Sami languages
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Sami is a general name for a group of Uralic languages spoken in parts of northern Norway, Sweden, Finland and extreme northwestern Russia, in Northern Europe. Sami is frequently (and erroneously) believed to be a single language. It is the native tongue of the Sami people. There are several terms used for the Sami languages: Saami, Sámi, Samic, Saamic, Lappish and Lappic. The last two are, along with the term Lapp, considered derogatory by some.
Classification
The Sami languages are divided into two groups: the western and the eastern ones. The groups may be further divided into various subgroups and ultimately individual languages. Parts of the Sami language area form a dialect continuum in which the neighbouring languages may be to fair degree mutually intelligible, but two more widely separated groups will not understand each others' speech. There are, however, sharp and absolute language boundaries, in particular between Northern Sami, Inari Sami and Skolt Sami, the speakers of which are not able to understand each other without learning or long practice.Western Sami languages
Eastern Sami languagesGeographic distribution
The Sami languages are spoken by the Sami people living in Lapland in Northern Europe. The Lapland region stretches over the four countries Norway, Sweden, Finland and Russia, reaching from the southern part of central Scandinavia in the southwest to the tip of the Kola Peninsula in the east.During the Middle and Early Modern Ages now extinct Sami languages have also been spoken in the central and southern parts of Finland and Karelia. Historical documents as well as Finnish and Karelian oral tradition contain many mentions of the earlier Sami inhabitation in these areas. Place names of Sami origin are widespread in Finland, Karelia, Norway and Sweden.
Official status
Adopted in April 1988, Article 110a of the Norwegian Constitution states: "It is the responsibility of the authorities of the State to create conditions enabling the Sami people to preserve and develop its language, culture and way of life." The Sami Language Act went into effect in the 1990s. Sami is an official language of the municipalities of Kautokeino, Karasjok, Kåfjord, Nesseby, Sør-Varanger and Tana.In Finland, the Sami language act of 1991 granted Sami people the right to use the Sami languages for all government services. The Sami language act of 2003 made Sami an official language in Enontekiö, Inari, Sodankylä and Utsjoki municipalities.
On April 1, 2002 Sami became one of five recognized minority languages in Sweden. It can be used in dealing with public authorities in the municipalities of Arjeplog, Gällivare, Jokkmokk and Kiruna.
See also: Sami parliaments of Finland, Norway, and Sweden
Languages and dialects
In 2001 there were ten known Sami languages. The largest six of these have standard written languages; the four others are not written, and there are likely fewer than 20 people speaking them. The ISO 639-2 code for all Sami languages without its proper code is "smi". The six written languages are:
- Northern Sami (Norway, Sweden, Finland): With an estimated 15,000 speakers, this accounts for probably more than 75% of all Sami speakers in 2002. ISO 639-1/ISO 639-2: se/sme
- Lule Sami (Norway, Sweden): The second largest group with an estimated 1,500 speakers. ISO 639-2: smj
- Southern Sami (Norway, Sweden): ISO 639-2: sma
- Inari Sami (Enare Sami) (Inari, Finland): SIL code: LPI, ISO 639-2: smn
- Skolt Sami (Näätämö and the Nellim-Keväjärvi districts, Inari municipality, Finland, also spoken in Russia, previously in Norway) SIL code: LPK, ISO 639-2: sms
- Kildin Sami (Kildin Island, Russia) SIL code: LPD
Orthography
The Northern Sami language has had more than one orthography, but in 1948 a common orthography was created. It was last modified in 1985.Northern Sami uses seven characters not found in the Scandinavian languages or the Finnish language:
- a-acute (Á/á) /aː/ (front vowel; notice the contrast between the back vowel [ɑ] and the front vowel [æ])
- c-caron (Č/č) /ʧ/
- d-stroke (Đ/đ) /ð/
- engma (Ŋ/ŋ) /ŋ/
- s-caron (Š/š) /ʃ/
- t-stroke (Ŧ/ŧ) /θ/
- z-caron (Ž/ž) /ʒ/
Southern Sami uses written using Norwegian or Swedish characters, some variants of Swedish (ä, ö) or Norwegian (æ, ø) characters. Inari Sami uses seven special characters. Kildin Sami uses Cyrillic typesetting, Russian characters with some special characters.
Skolt Sami uses a Latin orthography, with the following special characters:
- circumflex-A (Â/â)
- a-ring (Å/å)
- a-trema (Ä/ä)
- o-tilde (Õ/õ)
- ezh (Ʒ/ʒ)
- ezh-caron (Ǯ/ǯ)
- s-caron (Š/š)
- z-caron (Ž/ž)
- c-caron (Č/č)
- g-caron (Ǧ/ǧ),
- k-caron (Ǩ/ǩ)
- d-stroke (Đ/đ)
- g-stroke (Ǥ/ǥ)
- engma (Ŋ/ŋ)
External links
- [Sami alphabets: Basics (in Norwegian) and references] - from Skolelinux, in Norwegian
- [Kimberli Mäkäräinen] "Sámi-related odds and ends," including 5000+ word vocabulary list
- [Dictionaries] - at University of Tromsø
- [Samisk språkråd] - Sami language department of the Norwegian Sami parliament (in Norwegian and Northern Sami)
- Finland - [Sámi Language Act]
- [Sami Language Resources] All about Sami Languages with glossaries, scholarly articles, resources
| Finno-Ugric languages | |||
| Ugric languages | Hungarian | Khanty | Mansi | ||
| Permic languages | Komi | Komi-Permyak | Udmurt | ||
| Finno-Volgaic languages | Mari | Erzya | Moksha | Merya† | Meshcherian† | Muromian† | Sami languages | Estonian | Finnish | Livonian | Veps | Võro | Votic | ||
| † Language death>Extinct | |||
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