Skolt Sami (sää´mǩiõll) is a Finno-Ugric, Sami language spoken in Finland and nearby parts of Russia. It has about 400 remaining speakers in Finland. It is written using an official Roman orthography.
As a historic note, this region was hit hard by the first of the great famines of the 19th Century which happened about 1913. Most people moved out of this northernmost area to the Americas or parts of Fennoscandia further South as a consequence.
For those interested in doing Sami-American research, check York county, Pennsylvania. This area had five Sami settlements since the 17th Century. Many Skolt Sami fled there to escape the famine mentioned above.
Skolt Sami is spoken by some 400 individuals. Nearly all of these live in Finland; very few speakers remain today on the Russian side. On the Finnish side of the border, the language is officially supported. It is an official language in the municipality of Inari, and the elementary schools offer courses in the language. However, most youths have Finnish as their first language, so that it must be taught like a foreign language. A small number of youths do learn the language and continue to use it actively. Skolt Sami is thus a seriously endangered language, unlike the neighboring Inari Sami with the same number of speakers, in the same municipality.
Like Inari Sami, Skolt Sami has recently bore witness to a new phenomenon, namely it is being used in rock songs sung by Tiina Sanila, who recently published her first full-length CD in Skolt Sami.
Skolt Sami is a synthetic, highly inflected language that shares many grammatical features with the other Uralic languages. However, Skolt Sami is not a typical agglutinative language like many of the other Uralic languages are, as it has developed considerably into the direction of a fusional language, much like Estonian. Therefore, cases and other grammatical features are also marked by modifications to the root and not just marked with suffixes. Many of the suffixes in Skolt Sami are portmanteau morphemes that express several grammatical features at a time.
Skolt Sámi has 9 cases in the singular, although the genitive and accusative are oftentimes the same:
Like the other Uralic languages, the nominative singular is unmarked and indicates the subject or a predicate. The nominative plural is also unmarked and always looks the same as the genitive singular.
The genitive singular is unmarked and looks the same as the nominative plural. The genitive plural is marked by an -i. The genitive is used:
The genitive has been replacing the partitive for some time and is nowdays more commonly used in its place.
The accusative is the direct object case and it is unmarked in the singular. In the plural, its marker is -d, which is preceded by the plural marker -i, making it look the same as the plural illative. The accusative is also used to mark some adjuncts, e.g., obb tää'lv (the entire winter).
The locative marker in the singular is -st and -n in the plural. This case is used to indicate:
In addition, it is used with certain verbs:
The illative marker actually has three different markers in the singular to represent the same case: -a, -e and -u. The plural illative marker is -d, which is preceded by the plural marker -i, making it look the same as the plural accusative. This case is used to indicate:
The comitative marker in the singular is -in and -vui'm in the plural. The comitative is used to state with whom or what something was done.
The abessive marker is -tää in both the singular and the plural. It always has a tertiary stress.
The dual form of the essive is still used with pronouns, but not with nouns and does not appear at all in the plural.
The partitive is only used in the singular and can always be replaced by the genitive. The partitive marker is -d.
1. It appears after numbers larger than 6:
This can be replaced with kää'uc čâustõõǥǥ.
2. It is also used with certain postpositions:
This can be replaced with kuä'đ vuâstta.
3. It can be used with the comparative to express that which is being compared:
This would nowadays more than likely be replaced by pue'rab ko kå'll
The personal pronouns have three numbers - singular, plural and dual. The following table contains personal pronouns in the nominative and genitive/accusative cases.
| English | nominative | English | genitive | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| First person (singular) | I | mon | my | muu |
| Second person (singular) | you (thou) | ton | your, yours | tuu |
| Third person (singular) | he, she | son | his, her | suu |
| First person (dual) | we (two) | muäna | our | muännai |
| Second person (dual) | you (two) | tuäna | your | tuännai |
| Third person (dual) | they (two) | suäna | theirs | suännai |
| First person (plural) | we | mij | our | mij |
| Second person (plural) | you | tij | your | tij |
| Third person (plural) | they | sij | their | sij |
The next table demonstrates the declension of a personal pronoun he/she (no gender distinction) in various cases:
| Singular | Dual | Plural | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nominative | son | suäna | sij |
| Genitive | suu | suännai | sij |
| Accusative | suu | suännaid | si'jjid |
| Illative | su'nne | suännaid | si'jjid |
| Locative | su'st | suännast | sii'st |
| Comitative | suin | suännain | si'jjivui'm |
| Abessive | suutää | suännaitää | si'jjitää |
| Essive | suu'nen | suännan | -- |
| Partitive | suu'đed | -- | -- |
Skolt Sámi has 4 grammatical moods:
Skolt Sámi has 2 simple tenses:
and 2 compound tenses:
Skolt Sámi verbs have 6 nominal forms:
The system of vowel phonemes is as follows.
| front | central | back | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| unrounded | unrounded | unrounded | rounded | |
| close | i | u | ||
| close-mid | e | õ | o | |
| open-mid | ε | â | å | |
| open | ä | a |
Notes:
Long and short vowels contrast phonologically: cf. le´tt "vessel" vs. lee´tt "vessels". All vowels can occur as both long and short.
The vowels can combine to form twelve opening diphthongs:
| front | front to central | back to front | back to central | back | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| close to close-mid | ie | iõ | ue | uõ | |
| close to open-mid | iε | iâ | uε | uâ | uå |
| close to open | uä | ||||
| close-mid to open-mid | eâ | ||||
| close-mid to open | eä |
Also diphthongs contrast length, although this is not indicated in spelling. Short diphthongs are distinguished from long ones by both length and stress placement; short diphthongs have a stressed second component, whereas long diphthongs have stress on the first component. With the exception of eâ, all diphthongs can occur as both long and short; eâ, however, only occurs as short.
Consonants may be phonemically long or short word-medially or word-finally; both are exceedingly common. A typical Sami feature is that also consonant clusters may be long or short, e.g. ju´rdded "to think", kuoskkâd "to touch".
In consonants, all voiced plosives are half-voiced (weak voicing). Alveolar affricates are denoted Ʒ (voiced) and C *," target="_blank" >Ǯ *," target="_blank" >Ž *" target="_blank" >and Ǩ [c. The latter (Ǩ, Ǧ) are in between K and T with respect to place of articulation. (Notice the disagreement between Skolt Sami orthography and IPA, and the difference between historical and synchronic palatalization.) The strike indicates fricative articulation; D is a dental stop, Đ is a dental fricative.
Palatalization is distinguished for three degrees. The plain form is velarized and receives no overt marking, the palatalized form is recognized by an adjacent softener mark, and full palatal articulation receives overt marking by digraphs in 'j'. For example, plain L is velarized with the tip of the tongue barely touching the back of the teeth, the softened ´L is constricted by keeping the tongue wider against the teeth, and the fully palatal LLJ has the middle of the tongue touching the hard palate. The same distinction is found for N, ´N and NJ.
Skolt Sámi has four different types of stress for words:
The first syllable of any word is always the primary stressed syllable in Skolt Sami as Skolt is a fixed-stress language. In words with two or more syllables, the final syllable is quite lightly stressed (tertiary stress) and the remaining syllable, if any, are stressed more heavily than the final syllable, but less than the first syllable (secondary stress).
Using the abessive and the comitative singular in a word appears to disrupt this system, however, in words of more than one syllable. The suffix, as can be expected, has teratiary stress, but the the penult syllable also has tertiary stress, even though it would be expected that it would have secondary stress.
Zero stress can be said to be a feature of conjunctions, postpositions, particles and monosyllabic pronouns.
A short period of voicelessness or 'h' before geminate consonants is observed, but this receives no marking, e.g. jo´kke "to the river" is pronounced The epenthetic vowels are not phonemic or syllabic, and thus not marked, e.g. mie´ll mielle [mielle" target="_blank" >* "to the mind". The Latin alphabet is used: A/a, Â/â, B/b, C/c, Č/č, Ʒ/ʒ, Ǯ/ǯ, D/d, Đ/đ, E/e, F/f, G/g, Ǧ/ǧ, Ǥ/ǥ, H/h, I/i, J/j, K/k, Ǩ/ǩ, L/l, M/m, N/n, Ŋ/ŋ, O/o, Õ/õ, P/p, R/r, S/s, Š/š, T/t, U/u, V/v, Z/z, Ž/ž, Å/å, Ä/ä, ´ (softener mark). The letters Q/q, W/w, X/x, Y/y and Ö/ö are also used in words of a foreign origin.
Languages of Finland | Languages of Russia | Finno-Ugric languages | Sami languages | Endangered languages
Samieg Skolt | Skoltsamische Sprache | Lingua sami skolt | Skoltesamisk språk | Nuortalašgiella | Koltansaame
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"Skolt Sami".
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