Yakut
[également appelé Sakha, якутский язык, Saxa tıla]Classification : Turkic
·vulnérable
Classification : Turkic
·vulnérable
Sakha, якутский язык, Saxa tıla, Саха тыла, Yakutça, Yakut Türkçesi, Saha Türkçesi, Yakoute, Yakuto, 雅库特语, 야쿠트어, サハ語 |
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Turkic, Siberian Turkic, Lena Turkic |
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ISO 639-3 |
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sah |
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En tant que csv |
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Recherche au sein de la communauté OLAC (Open Language Archives Community) |
Informations incomplètes “Contact in the prehistory of the Sakha (Yakuts): Linguistic and genetic perspectives” . Pakendorf, Brigitte (2007) LOT
approximately 93% of Sakha know their heritage language
Russian
"Language retention among the Sakha is high – according to the 2002 population census, approximately 93% of Sakha know their heritage language, and only approximately 87% know Russian; among the rural population this figure is even lower, with only approximately 83% of the Sakha claiming a knowledge of Russian (Federal’naja služba gosudarstvennoj statistiki 2004: 19, 24, 113, 130).... In Sakha rural settlements, older people are sometimes still monolingual Sakha speakers, as are children under school age, notwithstanding the fact that often the only television channels that can be received in such settlements are Russian (personal observation)." (p.2)
the autonomous Republic Sakha (Yakutia)
Informations incomplètes “Über die Sprache der Jakuten” . Otto Böhtlingk (1964) Indiana University Publications
Informations incomplètes “Grammatika sovremennogo yakutskogo literaturnogo yazyka” . L.N. Kharitonov, et al. (1982) Nauka Publishing
Informations incomplètes “The Languages of the Soviet Union” (42-78) . Bernard Comrie (1981) Cambridge University Press
Informations incomplètes “Russian Population Census 2010” .