Everything about The Chukchi Language totally explained
The
Chukchi language (лыгъоравэтлъан йилйил,
lyg"oravetl'an jiljil) also known as
Luoravetlan,
Chukot and
Chukcha is a
Palaeosiberian language spoken by
Chukchi people in the easternmost extremity of
Siberia, mainly in
Chukotka Autonomous Okrug. According to the
Russian Census of 2002, about 7,700 of the 15,700 Chukchi people speak Chukchi; knowledge of the Chukchi language is decreasing, and most Chukchis now speak the
Russian language (fewer than 500 report not speaking Russian at all). Chukchi is closely related to
Koryak, which is spoken by about half that number. The language together with Koryak,
Kerek,
Alutor and
Itelmen forms the
Chukotko-Kamchatkan language family.
The Chukchi and
Koryaks form a cultural unit with an economy based on
reindeer herding and both have autonomy within the
Russian Federation.
The ethnonym
Chukchi (also spelled
Chukchee) is an anglicized form of the
Russian ethnonym (singular
Chukcha, plural
Chukchi). This came into Russian from
Čävča, the term used by the Chukchis'
Tungusic-speaking neighbors, itself a rendering of the Chukchi word /ʧawʧəw/, which in Chukchi means "a man who is rich in reindeer". The Chukchis' term for themselves is /ɬəɣʔorawətɬʔat/ (singular /ɬəɣʔorawətɬʔan/), "the real people".
In the
UNESCO Red Book the language is on the
list of endangered languages.
Scope
Many Chukchis are using the language as their primary means of communication, both within the family and while engaged in their traditional agricultural activity (reindeer herding).
The language is also used in media (including
radio and
TV translations), and some
business activities. However, Russian language is increasingly used as the primary means of business and administrative communication, in addition to having an
interlingua status on neighborhood territories inhabited by non-Chukchis Russian citizens, such as Koryaks and Yakuts. Almost all Chukchis speak Russian, although some have a lesser command than others. Chukchi language is used as a primary language of instruction in
elementary school; the rest of secondary education is done in Russian, with Chukchi taught as a subject.
A Chukchi writer,
Yuri Rytkheu (born 1930) has earned a measure of renown in both Russia and Germany, although much of his published work was written in Russian, rather than Chukchi.
Orthography
Until
1931, the Chukchi language had no official orthography, in spite of attempts in the
19th century to write religious texts in it.
At the beginning of the
20th century,
Vladimir Bogoraz discovered specimens of pictographic writing by the Chukchi herdsman
Tenevil. Tenevil's writing system was his own invention, and was never used beyond his immediate family. The first official Chukchi alphabet was devised by
Vladimir Bogoraz in 1931, and was based on the
Latin alphabet:
| А а |
Ā ā |
B b |
C c |
D d |
Е е |
Ē ē |
Ә ә |
| Ә̄ ә̄ |
F f |
G g |
H h |
I i |
Ī ī |
J j |
K k |
| L l |
M m |
N n |
Ŋ ŋ |
O o |
Ō ō |
P p |
Q q |
| R r |
S s |
T t |
U u |
Ū ū |
V v |
W w |
Z z |
| Ь ь |
In
1937, this alphabet, along with all of the other alphabets of the peoples of the USSR, started to be written in
Cyrillic. At first, it was the same as the
Russian alphabet, with the addition of the relic letters
К’ к’ and
Н’ н’. In the 1950s, however, they were replaced by the letters
Ӄ ӄ and
Ӈ ӈ. These newer letters were mainly used in educational texts while the press continued to use the older versions. At the end of the 1980s, the letter
Ԓ ԓ was introduced as a replacement for
Л л. This was intended to reduce confusion with the pronunciation of the Russian letter of the same form. The Chukchi alphabet now stands as follows:
| А а |
Б б |
В в |
Г г |
Д д |
Е е |
Ё ё |
Ж ж |
| З з |
И и |
Й й |
К к |
Ӄ ӄ |
Ԓ ԓ (Л л) |
М м |
Н н |
| Ӈ ӈ |
О о |
П п |
Р р |
С с |
Т т |
У у |
Ф ф |
| Х х |
Ц ц |
Ч ч |
Ш ш |
Щ щ |
Ъ ъ |
Ы ы |
Ь ь |
| Э э |
Ю ю |
Я я |
' |