Academic literature on the topic 'Yakulta language'

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Journal articles on the topic "Yakulta language"

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Vasil’eva, Akulina A. "Translation in Yakutia as a Means of Preservation of the Sakha Language and Culture." Polylinguality and Transcultural Practices 18, no. 4 (December 14, 2021): 358–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.22363/2618-897x-2021-18-4-358-367.

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Translation as a means of cross-cultural communication serves two purposes: 1. making an additional recording of cultural works of a certain people by creating a copy of these works in a language with a higher number of speakers for further introduction of the culture to a wider public; 2. in a situation of widespread bilingualism, preserving a vulnerable language against assimilation by a dominant language by a bilingual translators conscious counteracting of negative interference and their educational activities in the field of ecolinguistics. In comparison with translation from/to foreign languages, these translational purposes acquire other, new aspects when applied to the languages of the different peoples in one country, depending on the language situation, politics, etc. The article examines the practices used in achieving the above-mentioned purposes of Russian-Yakut, Yakut-Russian translation in the Sakha Republic (Yakutia), a constituent entity of the Russian Federation. The article also describes the role of translation in the spiritual culture of the Yakut people as a proxy of literary and artistic innovations capable of shaping and changing the artistic tastes of readers, as well as a means of integration into the world cultural space, enabling the Yakuts to look at their native culture from the point of view of native speakers of the Russian language and members of Russian (including Soviet) culture. Translation as a sphere of close interaction of languages is of interest to the language policy of this multinational constituent of the Russian Federation. With the adoption of federal and republican laws for language issues in the 1990s, the Sakha Republic (Yakutia) started to give more attention to the translation between the two official languages. As a result of years-long observation of bilingual Yakuts speech culture, it has become apparent that researching linguistical issues of translation, drawing up practical recommendations for translation based on scientific research, and then popularizing them among bilingual Yakuts may become a great help in the preservation of the native language. A review of the Sakha Republics (Yakutia) experience in translation development in a multinational constituent of the Russian Federation leads to a conclusion about the importance of the work of a translator (who translates from and to languages of Russia) in standardization of their native language. Such a translator can consciously regulate the mutual influence of the languages in society.
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Efimova, Sardana. "Recognition of Linguistic Characteristics of Bilingual Students when Teaching Japanese at North-Eastern Federal University." SHS Web of Conferences 134 (2022): 00034. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/202213400034.

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The article justifies the need to take into account the linguistic characteristics of bilingual students from among the indigenous inhabitants of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) when teaching the Japanese language at the North-Eastern Federal University named after M.K. Ammosov. The purpose of this study is to analyze the linguistic phenomena of the Japanese and Yakut languages for the effective development of foreign language communicative competence of students. The author of the study revealed a contradiction at the methodological level between the need to train specialists with knowledge of the Japanese language from among the indigenous peoples of Yakutia and the lack of a methodology that takes into account the linguistic characteristics of bilingual students. The research methods were theoretical and empirical methods. Due to the fact that the key feature of teaching foreign languages in the Republic is bilingualism of students, the author of the article analyzed scientific literature on the topic of bilingualism, justified the need to take into account bilingualism of students when teaching Japanese in the national Republic. Difficulties arising in the study of the Japanese language are considered. As a result of the study, the grammatical, lexical and phonetic phenomena of the Japanese language, which have similarities in the Yakut language, have been identified, it is proposed to explain these phenomena in the process of teaching the Japanese language based on the Yakut language.
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Vinokurova, Liliia I. "Рукопись И. П. Сойкконена в аспекте изучения зимней повседневности якутов первой трети ХХ в." Oriental studies 15, no. 3 (October 17, 2022): 501–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.22162/2619-0990-2022-60-3-501-518.

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The Yakutia Comprehensive Research Expedition of 1925–1930 proved a most essential stage in the intellectual discovery of Russia’s Arctic and North. Even nowadays the insights into climate and natural resources, socioeconomic and demographic analyses, living conditions assessments remain as topical. It is noteworthy that the efforts undertaken were largely humanitarian, thus making the collected data on socioeconomic history and everyday life rich enough. Ivan Soikkonen was heading the Yakut Ethnographic Subgroup in 1926–1927, the latter to have been working in the central part of the Republic. Long-term stationary observations resulted in materials covering ethnic culture of the Yakuts, including detailed descriptions of household life, economic activities, and family relations. Soikkonen’s papers are distinguished by ‘photographic’ reflections of rural Yakutia’s local realities typical for earliest decades of the 20th century. Goals. The article aims to introduce into scientific circulation one manuscript by the Russian ethnographer Ivan P. Soikkonen containing ethnographic materials from late 1920s Central Yakutia. Materials. The manuscript titled ‘Winter Day of the Yakut Woman’ is stored together with other unpublished Yakutia-related materials of Soikkonen at the Archive of the Russian Academy of Sciences (St. Petersburg Branch). Results. The expedition materials are invaluable sources for humanities research. The manuscript examined contains interesting facts that shed light on social relations, standards and qualities inherent to rural life refracted in the mirror of everyday gender. The phenomena dominating throughout the to be presented document is that of natural winter cold which limits, restrains, and regulates activities of a Yakut woman in winter everyday life in earliest decades of the past century. Soikkonen’s notes make it possible to examine aspects of the economic determinism among Yakuts to have arisen from natural and climatic conditions of the region in the period prior to the Soviet modernization in interdisciplinary perspectives. Conclusions. The paper is first to publish the manuscript, only some small fragments have been cited before. The article pioneers the interpretation of Soikkonen’s materials from the standpoint of the anthropology of cold. The author comments and transcribes Yakut terms contained in the manuscript.
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Vinokurova, Liliia I. "Рукопись И. П. Сойкконена в аспекте изучения зимней повседневности якутов первой трети ХХ в." Oriental studies 15, no. 3 (October 13, 2022): 501–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.22162/2619-0990-2022-61-3-501-518.

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The Yakutia Comprehensive Research Expedition of 1925–1930 proved a most essential stage in the intellectual discovery of Russia’s Arctic and North. Even nowadays the insights into climate and natural resources, socioeconomic and demographic analyses, living conditions assessments remain as topical. It is noteworthy that the efforts undertaken were largely humanitarian, thus making the collected data on socioeconomic history and everyday life rich enough. Ivan Soikkonen was heading the Yakut Ethnographic Subgroup in 1926–1927, the latter to have been working in the central part of the Republic. Long-term stationary observations resulted in materials covering ethnic culture of the Yakuts, including detailed descriptions of household life, economic activities, and family relations. Soikkonen’s papers are distinguished by ‘photographic’ reflections of rural Yakutia’s local realities typical for earliest decades of the 20th century. Goals. The article aims to introduce into scientific circulation one manuscript by the Russian ethnographer Ivan P. Soikkonen containing ethnographic materials from late 1920s Central Yakutia. Materials. The manuscript titled ‘Winter Day of the Yakut Woman’ is stored together with other unpublished Yakutia-related materials of Soikkonen at the Archive of the Russian Academy of Sciences (St. Petersburg Branch). Results. The expedition materials are invaluable sources for humanities research. The manuscript examined contains interesting facts that shed light on social relations, standards and qualities inherent to rural life refracted in the mirror of everyday gender. The phenomena dominating throughout the to be presented document is that of natural winter cold which limits, restrains, and regulates activities of a Yakut woman in winter everyday life in earliest decades of the past century. Soikkonen’s notes make it possible to examine aspects of the economic determinism among Yakuts to have arisen from natural and climatic conditions of the region in the period prior to the Soviet modernization in interdisciplinary perspectives. Conclusions. The paper is first to publish the manuscript, only some small fragments have been cited before. The article pioneers the interpretation of Soikkonen’s materials from the standpoint of the anthropology of cold. The author comments and transcribes Yakut terms contained in the manuscript.
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Nanzatov, Bair Z., and Vladimir V. Tishin. "Об одном бурятском этнониме в якутской среде: *mököröön > mögürüön ~ möŋürüön ‘Мегюрен’." Монголоведение (Монгол судлал) 14, no. 2 (August 10, 2022): 334–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.22162/2500-1523-2022-2-334-343.

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Introduction. The article examines the onym Megüren (Yak. Möŋürüön < Mögürüön) used as a name of several administrative units in the territory of Yakutia, mainly those included in Meginsky (Yak. Mäŋä) District. The available 17th-century written sources — i.e. earliest Russian-language documents on Yakuts — mention no such onym. And it was E. Pekarsky who already pointed out that the Yakut word mögürüön ‘round-thick’ could be a Mongolic borrowing and, in particular, tended to trace parallels in the Buryat language. Subsequent researchers paid no attention to both the word and the corresponding ethnonym. Goals. The paper aims to analyze origins of the word the ethnic name stems from. Materials and methods. In the absence of early historical accounts, the work explores linguistic sources to investigate phonetic appearances of the Yakut onym in question and comparable data in other languages, primarily Mongolic ones. The latter include not only vocabularies but also materials dealing with personal onomastics. Some folklore elements also prove instrumental in settling the issue. Conclusions. The analysis of phonetic properties inherent to the Yakut ethnonym möŋürüön — in comparison with different forms of the word in Buryat dialects — makes it possible to conclude that it penetrated the Yakut discourse precisely from a language essentially close to western Buryat dialects characterized by the use of /ö/ in the first syllable (/ü/ in standard Buryat) and vowel labialization in non-first syllables. Other features outline the upper chronological limit of the word’s arrival in Yakut to the late 17th century since the observed properties are as follows: /g/ > /ŋ/ assimilation; presence of a long vowel in -VgV- complex, and the intervocalic /g/ from the Mongolic /k/ not yet transformed into the Buryat /χ/
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Bitkeeva, A. N., N. I. Ivanova, and M. Ya Kaplunova. "Yakut Language in Modern Education System of Republic of Sakha (Yakutia): Actors, Debates, New Challenges." Nauchnyi dialog 11, no. 9 (November 30, 2022): 27–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2022-11-9-27-45.

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The issues of the Yakut language functioning — the native language of the majority of the Arctic zone of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) inhabitants — in the field of education are considered. The authors proceed from the fact that, being one of the key areas (along with such regulated areas of communication as the sphere of official office work, the media, science, etc.) necessary for the preservation and sustainable development of the language, the education sector is able to reflect the current language situation in the region, identify risks and threats to the existence of a particular language. The relevance of the study is due to the fact that we are on the eve of the International Decade of Indigenous Languages (2022—2032), proclaimed by the UN General Assembly. The results of a comparative analysis of the status of the Yakut language de jure and de facto based on the analysis of relevant legislative acts and the results of surveys among residents of Yakutia in 2021 are presented. It is concluded that the analysis carried out makes it possible to judge the negative dynamics, which manifests itself in a moderate but continuous decrease in linguistic competence among native speakers of the languages of the peoples of the Russian Federation. It is noted that this situation at the present stage is noticeable only to experts and philologists, but it poses a certain threat to the existence of the language in the long term.
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Gogolev, Anatolii Ignat'evich, Natal'ya Anatol'evna Struchkova, and Kapitolina Maksimovna Yakovleva. "The phenomenon of viability in modern society of the culture of hunters, fishermen and gatherers (on the example of the Essene Yakuts)." Человек и культура, no. 3 (March 2022): 35–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.25136/2409-8744.2022.3.38058.

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The subject of the study is the viability of the tradition of hunters and fishermen in modern society in the conditions of the Extreme North. This article substantiates the features of the viability of the Essene Yakuts in the context of the historical development of mechanisms of self-regulation, adaptation and cultural reproduction. The object of the study is the Essene Yakuts living in the village of Essey of the Evenki National District of the Krasnoyarsk Territory. The Essene Yakuts are a unique local group of Yakuts, as they have preserved the Yakut language and self-consciousness in a modern and non-ethnic environment. In the conditions of the Extreme North, the Yakuts of Essey successfully switched to reindeer husbandry, fishing and hunting, hence the difference in the culture of life support from the Yakuts of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia). The main conclusions of the study are the identification of mechanisms for countering instability, as a result of which a new stability arises. The Essene Yakuts were able to preserve elements of the traditional culture of the Yakuts, while transforming it under new living conditions. And if in the pre-XXI century the Essenes felt their remoteness, then with the development of the information society, mass media, messengers, they joined the "Yakut world", which contributed to the transformation of the unique culture of the Essenes. A special contribution of the authors to the study of the topic is that personal field materials collected in 2014 in Essey and Tura settlements of the Krasnoyarsk Territory were used. The novelty of the research is the revealed mechanisms for the preservation of traditional culture, as well as previously unpublished field materials.
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Popova, M. "Sociocultural Factors Affecting the Development of Speech in Russian of Students in Grades 5–7th of Schools of Indigenous Small Peoples of the North." Scientific Research and Development. Modern Communication Studies 10, no. 3 (June 23, 2021): 38–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/2587-9103-2021-10-3-38-43.

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The article examines the socio-cultural factors that influence the communicative development of students in grades 5-7 of schools of indigenous small-numbered peoples of the North of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia). In the places of residence, the indigenous small-numbered peoples of the North, the population is mixed by national composition and speaks several languages. Students, in addition to Russian and foreign languages, study their native languages. Consequently, most of these students learn 2-3 languages at school. The language of interethnic communication is more often Russian, but in some settlements this function of the language is also performed by the Yakut language. Therefore, one of the necessary conditions for the formation of the Russian civil identity in such conditions is the communicative development of students-representatives of the indigenous small-numbered peoples of the North in Russian.
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Filippova, Sargylana, Varvara Filippova, Karina Pokoyakova, Varvara Filippova, and Aureliia Khikhlun. "Gender representations in associative meaning: The image of woman in Russian and Yakut language consciousnesses." SHS Web of Conferences 134 (2022): 00046. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/shsconf/202213400046.

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The study is focused on representations of the concept ‘woman’ existing in the language consciousnesses of representatives of the Russian and Yakut ethnic groups. The image of ‘woman’ was investigated by means of a free-associative experiment. The associative field, collected in the course of the experiment, is considered as the verbalization of language consciousness that reflects the image of the world, mediated by language. To identify the effect of the social environment as well as the role of native language in the preservation of traditional worldview elements, the associative experiment was conducted among Russians, Urban Yakuts (for whom Russian was the main or only language), and Rural Yakuts (who speak Yakut). The conclusions of our research are the following: the components of the associative meanings of the three experimental groups overlap due to commonalities in traditions and gender stereotypes existing in Russian and Yakut cultures. However, some responses of Rural Yakuts were specific for that group, showing that they preserved some elements of traditional perceptions of ‘woman’ in comparison with Urban Yakuts. Thus, we think that the usage of the ancestral language and the rural way of life contribute to the preservation and retention of traditional worldview elements.
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Bragina, Daria Grigorevna. "About Modern Factors of Yakut Identity at the Turn of the XX–XXI Centuries." Ethnic Culture 4, no. 3 (September 27, 2022): 12–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.31483/r-103550.

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In the conditions of the historically established ethnic diversity in the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia), the complex development of market relations and the strengthening of the role of the ethnic factor, the problems of ethno-social adaptation of the indigenous population arises. The purpose of the article is to study the structure of a person's self-identification and to research various forms of identity such as ethno-cultural, linguistic and ethnic. One of the main sources for studying the problems of ethnicity was both various statistical materials, data from an ethno-sociological survey, and field ethnographic materials obtained by the author of the article in the course of expeditionary and stationary work in the uluses of the republic over the last quarter of the XX century – the beginning of the XXI century. When writing the work, the author applied both methods of field research in order to collect initial material, as well as theoretical and methodological ones. The article concludes that if there is a problem with the functioning of the Yakut language and its loss by a part of the urban Yakut population, it does not lead to the loss of Yakut identity. On the contrary, partly the loss of their native language by people of Yakut nationality, as it turned out, leads to the strengthening of their ethno-cultural identity. The dynamic of the number of Yakuts shows that the ethnic factor plays an important role in the identification of a person. The results of the work confirm the thesis that ethnicity, compensating for the weakening of civic identity, becomes a defining stratifying category, acquiring the ethnopolitical rank. In general, despite the influence of various factors, the materials of ethno-sociological studies in Yakutia showed a high degree of manifestation of both ethnic and ethno-cultural identity, and partly linguistic.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Yakulta language"

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Coșobea, Timeea. "“Asia as Method” Now and Then : Investigating the Critical Concept of Inter-Asia Referencing." Thesis, Stockholms universitet, Institutionen för Asien-, Mellanöstern- och Turkietstudier, 2017. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-147570.

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Books on the topic "Yakulta language"

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Vasilʹev, I︠U︡ I. Türkçe-Sahaca (Yakutça) sözlük. Ankara: Atatürk Kültür, Dil ve Tarih Yüksek Kurumu, 1995.

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Deverbal nominals in Yakut: A historical approach. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2013.

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Kirişçioğlu, M. Fatih. Saha (Yakut) Türkçesi grameri. Ankara: Türk Dil Kurumu, 1994.

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I, Vasilʹev I͡U. Türkçe ve Sakaca (Yakutça) konuşuyoruz =: Turiktyy uonna sakhalyy kėpsėtiėghin͡g. Erzurum [Turkey]: Atatürk Üniversitesi, Türkiyat Araştırmaları Enstitüsü, 1993.

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Pakendorf, Brigitte. Contact in the prehistory of the Sakha (Yakuts): Linguistic and genetic perspectives. Utrecht, Netherlands: LOT (Landelijke Onderzoekschool Taalwetenschap), 2007.

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Slept︠s︡ov, P. A. Sovremennye i︠a︡zykovye prot︠s︡essy v Respublike Sakha (I︠A︡kutii︠a︡): Aktualʹnye problemy. Novosibirsk: "Nauka", 2003.

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Respublikanskai︠a︡ nauchno-prakticheskai︠a︡ konferent︠s︡ii︠a︡ "I︠A︡zyk kak osnovnoĭ ėlement kulʹtury--genezis, tradit︠s︡ii i sovremennye problemy" (2004 I︠A︡kutsk, Russia). I︠A︡zyk kak osnovnoĭ ėlement kulʹtury--genezis, tradit︠s︡ii i sovremennye problemy: Materialy Respublikanskoĭ nauchno-prakticheskoĭ konferent︠s︡ii, 26 noi︠a︡bri︠a︡ 2004 g. I︠A︡kutsk: I︠A︡kutskiĭ gos. universitet, 2006.

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Marine, Leberre-Semenov, ed. Parlons sakha: Langue et culture iakoutes. Paris: Harmattan, 2010.

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Vinokurov, I. P. Sakha tyla: Kėtėkhtėn u̇ȯrėnėr studennarga khonturuolunaĭ u̇lė sorudagha, metodicheskaĭ su̇bė-ama. I︠A︡kutskaĭ: Universiteta, 1995.

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Nikolaevich, Toburokov Nikolaĭ, ed. A.E. Kulakovskiĭ i ego sovremenniki: Osobennosti poėticheskogo i︠a︡zyka. Novosibirsk: Nauka, 2002.

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Book chapters on the topic "Yakulta language"

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Menz, Astrid, and Vladimir Monastyrev. "Yakut." In The Turkic Languages, 444–59. 2nd ed. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003243809-29.

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Johanson, Lars. "Chapter 10. A Yakut copy of a Tungusic viewpoint aspect paradigm." In Studies in Language Companion Series, 235–42. Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/slcs.161.17joh.

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Filippova, Sargylana V., Marina I. Kysylbaikova, and Mariet P. Akhidzhakova. "The ‘Male’ Image in the Yakut and Russian Language Consciousnesses." In Integrating Engineering Education and Humanities for Global Intercultural Perspectives, 1041–48. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-47415-7_111.

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Ivanova, Aleksandra, Anna Grigorieva, Tuyaara Ordakhova, and Wu Li. "The First Foreign Language Influence on the Second Foreign Language in Bilingual Environment of Sakha Republic (Yakutia), Russia." In Integrating Engineering Education and Humanities for Global Intercultural Perspectives, 323–30. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-47415-7_34.

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Pakendorf, Brigitte, and Eugénie Stapert. "Sakha and Dolgan, the North Siberian Turkic languages." In The Oxford Guide to the Transeurasian Languages, 430–45. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198804628.003.0027.

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This chapter provides a brief structural overview of the North Siberian Turkic languages Sakha (also known as Yakut) and Dolgan. Both languages are spoken in the northeast of the Russian Federation: Sakha in the Republic Sakha (Yakutia) and Dolgan on the Taimyr Peninsula. These languages clearly fit the Turkic linguistic profile with vowel harmony, agglutinative morphology, SOV word order, and preposed relative clauses, but owing to contact-induced changes there are considerable differences from other Turkic languages as well. Notable differences are the loss of the Turkic genitive and locative cases and the development of a partitive and a comparative case, as well as a distinction between an immediate and a remote imperative. Like other so-called Altaic languages, Sakha and Dolgan make widespread use of nonfinite verb forms in subordination.
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Harris, Robin P. "Encountering Olonkho." In Storytelling in Siberia. University of Illinois Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252041280.003.0001.

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This introductory chapter includes the author’s personal narrative of encounter with the songs and stories of olonkho during the years she lived in the coldest inhabited city on earth. The reader becomes acquainted with the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia), its relationship to Russia, and its largest group of indigenous people, the Sakha (sometimes called “Yakut”). In addition to exploring a few of the complex translation issues for Russian-language terms in the book—Center, nation, and epic sreda—the chapter foregrounds Sakha voices as they reflect on the changes undergone by olonkho during pre-Soviet, Soviet, and post-Soviet periods and give their opinions about revitalization efforts for olonkho.
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Johanson, L. "Yakut." In Encyclopedia of Language & Linguistics, 719–22. Elsevier, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b0-08-044854-2/02107-6.

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Mandelstam Balzer, Marjorie. "Sakha Republic (Yakutia)." In Galvanizing Nostalgia?, 24–60. Cornell University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501759772.003.0002.

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This chapter discusses the ebbs and flows of permissible Sakha activism within the context of a social and political landscape that has changed radically during the post-Soviet period. Since 2015, Sakha language rights have brought crowds to the streets of the capital Yakutsk, especially since many thought cultural sovereignty was already won. Sakha-language proficiency and Sakha identity are correlated in the republic, often in highly emotional terms. Beyond language recovery politics, a limited sovereignty has been celebrated. How did “center-periphery” relations become so dysfunctional? Understanding key historical legacies of differentially perceived interethnic and center-periphery relations provides a framework for understanding societal change and the crystallization of Sakha (Yakut) identity. The chapter concludes by assessing the interrelationship of social and spiritual values and political change.
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"Jidaigeki, yakuza and ‘eroduction’ films." In Language and Popular Culture in Japan, 173–88. Routledge, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780203843963-15.

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Oshchepkova, Anna Igorevna. "Yakutia: Communicative Training for Russian Language Learners." In Yakutia: Communicative Training for Russian Language Learners. Publishing house Sreda, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31483/r-99857.

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Conference papers on the topic "Yakulta language"

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Новгородов, Иннокентий Николаевич. "YAKUT-EVENK LANGUAGE CONVERGENCE." In Всероссийская научно-практической конференция с международным участием, посвященной 100-летию со дня рождения выдающегося ученого-североведа И.С. Гурвича (1919-1992). Электронное издательство Национальной библиотеки РС (Я), 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.25693/gurvich.2019novgorodov.

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Chirkoeva, Daria. "Problem of possessive constructions in the Yakut language." In Proceedings of the International Conference on Man-Power-Law-Governance: Interdisciplinary Approaches (MPLG-IA 2019). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/mplg-ia-19.2019.18.

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Mestnikova, E. A. "Right to Identity: Language Rights of Indigenous Peoples and Language Policy of Republic of Sakha (Yakutia)." In Proceedings of the First International Volga Region Conference on Economics, Humanities and Sports (FICEHS 2019). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/aebmr.k.200114.087.

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Oturgasheva, Natalya Vadimovna. "Modern Yakut Cinema: Logos, Ethos, Pathos." In International Conference on Language and Technology in the Interdisciplinary Paradigm. European Publisher, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2021.12.22.

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Ivanova, Sargylana. "Formation of official business style in the Yakut language." In Proceedings of the International Conference on Man-Power-Law-Governance: Interdisciplinary Approaches (MPLG-IA 2019). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/mplg-ia-19.2019.10.

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Monastyrev, Vladimir Dmitrievich, and Svetlana Mitrofanovna Prokopieva. "Memoratives In Ancient Anthroponymic System Of The Yakut Language." In International Conference on Social and Cultural Transformations in the Context of Modern Globalism. European Publisher, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2021.11.145.

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Nikolaeva, Tatiana, and Anna Pribylykh. "Covid-19 Realities In Yakut Media Texts." In International Conference on Language and Technology in the Interdisciplinary Paradigm. European Publisher, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2021.12.89.

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Vasilyeva, Nadezhda. "Phonetic and spelling changes of borrowed words in the Yakut language (on the material of the Bolshoi Dictionary of the Yakut language)." In Proceedings of the International Conference on Man-Power-Law-Governance: Interdisciplinary Approaches (MPLG-IA 2019). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/mplg-ia-19.2019.17.

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Poselskaia, Alexandra. "COLOUR DESIGNATIONS IN THE YAKUT LANGUAGE WORLDVIEW (ON THE MATERIAL OF THE YAKUT PHRASEOLOGICAL UNITS)." In 4th SGEM International Multidisciplinary Scientific Conferences on SOCIAL SCIENCES and ARTS Proceedings. STEF92 Technology, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2017/32/s14.079.

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Danilov, I. A. "NAMES OF CULTURED-MILK FOODS IN THE YAKUT LANGUAGE IN COMPARISON WITH LEXICAL PARALLELS IN OTHER TURKIC AND MONGOLIAN LANGUAGES." In ACTUAL PROBLEMS OF LINGUISTICS AND LITERARY STUDIES. Publishing House of Tomsk State University, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.17223/978-5-94621-901-3-2020-37.

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Reports on the topic "Yakulta language"

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Argunov, V. V. Features of biblical phraseological units (based on the material of the Yakut language). Technical institute (branch) Federal State Autonomous Educational Institution of Higher Professional Education «North-Eastern Federal University named after M.K. Ammosov» in Nerungry, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.18411/s-2019-22-a.

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