Ural-Altaic languages

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The Ural-Altaic language family (also known as Uralo-Altaic) is an hypothetical grouping of the Uralic and Altaic languages into one field. The word Turanian has also been used to describe the Ural-Altaic field and its people. The term is from the Transoxiana, Turān.

The Ural-Altaic grouping is speculative, as it has not been proven to the satisfaction of most linguists that there is any genetic relationship between the two language families, and even the existence of the Altaic group as one family is today questioned. This could be for lack of analytic opportunity, however. On the other hand, particularly the southern and central Uralic languages have been in extensive contact with Turkic languages, which introduces a risk of interpreting exchange arising from contact as a genetic relationship.

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Most modern linguists argue that Uralic and Altaic have not been shown to bear any exclusive genetic relation (if the latter, as understood today, should itself be considered a language family at all), ascribing proposed similarities to coincidence or mutual influence resulting in "convergence". Some suggest the two families may instead be related through a larger family, either Nostratic or Eurasiatic, within which Uralic and Altaic are no more closely related to each other than either of them is related to any of this macrofamily's other members, e.g. Uralic with Indo-European or Altaic with Indo-European.

Others point out strong similarities in the pronouns of Uralic and Altaic languages. Other observations are that both Uralic and Altaic languages follow the principle of vowel harmony, are agglutinative (stringing suffixes, prefixes or both onto a single root), employ SOV word order, and lack grammatical gender (see noun class). However, typological similarities such as these do not, on their own, constitute evidence of a genetic relationship, as they may be a result of regional influence or coincidence.

The vowel harmony argument is sometimes used to justify the necessity of the Ural-Altaic family, but vowel harmony is found in other, unrelated language groups. Moreover, vowel harmony is a typological feature, and as such does not serve as evidence for genetic relationship.

There are also political motivations that have been unscientifically used to support or oppose this hypothesis. The Swedes had a political motivation to present the Sami as "Asian", or an "inferior race". A linguistic connection was integral in demonstrating an Asian ancestry. Particularly important proponents of the politically motivated idea of "Finnic race" were Herman Lundborg and Gustav von Düben. Their work was based on craniometry: by finding "childlike" or neotenous features in the skulls of Uralic-speaking peoples, they reached the conclusion that Uralic speakers are racially Mongolian, and recommended policies of colonization, eugenics and racial hygiene. [1] This was supported by the Swedish government: the government funded the Institute of Race Biology, where Lundborg produced his research. The Ural-Altaic theory was the consensus in the 19th century but is no longer widely accepted. Though the direction of language and population spread do not necessarily correlate to each other DNA studies have shown that despite the geographic isolation of the Finnish and Sami peoples they are unambiguously related to other Europeans. The existence of a Ural-Altaic stock cannot be expressed genetically but rather by non-genetic social factors, the field of genetic science is often confused with the topic of language origins for the purpose of creating sensationalistic rhetoric for both sides of the debate and often to support racial propaganda.

The Uralic languages family tree has three main groups, Finno-Permic, Ugric, and Samoyedic languages, and a relationship to Yukaghir languages has been proposed.

The language families classed as Altaic always include the Turkic languages, Mongolic languages, and Tungusic languages. Some have proposed, largely on the basis of certain typological similarities, that Korean and the Japonic languages might be highly divergent Altaic languages, but this hypothesis is even more controversial than the more limited one that would group only the Turkic, Mongolic, and Tungusic languages together.

  • Korean is a language isolate.

  • Vago, R. M. (1972). Abstract vowel harmony systems in Uralic and Altaic languages. [Bloomington]: Indiana University Linguistics Club.
  • Shirokogoroff, S. M. (1931). Ethnological and linguistical aspects of the Ural-Altaic hypothesis. Peiping, China: The Commercial Press.

  1. ^ Niclas Wahlgren. Något om rastänkandet i Sverige. [1]
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