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Topic: Komi-Permyak language


    Note: these results are not from the primary (high quality) database.


  
 World congress on language policies
Language policy is part and parcel of national policy as a whole, since general attitude to ethnoses and ethnic groups determines a set of measures taken by the state, political parties, classes, social groups to change or preserve the existing distribution of languages, to introduce new or preserve existing linguistic norms.
Language policy, along with ethnic self-consciousness, value orientations of native speakers of a certain language, are subjective factors of the concrete language situation, since they exert deliberate impact of society upon the functions of the language.
The national language of the RF - the language of national unity is one of the Slavic languages, the mother tongue of an absolute majority of the population - the Russian language.
www.linguapax.org /congres/taller/taller3/Mikhalchenko.html

  
 cars - Komi-Permyak language
Komi-Permyak language, a language spoken in Permyakia, Russia.
www.carluvers.com /cars/Komi-Permyak

  
 Finno-Ugric language
Unlike most of the languages spoken in Europe, the Finno-Ugric languages are not part of the Indo-European family of languages.
The " Urheimat " of the proto-language of the modern Finno-Ugric languages, the so-called Proto-Finno-Ugric, is believed to be on the western side of the Ural mountains 5000 years ago.
There have been attempts to relate them to the Indo-European languages, but the about 40 similarities are not enough.
www.brainyencyclopedia.com /encyclopedia/f/fi/finno_ugric_language.html

  
 Komi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Komi language —languages of the Komi peoples (
Komi (Arcadia), Greece —a village in northern Arcadia in
Komi —a short name for komidashi —a rule used in the board game Go.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Komi

  
 Komi-Zyrian language
It is disputed whether Zyrian is a separate language or a dialect of Komi, because of its affinity to Komi-Permyak language.
Komi-Zyrian, or simply Zyrian or Zyryan, is a Finno-Ugric language of the Permic branch spoken by the Komi-Zyrians' ethnic group in Komi Republic and some other parts of Russia.
It was written in the form of Old Permic language for liturgical purposes as early as the 14th century in the Old Permic alphabet (Abur).
www.sciencedaily.com /encyclopedia/komi_zyrian_language

  
 PERMYAK KOMIS
The use of the Permyak language has been deleted from communal use, it is not taught even in many of the so-called “national” schools.
The Permyak Komis include also the Yazva Komis or Krasnovishersk Permyaks, who live in the north-western part of the Perm Province.
1930s — most of the Permyak intellectuals, including the authors of the Permyak Komi school textbooks, scientists, researchers and pioneers of the Permyak Komi national literature, are killed or detained in prison camps;
www.suri.ee /eup/permyak.html

  
 Komi-Permyak language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
It is written using the Komi Cyrillic alphabet and is co-official with
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Komi-Permyak_language

  
 Komi Fonts, Komi Reference, Komi Software - Mac, Komi Software - Windows, Komi System,
Komi is another of the Finno-Ugric languages spoken in north-eastern European Russia.
Traditionally they were known as Zyrian and Permyak, but in the Soviet era the former has been designated Komi-Zyrian or simply Komi, the latter Komi-Permyak.
Komi-Permyak is spoken by about 275,000 people in what is now the Komi Republic (capital: Syktyvkar), which extends over a large area (the size of California) eastward to the North Ural Mountains and north past the Artic Circle.
www.worldlanguage.com /Languages/Komi.htm?CalledFrom=210325

  
 Komi language - Art History Online Reference and Guide
The Komi language, also known as Zyrian, or Komi-Zyrian, is a language spoken by the Komi peoples in the northeastern European part of Russia.
Komi belongs to the Finno-Permic group of the Finno-Ugric languages.
Permyak (also called Komi-Permyak) is spoken in Komi-Permyak, where it has literary status.
www.arthistoryclub.com /art_history/Komi_language

  
 Komi-Permyak language - Result for Komi-Permyak language - Meaning of Komi-Permyak language - Definition of Komi-Permyak language - Dictionary of Meaning - www.mauspfeil.net
It is a Autonomous district of the Komi-Permyaks language related to Autonomous district of the Komi-Permyaks and Autonomous district of the Komi-Permyaks.
There you find a list of all editors and the possibility to edit the original text of the article Komi-Permyak language.
It is written using the Komi Autonomous district of the Komi-Permyaks and is co-official with Autonomous district of the Komi-Permyaks in the Komi-Permyak autonomous district.
www.mauspfeil.net /Komi-Permyak_language.html

  
 computer-account-application
Fragments of the Gospel of Luke in the Nanai Language.
Fragments of the Gospel of Luke in the Chukchi Language.
The Gospel of Luke in the Moksha Mordvin Language.
www.ling.helsinki.fi /uhlcs/projects/databank/suihkonen/bib-computer-corpora.html

  
 Komi
Komi The name may refer to Komi Republic Komi peoples Komi-Zyrians Komi-Permyaks Komi language Komi-Zyrian language Komi...
Both Komi languages are written with Russian alp...
Komi-Zyrian language Коми Кыв (Komi Kyv) Komi-Zyrian, or simply Zyrian or Zyr...
www.brainyencyclopedia.com /topics/komi.html

  
 Udmurt language - Iridis Encyclopedia
It is linguistically closest to Komi and Komi-Permyak
Udmurt ( удмурт кыл, udmurt kyl) is a Finno-Ugric language spoken by the Udmurts, native of the Russian constituent republic of Udmurtia, where it is co-official with the Russian language.
Some characters (consonants with diaeresis) are unique to the Udmurt language.
www.iridis.com /Udmurt_language

  
 Usein kysyttyä suomalais-ugrilaisista kielistä
In fact, the lack of grammatical gender (FU languages have only one word for "he" and "she"), the lack of a verb for "have" (Finnish uses structures like "there is a book with me" for "I have a book") or the lack of a grammatically expressed future tense are universally quite frequent phenomena.
The Volgaic and Permian languages have hundreds of thousands of speakers, but most of the fluent speakers are elderly and live in the countryside; many urban and young people tend to give up their language in favour of Russian.
Languages are genetically related if their common characteristics - words, affixes, features - can be explained as inheritance from a common proto-language.
www.helsinki.fi /~jolaakso/fufaq.html

  
 Utrecht Typological Database - Aspect (working title)
Particular attention will be paid to agreement morphology in a number of typologically distinct languages, and its relation to the occurrence of empty subjects, empty objects and the syntact ic position of the verb in the clause.
It is a traditional idea that some syntactic properties of languages are related to the structure of their inflectional paradigms.
Furthermore, a subset of 200 languages conform to the sample for the World Atlas of Language Structure project of the Max Planck Institute in Leipzig.
www.language-archives.org /data/tdproject.xml

  
 EXPO
They speak the Komi-Permyak language of the Finno-Ugric group of the Altay family.
Their written language is based on the Russian alphabet.
www.expo2005.ru /en/nation.php?id=53

  
 Komi
The Komi live in the Komi Republic and the Komi-Permyaks live in the Komi-Permyak Autonomous Area; both were formerly administrative divisions of the Russian SFSR.
The enlightener of the Komi and a saint of the Orthodox Eastern Church was Stephen of Perm (1340–96).
Structure of the moose population and its utilization in the Komi Republic.
www.infoplease.com /ce6/society/A0828054.html

  
 Phrasebase™ - KOMI LANGUAGE Facts and Information - KOMI Statistics
Komi is used in the Institute for Language and Literature of the Komi branch of the Academy of Science.
ZYRIAN: Komi ASSR, 60' N. Lat., nearly to the Arctic Ocean.
Countries where spoken : PERMYAK: 116,000 mother tongue speakers (77%) out of an ethnic population of 151,000 (1979 census).
www.phrasebase.com /languages/index.php?cat=178

  
 Origin of Finnish and related languages — Virtual Finland
In the east, the domain of the language family extends to the Yenisey river and the Taimyr peninsula, and the farthest outpost to the south comprises the Hungarians, in the Carpathian basin of Central Europe.
The Baltic-Finnic language group is one of the westernmost branches of the Finno-Ugrian language family; only the Sámi territory in western and northern Norway extends further west.
Many minor Saami languages are on the verge of extinction (Ume and Pite Saami in Sweden and Akkala Saami in Russia), while the speakers of many others are numbered in dozens or hundreds (Southern Saami in Sweden and Norway, Inari and Skolt Saami in Finland, and Ter Saami in Russia).
virtual.finland.fi /finfo/english/langua.html

  
 The Bible in Komi: Permyak
Komi: Permyak is spoken in Russia by 116,000 people.
www.worldscriptures.org /pages/komipermyak.html

  
 Minority languages of Russia on the Net - Komi-Permyak
In the beginning of the 1930's the Komi-Permyak language was switched into the Latin, and at the end of the decade - Cyrillic alphabet.
Before 1917 textbooks were printed in various dialects of the Komi-Permyak language (Cyrillic alphabet).
Komi-Permyak language - one of the Finno-Ugric languages (Permic group).
www.belti.msk.ru /peoples/eng_permjak.html

  
 MSN Encarta - Search Results - Komi-Permyak
The ancestors of the Komi-Permyak people lived in the region from the end of the 1st millennium ad.
classification among Finno-Ugric languages, classification among Uralic languages
encarta.msn.com /Komi-Permyak.html

  
 Minority languages of Russia on the Net - Finno-Ugric languages
The modern Komi, Mari, Mordovian and Udmurt literary languages were formed during the first decades of the 20th century.
The so-called Old Permic written language in Komi existed in the 14th-16th centuries.
New literary languages are recently being developed for the Karelians, Veps and the Lapps of the Kola Peninsula.
www.belti.msk.ru /peoples/eng_finnougr.html

  
 Komi-Permyak Autonomous Okrug --  Britannica Student Encyclopedia
division of the Finno-Ugric branch of the Uralic language family, consisting of the Udmurt (Votyak), Komi (Zyryan), and Permyak (Komi-Permyak) languages.
Kudymkar; formed 1925 for the Komi-Permyak branch of the Finno-Ugrian Komi people; predominant landscapes are floodplain meadows, peat bogs, and dense, swampy forest (taiga); only important economic activity is timbering; limited agriculture; rye and oats; pop.
Kudymkar; formed 1925 for the Komi-Permyak branch of the Finno-Ugrian Komi people; predominant landscapes are floodplain meadows,...
www.britannica.com /ebi/article?tocId=9328521

  
 Komi-Permyak Autonomous Okrug
The Komi-Permyak language belongs to the Permian group of the Finno-Ugric branch of the Uralo-Altaic language family.
Komi-Permyak Autonomous Okrug is located in the northwestern corner of Perm Oblast and borders with the Komi Republic to the north.
The Komi-Permyak, for whom the okrug was established in 1925, is an ethnic subgroup of the Komi people, to whom they are closely related.
www.hf.uib.no /Andre/vesti/KOMI-PER.HTM

  
 Google Search: udmurt_language
???, udmurt kyl) is a Finno-Ugric language spoken
udmurt_language.networklive.org

  
 Uralic (Finno-Ugrian) languages
Other changes are that Karelian and Olonetsian on the one hand, and Komi and Permyak on the other are listed separately, and the idioms subsumed under Mari, Mansi, Khanty, Enets, Nenets, and Selkup are included in the list, as they are in fact separate languages rather than "major dialects".
Also mentioned are for the first time outlying dialects Yazva Komi and Csángó Hungarian as well as Võro-Seto which is in the process of becoming a separate language, all marked with a + sign.
Furthermore, it has to be remembered that many of the alleged speakers actually prefer some other language(s) in their daily life.
www.helsinki.fi /~tasalmin/fu.html

  
 fREADME-Komi-Permyak.html
The sub-directory /permyak/ consists of the sub-directories /New-Testament/ and /Books-of-Children/.
The texts have been donated to the University of Helsinki by the Institute for Bible Translation (Helsinki and Stockholm) to be used as research material.
Reference to the corpora has to be made in the papers in which they are used as a source.
www.ling.helsinki.fi /uhlcs/readme-all/fREADME-Komi-Permyak.html

  
 PERMYAK
Source: "Jesus Friend of Children" in Komi-Permyak language, Institute for Bible Translation, Stockholm - Helsinki, 1997
Source: "Bible Stories" in Komi-Permyak language, Institute for Bible Translation, Stockholm - Helsinki, 2002
www.christusrex.org /www1/pater/JPN-permyak.html

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