Search results
Suku-suku Finno-Ugrik dan suku-suku Samoyedik. Suku-suku Finno-Ugrik adalah sekumpulan suku bangsa yang sebagian besar menuturkan bahasa-bahasa Finno-Ugrik dan hidup di Eropa Utara, beberapa wilayah di Rusia Eropa bagian utara, wilayah Volga, Siberia Barat, Eropa Timur dan Eropa Tengah.
100-word Swadesh lists for certain Finno-Ugric languages can be compared and contrasted at the Rosetta Project website: Finnish, Estonian, Hungarian, and Erzya. Speakers. The four largest ethnic groups that speak Finno-Ugric languages are the Hungarians (14.5 million), Finns (6.5 million), Estonians (1.1 million), and Mordvins (0.85
- None
- UralicFinno-Ugric
Rumpun bahasa Finno-Ugrik adalah pengelompokan tradisional semua bahasa dalam rumpun bahasa Uralik kecuali bahasa Samoyed. Hal ini telah diketahui bersama bahwa bahasa yang merupakan subfamili rumpun bahasa Uralik didasarkan pada kriteria yang dirumuskan pada abad ke-19, meski teori itu sering dikritik oleh ahli bahasa kontemporer. [1]
Rumpun bahasa Finnik atau Balto-Finnik ( Finnik Baltik) [a] [3] membentuk sebuah cabang dari rumpun bahasa Ural yang dituturkan di sekitar Laut Baltik oleh suku-suku Finnik Baltik. Bahasa-bahasa ini dituturkan oleh 7 juta jiwa, yang utamanya hidup di Finlandia dan Estonia .
In the Indo-European word, *-os (> Finno-Ugric *-as) is a masculine nominative singular ending, but it is quite meaningless in Uralic languages. This shows that the whole word was borrowed as a unit and is not part of the original Uralic vocabulary.
MeaningProto-indo-europeanIndo-european ExamplesProto-uralicfirst person singular*-mSanskrit -m, Old Persian -m, Latin -m, ...*-mfirst person plural*-meLithuanian -me, Sanskrit -ma, Greek -men.*-mesecond person singular*-s (active)Sanskrit -s, Greek -s, Latin -s, Gothic ...*-tsecond person singular*-tHa (perfect)Greek -tʰa, Sanskrit -tʰa.*-t- None
- Eurasia
- Proposed language family
Pan-Finnicism ( Finnish: Panfennismi ), also known as Pan-Fennicism or sometimes even referred to as Finno-Ugrism or even Heimoaate [1] ( transl. "Kinship Ideology/Thought") is a pan-nationalist idea which advocates for the political or economic unification of the Finno-Ugric peoples.
The name "Finn (ic)" is an ancient exonym with scarce historical references and therefore rather questionable etymology. Its probable cognates, like Fenni, Phinnoi, Finnum, and Skrithfinni / Scridefinnum appear in a few written texts starting from about two millennia ago in association with peoples of northern Europe.