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  1. Uralic languages - Languages of the family: The two major branches of Uralic are themselves composed of numerous subgroupings of member languages on the basis of closeness of linguistic relationship. Finno-Ugric can first be divided into the most distantly related Ugric and Finnic (sometimes called Volga-Finnic) groups, which may have separated ...

  2. Jun 2, 2020 · By Sam Wood. June 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. Let’s get started.

  3. Uralic languages - Linguistic characteristics: The linguistic structure of Proto-Uralic has been partially reconstructed by a comparison of the similarities and differences among the known Uralic tongues.

  4. Mar 24, 2022 · The Uralic (Finno-Ugric) languages, the second largest language family in Europe, including three European nation-state languages (Hungarian, Finnish, Estonian) and a number of minority languages in Northern Eurasia, look back to a long history of research.

  5. UraTyp - Welcome to Uralic Areal Typology Online. Uralic Areal Typology Online comprises at the moment UraTyp - a typological database with 360 features mainly on morphology, syntax, and phonology collected from 35 Uralic languages/language varieties.

  6. Dec 5, 2014 · The majority of speakers of Uralic 1 languages live in three discontinuous latitudinal bands stretching from Europe into northern Asia: in the northernmost band (60 o –75 o, ranging from Fennoscandia in the west to the Taimyr peninsula in the east) live speakers of the Saamic, Fennic, Komi, Mansi, Khanty, and Samoyedic branches; in a middle band...

  7. Based on the compiled datasets, new maps of the Uralic languages were finally created. Map visualisations based on the same data have also been published in the handbook. In sum, the geographical database includes the state-of-art knowledge of past and present day distribution of the Uralic languages and their dialects.

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