Central Eurasian Language Grammars project/organising: Difference between revisions
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==== Turkic ==== | ==== Turkic ==== | ||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language="Yurt Tatar" | |||
|UNESCOstatus=definitely endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=12,000 speakers (2005 Арсланов) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Trukhmen ("Caucasian Turkmen") | |||
|UNESCOstatus=definitely endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=10,000 speakers (estimate based on the 2002 census) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Karagash | |||
|AlternateNames=a "Tatar"/"Noghay" dialect | |||
|UNESCOstatus=definitely endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=7,000 speakers (current estimate; not listed separately in the census) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Shor | |||
|URLs=[http://lingsib.iea.ras.ru/en/languages/shor.shtml Shor on lingsib.iea.ras.ru] | |||
|UNESCOstatus=severly endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=6,210 speakers (2002 census) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Saryg/Western Yugur | |||
|UNESCOstatus=severly endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=4,600 speakers (2000 census) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Northern Altay | |||
|AlternateNames=Tuba, Qumandı, Chalkan/Lebedin/Kuu | |||
|URLs=[http://lingsib.iea.ras.ru/en/languages/kumandy.shtml Qumandı on lingsib.iea.ras.ru], [http://lingsib.iea.ras.ru/en/languages/chelkan.shtml Chalkan on lingsib.iea.ras.ru] | |||
|UNESCOstatus=severely endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=speaker data unavailable (not know exactly, but in the range of a few thousand; the 2002 census figures for Tuba [436], Kumandy [1044] and Chalkan [539] are presumably too low, because some speakers may have registered as (Southern) Altay speakers) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Alabugat Tatar | |||
|AlternateNames="outlying dialect of Nogay" | |||
|UNESCOstatus=definitely endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=422 speakers (1987 figure in Арсланов 1988) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Dukha | |||
|AlternateNames=Tuha/Tsaatan | |||
|UNESCOstatus=severely endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=200 speakers (compromise figure based on various sources) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Ili Turk | |||
|UNESCOstatus=severely endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=120 speakers (1980 R. F. Hahn for the Ethnologue) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Urum | |||
|UNESCOstatus=definitely endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=''data unavailable'' | |||
|Estimate=112 speakers | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Tofa / Karagas | |||
|URLs=[http://lingsib.iea.ras.ru/en/languages/tofa.shtml Tofalar/Karagas on lingsib.iea.ras.ru] | |||
|UNESCOstatus=critically endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=40 speakers (specialist estimate; the census figure 378 is inflated) | |||
|who1=David Harrison and/or Greg Anderson ?? | |||
|who2=Rassadin? | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Chulym | |||
|URLs=[http://lingsib.iea.ras.ru/en/languages/chulym.shtml Chulym on lingsib.iea.ras.ru] | |||
|AlternateNames='''Middle Chulym'''? | |||
|UNESCOstatus=critically endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=35 speakers (specialist estimate) | |||
|who1=David Harrison and/or Greg Anderson | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | {{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | ||
|Language=Fu-yü Ğırgıs | |Language=Fu-yü Ğırgıs | ||
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|UNESCOstats=5 speakers (estimate based on various sources reporting less than 10 speakers) | |UNESCOstats=5 speakers (estimate based on various sources reporting less than 10 speakers) | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Khotong | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Kamas Turk | |||
|AlternateNames=an extinct outlying dialect of Khakas spoken by the last speakers of Kamas (Samoyed) | |||
|UNESCOstatus=extinct | |||
|UNESCOstats=0 speakers (recently extinct) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | {{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | ||
|Language=Soyot | |Language=Soyot | ||
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|UNESCOstatus=extinct | |UNESCOstatus=extinct | ||
|UNESCOstats=0 speakers (became extinct in the second half of the twentieth century) | |UNESCOstats=0 speakers (became extinct in the second half of the twentieth century) | ||
|who1=Rassadin? | |||
}} | }} | ||
==== Mongolic ==== | ==== Mongolic ==== | ||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Daur (Hailar) | |||
|UNESCOstatus=definitely endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=5,000 speakers (estimate based on Tsumagari 2003) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Eastern/Shira Yugur | |||
|UNESCOstatus=severely endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=3,000 speakers (based on Junast 1981 estimate of one third of the (then) total population of 9,000 Yugur speaking Shira Yugur) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Khamnigan Mongol | |||
|UNESCOstatus=definitely endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=2,000 speakers of Manchurian dialect (2003 Janhunen estimate) | |||
|Estimate=less than 50 speakers of the Mongolian dialect | |||
|EstimateComment=Shimunek estimate, based on preliminary fieldwork in summer 2006 | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Manchurian Ölöt | |||
|UNESCOstatus=severely endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=1,000 speakers (rough estimate) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Daur (Amur) | |||
|UNESCOstatus=critically endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=(overall vitality: definitely endangered) 400 speakers (2003 Tsumagari estimate) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Khövsgöl Uryangkhay | |||
|UNESCOstatus=critically endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=10 speakers (specialist estimate) | |||
}} | |||
==== Tungusic ==== | ==== Tungusic ==== | ||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Solon | |||
|UNESCOstatus=definitely endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=10,000 speakers (estimate based on the 2000 census and other sources) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Evenki | |||
|UNESCOstatus=severely endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=7,584 speakers (2002 census of the Russian Federation for Evenki; cf. Evenki (Northern Siberia) and Evenki (Sakhalin); possibly also a small number of speakers in Mongolia) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Evenki''' (Manchuria) | |||
|UNESCOstatus=severely endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=4,000 speakers (estimate based on Chinese census figures and other sources; includes all speakers in the official Oroqen nationality as well as under 1,000 speakers of the Manchurian Reindeer Tungus dialect and the approximately 1,000 Evenki-speaking Khamnigan) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Ongkor Solon | |||
|UNESCOstatus=extinct | |||
|UNESCOstats=0 speakers (the last fluent speaker died in the 1990s; there may still be a few people who know some isolated phrases or words) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Manchu (Amur) | |||
|UNESCOstatus=critically endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=10 speakers (compromise figure based on various sources) | |||
}} | |||
==== Uralic ==== | ==== Uralic ==== | ||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Kamas/Koibal | |||
|AlternateNames=Samoyedic | |||
|UNESCOstatus=extinct | |||
|UNESCOstats=0 speakers (the last speaker, Klavdia Plotnikova, died in 1989) | |||
}} | |||
==== IE ==== | ==== IE ==== | ||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Yazgulami | |||
|UNESCOstatus=severely endangered | |||
|UNESCOstats=6,000 speakers (Official statistics, 2003) | |||
}} | |||
{{Infobox Central Eurasian Language | |||
|Language=Ishkashimi | |||
|UNESCOstatus=severely endangered, 1,000 speakers (Approximate estimate, 2006) | |||
}} | |||
|} | |} | ||
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|- | |- | ||
| | | | ||
=== Extinct / Historic === | === Extinct / Historic === | ||
Most of these won't be able to have full grammars written on them, and many won't be able to have more than "present level of knowledge about the language" written. Maybe this volume should be of a slightly different nature. | Most of these won't be able to have full grammars written on them, and many won't be able to have more than "present level of knowledge about the language" written. Maybe this volume should be of a slightly different nature. |
Revision as of 06:26, 31 March 2009
<accesscontrol>CELG</accesscontrol> This page is here for organising thoughts for the Central Eurasian Language Grammars project.
This includes at to-do list and ideas on the name(s) of the volume(s).
The bulk of it, though, is ideas for organising the languages by volume (currently #Medium-density, #Low-density, #Critical, and #Extinct / Historic). Along with the languages in each section are UNESCO declarations about the relative endangerment of the language (including estimates of the number of speakers), and also ideas for who could write a chapter on the language.
There's also a few notes on #Size concerns.
To-do
Organisational stuff
- Figure out criteria for what constitutes what kind of language.
- Decide on whether to include large numbers of Uralic and Iranic languages.
Getting things moving
- Decide on people to contact,
Name
Ideas for what to name the various volumes go here:
- A linguist's {guide/guidebook/handbook/(desk) reference} {to/of/for/on} (the?) {Medium Density/Low Density/Critical/Extinct~Historical} languages of the Central Eurasian Sprachbund.
- A {guide/guidebook/handbook/(desk) reference} {to/of/for/on} (the?) {Medium Density/Low Density/Critical/Extinct~Historical} languages of the Central Eurasian Sprachbund for linguists!
Language Organisation
Languages are broken down by what volume they should occur in, and then genetic affiliation. Ideas for contributors are included with each language, as well as some info from UNESCO's Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger.
Medium-densityTurkic
Mongolic
IE
|
Low-densityThese are low density languages. UNESCO rates most of these languages as unsafe or definitely endangered. Turkic
Mongolic
Tungusic
IE
Other
|
CriticalThese are moribund and maybe recently dead languages. Many are classified by UNESCO as severely endangered, critically endangered, or extinct. Turkic
Mongolic
Tungusic
Uralic
IE
|
Extinct / HistoricMost of these won't be able to have full grammars written on them, and many won't be able to have more than "present level of knowledge about the language" written. Maybe this volume should be of a slightly different nature. Turkic
Mongol-Xianbeic
IE
|
Size concerns
A decent-quality bare-bones grammar of a medium-density language would be a minimum of about 20 pages, and a more full grammar might be as much as 50 pages. This allows for a maximum of 10-20 languages per volume before a volume starts to get too big. On the level of the volume, do we stress quantity of languages, or quality of grammars (probably the former, but we do want to fit everything)? On the level of the individual language/grammar, we probably stress quality over size? These are things which need to be discussed.