Mansi language

Spoken in

  • Uralic Finno - Ugric Ugric Obugrisch Mansi

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Fiu ( other Finno- ugr. languages)

Mns

The mansische language ( моаньсь, Moans ) ( formerly " Wogulisch " ) is one of the Mansi in Siberia spoken, belonging to the Ob-Ugric branch of the Finno -Ugric languages ​​and language is related closest to the Khanty.

2002 Of the 11,000 Mansi gave only 3,000 to speak at Mansi. Since the Mansi extend over a relatively large area of ​​settlement in terms of area, the Mansische decays despite the small number of speakers into several dialects, which sometimes exhibit greater differences in pronunciation.

Mansi is an agglutinative language and has six case ( nominative, locative, relatively, ablative, translative and Instrumental). As in Hungary, the genitive is not continued, but is expressed by the possession of money. The vocabulary of Mansischen to be about 30-40 % com- Ugric origin. Many loanwords come from the Komi and Russian. Since 1937, the unfavorable for the correct sound reproduction of the Cyrillic alphabet is used Mansischen with additional characters for Mansi.

Comparison

Pay

Figures 1 and 2 also forms attributive: акв (1) and кит (2); (see két with Hungarian and altungarisch kit).

Dialects

Mansi has four main dialects, named after the distribution areas by flowing rivers:

  • North ( Sos'va ) dialect; is spoken by the vast number of Mansi
  • Western dialect; from each includes different subdialects ( Pelym, Wagily )
  • Eastern ( Konda ) dialect; with minor differences
  • South ( Tavda ) dialect; virtually extinct

Mansischsprachige literature

The most famous author who wrote his works in mansischer language, Juwan Schestalow was. The vast majority of his works, however, are written in Russian language

Researchers at the mansischen language

Hungarian and Finnish scientists who undertook linguistic traveling mansischen speaking countries, were mainly Antal Reguly, August Ahlqvist, Bernát Munkácsi and Artturi Kannisto.

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