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  1. The Uralic languages ( / jʊəˈrælɪk / yoor-AL-ik ), sometimes called the Uralian languages ( / jʊəˈreɪliən / yoor-AY-lee-ən ), form a language family of 42 [3] languages spoken predominantly in Europe and North Asia.

  2. The Proto-Uralic homeland is the hypothetical place where speakers of the Proto-Uralic language lived in a single linguistic community, or complex of communities, before this original language dispersed geographically and divided into separate distinct languages.

  3. Jul 5, 2024 · The Uralic languages are spoken by more than 25 million people scattered throughout northeastern Europe, northern Asia, and (through immigration) North America. The most demographically important Uralic language is Hungarian, the official language of Hungary.

  4. The Uralic Language Family is made up of several languages spoken in and around the Arctic circle. The most well-known members of this family are Hungarian, Finnish & Estonian.

  5. The term Finno-Ugric, which originally referred to the entire family, is sometimes used as a synonym for the term Uralic, which includes the Samoyedic languages, as commonly happens when a language family is expanded with further discoveries.

  6. Jul 5, 2024 · The Ugric group comprises the geographically most distant members of the family—the Hungarian and Ob-Ugric languages. Finnic contains the remaining languages: the Baltic-Finnic languages, the Sami (or Lapp) languages, Mordvin, Mari, and the Permic tongues. There is little accord on the further subclassification of the Finnic languages ...

  7. Uralic languages, Family of more than 20 languages spoken by some 25 million people in central and northern Eurasia. A primary division is between the Finno-Ugric languages, which account for most of the languages and speakers, and the Samoyedic languages.

  8. The westward spread of Uralic languages happened approximately 4,200-3,900 years ago, first to the central Volga region and later to the Baltic Sea and North Atlantic. The dispersal of the...

  9. A severe and widespread drought beginning about 4,200 years ago cleared the way for a rapid spread of Uralic-speaking people along the Volga and across southwestern Siberia.

  10. Sep 6, 1999 · The Uralic languages geographically cover Scandinavia, Finland, and Eastern Central Europe to Central Russia. As seen in Fig.1, the Uralic family consists of the Finno-Ugric and the Samoyed languages.

  11. Jun 2, 2020 · The Uralic family of languages are spoken across northern regions of Norway and Sweden, throughout Finland, Estonia, Hungary and parts of Russia. Here, we’ll take a look at which modern languages are part of this family, how many people speak them and how similar they are.

  12. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Volga_FinnsVolga Finns - Wikipedia

    The Volga Finns [a] are a historical group of peoples living in the vicinity of the Volga, who speak Uralic languages. Their modern representatives are the Mari people, the Erzya and the Moksha Mordvins, [3] [4] as well as speakers of the extinct Merya, Muromian and Meshchera languages. [5]

  13. Aug 1, 2017 · The Uralic language encompasses a group of 38 languages spoken by an estimated 25 million people in Europe. Hungarian, Finnish, and Estonian have the largest number of speakers of the Uralic languages.

  14. URALIC Centre promotes and protects human rights of indigenous peoples worldwide. We focus on language and cultural rights of. indigenous Uralic (Finno-Ugric and Samoyedic) peoples of Eurasia.

  15. Jul 5, 2024 · One hypothesis is that the original vowel system was essentially like that of Finnish, which has eight vowel sounds: i, ü, u, e, ö, o, ä, a ( ü —spelled y in the standard orthography—and ö are front rounded vowels, as in German; ä is a low front vowel, as a in cat ).

  16. The Uralic languages ( / jʊəˈrælɪk /; sometimes called Uralian languages / jʊəˈreɪliən /) form a language family of 38 [2] languages spoken by approximately 25 million people, predominantly in Northern Eurasia.

  17. Uralic languages are spoken by about 25 million people. The main Uralic languages in number of speakers are Hungarian (12-13 million), Finnish (5.4 million) and Estonian (1.1 million), that are also national and official languages of sovereign states.

  18. May 23, 2021 · Most Uralic ethnic groups are predominantly Haplogroup N and those that aren't are usually genetically similar to immediately adjacent non-Uralic ethnic groups (i.e. Hungarians being mostly R1a or R1b due to primarily being assimilated Slavs and Germans rather than descended from the original Uralic people that the language comes from; Selkups b...

  19. Finno-Ugric languages, group of languages constituting much the larger of the two branches of a more comprehensive grouping, the Uralic languages (q.v.). The Finno-Ugric languages are spoken by several million people distributed discontinuously over an area extending from Norway in the west to the.

  20. The Uralic languages are a language family. They were originally spoken in Eastern Europe and Asia but originated somewhere in eastern Siberia near Lake Baikal . There are two modern main kinds: the Samoyedic languages and the Finno-Ugric languages.

  21. Khanty and Mansi, western Siberian peoples, living mainly in the Ob River basin of central Russia. They each speak an Ob-Ugric language of the Finno-Ugric branch of the Uralic languages. Together they numbered some 30,000 in the late 20th century. They are descended from people from the south Ural.

  22. History of human settlement in the Ural Mountains - Wikipedia. The Ural Mountains extend from the Arctic Ocean in the north to the Ural River and northwestern Kazakhstan in the south over a distance of 1,500 mi (2,400 km), the boundary between Europe and Asia. Human occupation begins in the Paleolithic and continues to this day. [1]

  23. Ural-Altaic, Uralo-Altaic, Uraltaic, or Turanic is a linguistic convergence zone and abandoned language-family proposal uniting the Uralic and the Altaic (in the narrow sense) languages.

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