信息不完整 “Aspects of the Grammar of Eastern Khanty” . Andrey Filchenko (2010) TSPU-Press
极危
60 percent certain, based on the evidence available
~480
<1000
Most speakers over 50 years old
"...followed by mandatory education and the rapid development of local oil and gas reserves, there are today only about 20 Vasyugan Khanty, 10 Alexandrovo, 150 Vakh and 300 Yugan Khanty speakers left on the rivers."
传承情况
更多关于活力的信息
"The recent survey... shows that Eastern Khanty dialects... [are] being used increasingly less as means of daily communication. There are almost no child speakers, and only the older generation preserves knowledge of the language. There are, however, members of the Khanty communities, who maintain a strong ethnic identity, and who initiate and welcome efforts aiming at preserving their cultural and linguistic heritage, and are eager to assist linguistic researchers in the area."
语言环境评论
"The attempts at developing teaching materials inKhanty are based mostly on the western dialects.... Efficacy of attempted mother tongue education suffered from students'and teachers' alienation from the existing teaching aids, as they are based on other dialects, which differ considerably from those spoken locally
正字法
"Except for a small textbook in Surgut dialect, Eastern Khanty is unwritten, and there is no educational instruction in it as the native language. Standardization of the language has not occurred."
地点
Tomsk oblast', Russia
其他评论
"The Eastern Khanty (a.k.a. Ostjak) reside to the east of the Ural Range along the south-western tributaries of the Ob' river: Vasyugan and Yugan, and the eastern tributary Vakh."
信息不完整 “Red Book on Endangered Languages: Northeast Asia” . Juha Janhunen; Tapani Salminen (2000)
高危
80 percent certain, based on the evidence available
<1,000
<5,000
probably none
probably none
mean age of youngest speakers: unknown, but hardly less than 40 years
信息日期
1993
使用者趋势
传承情况
该群体使用的其他语言
Russian
Central Selkup
语言环境评论
degree of speakers' competence: mainly rudimentary, under strong interference from Russian, the principal language of the remaining speakers; there is also some traditional bilingualism between Eastern Khanty and Central Selkup
地点
Russia
地点描述
along the western and eastern tributaries to the middle Ob, from the Vasyugan to the Pim
信息不完整 “Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger” . Christopher Moseley (ed.) (2010) UNESCO Publishing
信息不完整 “"Multimedia documentation of the endangered Vasyugan and Alexandrovo Khanty dialects of Tomsk region in Siberia" HRELP Abstract” . Andrey Filchenko (2007)
高危
20 percent certain, based on the evidence available