Samoyedic languages at the beginning of the 20th century
Current geographic distribution of Samoyedic languages in Russia
Geographical distribution of Samoyedic languages in the 17th century (hatched) and in the 20th century (solid).
TheSamoyedic (/ˌsæməˈjɛdɪk,-mɔɪ-/)[1] orSamoyed languages (/ˈsæməˌjɛd,-mɔɪ-/)[2][3] are spoken around theUral Mountains, in northernmostEurasia, by approximately 25,000 people altogether, accordingly called theSamoyedic peoples. They derive from a common ancestral language calledProto-Samoyedic, and form a branch of theUralic languages. Having separated perhaps in the last centuries BC,[4] they are not a diverse group of languages, and are traditionally considered to be anoutgroup, branching off first from the other Uralic languages.
The termSamoyedic is derived from the Russian termsamoyed (Russian:самоед) originally applied only to theNenets people and later extended to other related peoples.
One of the theories supposes that the term is interpreted by some ethnologists asoriginating somewhat derogatorily from Russiansamo-yed, literally meaning 'self-eater' (the word has been interpreted by foreign travelers as an allegation ofcannibalism).[5][6]
Another suggestion for the term's origin is a corruption of the expressionsaam-edne, meaning "Land of theSaams".[7]
The wordSamodeic[8] has been proposed as an alternative by some ethnologists.[5]
In modern Russian the words самодийцы/самодийские (samodiytsy/samodiyskie), i.e., "samodians"/"samodian" are used for this ethnic grouping and the corresponding area of research is called"samodistika", i.e., "samodistics".
The word "самоед/samoyed" also refers in Russian to an excessively introspective or self-disparaging person i.e., the one engaged inсамоедство/"self-devouring".
Traditionally, Samoyedic languages and peoples have been divided into two major areal groups: Northern Samoyedic (Nenets, Yurats, Enets, Nganasans), and Southern Samoyedic (Selkups) with a further now-extinct subgroup of Sayan-Samoyedics (Kamasins, Mators) named after theSayan Mountains. They are however purely geographical, and do not reflect linguistic relations.
Linguistic genealogical classifications point to an early divergence of Nganasan and (perhaps to a lesser degree) Mator, with Enets–Nenets–Yurats and Kamas–Selkup forming internal branches.[4]
Samoyedic languages are primarilyagglutinative. They havepostpositions and suffixes and do not use articles or prefixes.[9][10] Samoyedic languages also have grammatical evidentiality.[9] Word order in Samoyedic languages is typicallysubject-object-verb (SOV).[11] Below are two sentences in Nenets that demonstrate SOV word order and case in Samoyedic languages:
Nouns in Samoyedic languages do not have gender, but they aredeclined for number (singular,dual, and plural) as well as case.[10] All Samoyedic languages have at least sevennoun cases which may include nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, ablative, locative, instrumental, lative, and/or prolative depending on the language.[10][11]
Many Samoyedic languages have the following three conjugation types: subjective, objective (in which the number of the object is expressed in addition to that of the subject), and reflexive.[11] Verbs in Samoyedic languages have severalmoods, ranging from at least eight in Selkup to at least sixteen in Nenets. Other forms of verbs that can be found in Samoyedic languages are gerunds, participles, and infinitives. Of the Samoyedic languages, only Selkup hasverbal aspect.[9]
Sonorant-obstruent consonant clusters with two consonants, of which the latter consonant is more sonorous than the former, are the most frequently occurring consonant clusters in several Samoyedic languages. Conversely, consonant clusters ending inglides are not found in any Samoyedic languages.[13]
Unlike some other Uralic languages, Samoyedic languages do not have vowel harmony.[11]
Vowelepenthesis is frequently used in Samoyedic languages to break up consonant clusters, particularly in the case of loanwords borrowed from Russian.[13]
Samoyedic languages have experienced significant language contact with Russian to such an extent that members of the Nenets, Selkup, Nganasan, and Enets ethnic groups now often have Russian as a first language, with speakers of Samoyedic languages primarily belonging to elder age groups.[13]
Russian loanwords in Samoyedic languages include: колхоз ("collective farm"), машина ("car"), молоко ("milk"), Москва ("Moscow").[13]
At present, Samoyed territory extends from theWhite Sea to theLaptev Sea, along theArctic shores ofEuropeanRussia, including southernNovaya Zemlya, theYamal Peninsula, the mouths of theOb and theYenisei, and into theTaimyr peninsula in northernmostSiberia.[9] They are contiguous with the trans-UralUgric speakers and the cis-UralKomi to the south, but they are cut off from theBaltic Finns by theRussians in the west. To the east traditionally dwell the northernTurkicSakha. A substantial Samoyed city grew up atMangazeya in the 16th century as a trade city, but was destroyed at the beginning of the 17th century.
The Southern Samoyedic languages, of which only theSelkup language has survived to the present day, historically ranged across a wide territory in central Siberia, extending from the basin of theOb River in the west to theSayan-Baikal uplands in the east. Records up to the 18th century sporadically report several further entities such as "Abakan", "Kagmasin", "Soyot", though there is no clear evidence for any of these constituting separate languages, and all available data appears to be explainable as these having been simply early forms of Kamassian or Mator.[14]
^abJanhunen, Juha (1998). "Samoyedic". In Daniel Abondolo (ed.).The Uralic Languages. London / New York: Routledge. pp. 457–479.
^abMandelstam Balzer, Marjorie (1999).The Tenacity of Ethnicity, a Siberian Saga in Global Perspective. Princeton University Press.ISBN9780691228112.... I use the linguistic term Samodeic here, since it has superseded the more derogatory Samoyedic. In Russian, 'Samoyed' originally meant 'self-eater' before it became a general enthnolinguistic term for the group encompassing Nentsy, Entsy, Nganasan, and Sel'kup (cf. Comrie 1981; Golovnev 1995)...
^Dolgikh, Boris Osipovich (1962)."On the origins of the Nganasans--preliminary remarks". In Michael, H. N. (ed.).Studies in Siberian Ethnogenesis. Anthropology of the North: Translations from Russian Sources. Vol. 2. University of Toronto Press.ISBN9781487591113.... The term 'Samoyeds' had no derogatory meaning (1) and, as can be surmised, represents a modification of the expression 'same-edne' i.e. 'land of the Saams.' This term was transferred from the Saam tribes (which evidently occupied, at one time, the entire north of European Russia) to the Nenets (who appeared there later), and thereafter to the Enets and Ngasans...{{cite encyclopedia}}:ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)