Sakha language

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Sakha
Саха тыла Saxa tyla
Spoken in: Russia 
Region: Sakha
Total speakers: 456,288 (2002 census)[1]
Language family: Altaic[2] (controversial)
 Turkic
  Northern Turkic
   Sakha 
Writing system: Cyrillic alphabet 
Official status
Official language in: Sakha Republic
Regulated by: no official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: sah
ISO 639-3: sah 

Map showing locations of Sakha (dark blue) and Dolgan (blue)

Sakha, or Yakut, is a Turkic language with around 460,000 speakers spoken in the Sakha Republic in the Russian Federation. Its speakers are known as the Sakha or the Yakuts.

Contents

Sakha is a member of the Northern Turkic family of languages, which includes Shor, Tuvan, and Dolgan in addition to Sakha. The Northern Turkic family is a subgroup of the Turkic languages, which some linguists believe to be member of the disputed Altaic language family. [3]

Like Finnish, Hungarian, and Turkish, Sakha has vowel harmony, is agglutinative and has no grammatical gender. Word order is usually Subject Object Verb.

Sakha is spoken mainly in the Sakha Republic. It is also used by ethnic Sakha in Khabarovsk Region and a small diaspora in other parts of the Russian Federation, Turkey, and other parts of the world. Dolgan, a close relative of Sakha, considered by some a dialect, is spoken by Dolgans in Krasnoyarsk Region. Sakha is widely used as a lingua franca by other ethnic minorities in the Sakha Republic - more Dolgans, Evenks, Evens and Yukagirs speak Yakut than their own languages. About 8% of the people of other ethnicities than Yakut living in Sakha claimed knowledge of Yakut language during the 2002 census.[4]

One characteristic feature of Sakha is vowel harmony. For example, if the first vowel of a Sakha word is a front vowel, the second and other vowels of the same word are usually the same vowel or another front vowel: кэлин (kelin) "back": э (e) is open unrounded front, и (i) is close unrounded front.

Consonant phonemes of Sakha
Bilabial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Plosives p b t d c ɟ k ɡ
Nasals m n ɲ ŋ
Fricatives s x ɣ h
Tap ɾ
Approximant j, j̃
Lateral
approximants
l

Vowel phonemes of Sakha
Short Long Diphthong
Close Open Close Open
Front Unrounded i e ie
Rounded y ø øː
Back Unrounded ɯ a ɯː ɯa
Rounded u o uo

Main article: Sakha writing system

Sakha is written using the Cyrillic script: the modern Sakha alphabet, established in 1939 by the Soviet Union, consists of the usual Russian characters but with 5 additional letters: Ҕҕ, Ҥҥ, Өө, Һһ, Үү.

Сахалыы сурук-бичигэ

Cyrillic Name IPA
А а /a/
Б б /b/
В в /v/ found only in Russian loanwords [3]
Г г /ɡ/
Ҕ ҕ /ɣ, ʁ/
Д д /d/
Дь дь /ɟ/
Е е /e, je/ found only in Russian loanwords
Ё ё /jo/ found only in Russian loanwords
Ж ж /ʒ/ found only in Russian loanwords
З з /z/ found only in Russian loanwords
И и /i/
Й й йот /j, j̃/ Nasalization of the glide is not indicated in the orthography
К к /k, q/
Л л /l/
М м /m/
Н н /n/
Ҥ ҥ /ŋ/
Нь нь /ɲ/
О о /o/
Ө ө /ø/
П п /p/
Р р /ɾ/
С с /s/
Һ һ ha /h/
Т т /t/
У у /u/
Ү ү /y/
Ф ф /f/ found only in Russian loanwords
Х х ха /x/
Ц ц /ʦ/ found only in Russian loanwords
Ч ч /c/
Ш ш /ʃ/ found only in Russian loanwords
Щ щ /ɕː/ found only in Russian loanwords
Ъ ъ кытаатыннарар бэлиэ /◌./ found only in Russian loanwords
Ы ы /ɯ/
Ь ь сымнатыы бэлиэтэ /◌ʲ/ found only in Russian loanwords
Э э /e/
Ю ю /ju/ found only in Russian loanwords
Я я /ja/ found only in Russian loanwords

The typical word order can be summarized as subject adverb - object - verb; possessor - possessed; noun - adjective.

Nouns have plural and singular forms. The plural is formed with the suffix /-LAr/, which may surface as [-лар (-lar)], [-лэр (-ler)], [-лөр (-lør)], [-лор (-lor)], [-тар (-tar)], [-тэр (-ter)], [-төр (-tør)], [-тор (-tor)], [-дар (-dar)], [-дэр (-der)], [-дөр (-dør)], [-дор (-dor)], [-нар (-nar)], [-нэр (-ner)], [-нөр (-nør)], or [-нор (-nor)], depending on the preceding consonants and vowels. The plural is used only when referring to a number of things collectively, not when specifying an amount. Nouns have no gender, but the pronoun system distinguishes between human and non-human in the third person, using кини (kini) to refer to human beings and ол (ol) to refer to all other things. [5]

Personal pronouns in Sakha distinguish between first, second, and third persons and singular and plural number.

Singular Plural
1st мин (min) биһиги (bihigi)
2nd эн (en) эһиги (ehigi)
3rd кини (kini) кинилэр (kiniler)

Question words in Sakha remain in-situ; they do not move to the front of the sentence. Sample question words include: туох (tuox) "what", ким (kim) "who", хайдах (xaydax) "how", хас (xas) "how much", ханна (xanna) "where", and ханнык (xannɯk) "which".

The first printing in Yakut was a part of a Nicolaas Witsen's book published in 1692 in Amsterdam.

  1. ^ Russian Census 2002. Распространенность владения языками (кроме русского)(Knowledge of languages other than Russian)(Russian)
  2. ^ "[1] Ethnologue"
  3. ^ a b Krueger, John R. (1962). Yakut Manual. Bloomington: Indiana U Press. 
  4. ^ Russian Census 2002. 6. Владение языками (кроме русского) населением отдельных национальностей по республикам, автономной области и автономным округам Российской Федерации (Knowledge of languages other than Russian by the population of republics, autonomous oblast and autonomous districts) (Russian)
  5. ^ Kirişçioğlu, M. Fatih (1999). Saha (Yakut) Türkçesi Grameri. Ankara: Türk Dil Kurumu. ISBN 975-16-0587-3. 

Sakha-English Dictionary

v  d  e
Turkic languages
Oghur Bulgar† | Chuvash | Hunnic† | Khazar† | Turkic Avar†
Uyghur Old Turkic† | Aini²| Chagatay† | Ili Turki | Lop | Uyghur | Uzbek
Kypchak Altay | Baraba | Bashkir | Crimean Tatar¹ | Cuman† | Karachay-Balkar | Karaim | Karakalpak | Kazakh | Kipchak† | Krymchak | Kumyk | Kyrgyz | Nogai | Old Tatar† | Tatar | Urum¹
Oghuz Afshar | Azerbaijani | Crimean Tatar¹ | Gagauz | Khorasani Turkish | Ottoman Turkish† | Pecheneg† | Qashqai | Salar | Turkish | Turkmen | Urum¹
Arghu Khalaj
Northeastern Chulym | Dolgan | Fuyü Gïrgïs | Khakas | Shor | Tofa | Tuvan | Western Yugur | Sakha/Yakut
Notes: ¹Listed in more than one group, ²Mixed language, ³Disputed, †Extinct
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