Voiced
ɡʲ
ɡ
ɢ
Affricate
Voiceless aspirated
ʦʰ
ʧʰ
Voiceless
ʦ
ʧ
Fricative
s
ʃ
xʲ
x
Nasal
mʲ
m
nʲ
n
ŋ
Lateral fricative
ɮʲ
ɮ
Approximant
wʲ
w
rʲ
r
j
Morphology
Syntax
Phrase structure
The clause
Compound sentences
Writing system
Main article: Mongolian alphabet
Cyrillic
IPA
Transliteration
Cyrillic
IPA
Transliteration
Аа
a
a
Пп
(pʰ ), (pʰʲ )
( p )
Бб
p,pʲ
b
Рр
r,rʲ
r
Вв
w,wʲ
v
Сс
s
s
Гг
ɡ,ɡʲ,ɢ
g
Тт
tʰ,tʰʲ
t
Дд
t,tʲ
d
Уу
ʊ
u
Ее
je
je
Үү
u
ü
Ёё
jɔ
jo
Фф
( f )
( f )
Жж
ʧ
ž
Хх
x,xʲ
h
Зз
ʦ
z
Цц
ʦʰ
ts
Ии
i
i
Чч
ʧʰ
č
Йй
j
j
Шш
ʃ
š
Кк
( k ), (kʲ )
( k )
Щщ
(sʧ )
( šč )
Лл
ɮ,ɮʲ
l
Ыы
i
y
Мм
m,mʲ
m
Ьь
ʲ
'
Нн
n,nʲ
n
Ээ
e
e
Оо
ɔ
o
Юю
jʊ
ju
Өө
o
ö
Яя
ja
ja
References
External links
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