Votic or Votian is the language spoken by the Votes of Ingria. It is closely related to Estonian, it is in the Balto-Finnic subgroup of Finno-Ugric languages. Votic is spoken only in Krakolye and Luzhitsy, two villages in the Kingisepp district, and is close to extinction. In 1989 there were 62 speakers left, the youngest born in 1930. In its 24 December 2005 issue, The Economist wrote that there are only approximately 20 speakers left.
In the 19th century it was already declining in favour of Russian, but its decline was accelerated under Soviet rule, when the Vote population diminished by 90% between 1926 and 1959. Since then, the Votes have, as far as possible, concealed their Votic identity, pretending to be Russians in the predominantly Russian environment. Votic originally previously several dialects: Western, Eastern, Kukkusi and Kreevin (an enclave in Latvia). Of these, Kreevin became extinct in the 19th century and Eastern in the 1960s.
| (IPA) (FUT) | Front | Central | Back |
|---|---|---|---|
| High | i y i ü | ɨ i̮ | u u |
| High-mid | e ø e ö | ɤ e̮ | o o |
| Low | æ ä | ɑ a |
All of the vowels may occur short or long, however in some eastern dialects the long mid vowels /ē ō ȫ/ have been diphthongized to /ie uo üö/. Thus, tee 'road' is pronounced as tie. Votic also has a large inventory of diphthongs.
Votic vowel harmony is rather similar to Finnish, in that most words may only have front or back vowels (while /i e/ are neutral), however there are some exceptions with the behavior of /o ö/. Some suffixes including the vowel /o/ do not harmonize (as the occurrence of /ö/ in non-initial syllables is generally a result of Finnish or Ingrian loan words), and similarly onomatopoetic words and loanwords are not necessarily subject to conforming to rules of vowel harmony.
| bilabial | labiodental | dental | palatal | velar | glottal | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| plosive | , | , | , | |||
| affricate | ||||||
| nasal | ||||||
| trill | ||||||
| fricative | , | , | , , | |||
| lateral | ||||||
| approximant |
Nearly all Votic consonants may occur as geminates. Also, Votic also has a system of consonant gradation, which is discussed in further detail in the consonant gradation article, although a large amount of alternations involve voicing alternations. Two important differences in Votic phonetics as compared to Estonian and Finnish is that the sounds /j/ and /v/ are actually fully fricatives, unlike Estonian and Finnish, in which they are approximants. Also, one possible allophone of /h/ is , ühsi is thus pronounced as IPA: .
The Votic voiced stops (FUT) /b d g/ may undergo devoicing to /B D G/, which are then similar to Estonian voiceless lenis stops.
Votic is an agglutinating language much like the nearly related Balto-Finnic languages. In terms of inflection on nouns, Votic has two numbers (singular, plural), and 16 cases: nominative, genitive, accusative (distinct for pronouns), partitive, illative, inessive, elative, allative, adessive, ablative, translative, essive, excessive, abessive, comitative, terminative.
In terms of verbs, Votic has six tenses, two of which are basic: present, imperfect; and the rest of which are compound tenses: present perfect, past perfect, future and future perfect. Votic has three moods (conditional, imperative, potential), and two 'voices' (active and passive). Caution however should be used with the term 'passive', with Baltic-Finnic languages though as a result of the fact that it is more active and 'impersonal' (it has an oblique 3rd person marker, and so is not really 'passive').
Votia | Finno-Ugric languages | Languages of Russia | Minority languages
Voteg | Vòtic | Wotische Sprache | Vadja keel | Vota lingvo | Vote (langue) | Lingua votica | Vodų kalba | Vót nyelv | Votisk språk | Votisk språk | język wotycki | Водский язык | Vatjagiella | Vatjan kieli | Votiska
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