Medny Aleut language
Mednyj Aleut | |
---|---|
Native to | Russia |
Region | Commander Islands |
Native speakers |
5 (2004) 10–12 (1996)[1] |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
mud |
Glottolog |
medn1235 [2] |
Mednyj Aleut (also called Copper Island Creole or Copper Island Aleut) is a nearly extinct mixed language spoken on Bering Island. It is characterized by Aleut nouns and Russian verbs, each with the full inflectional complexity of the source languages. There are only five native speakers left.
Mednyj Aleut is characterised by a blending of Russian and Aleut (primarily Attu) elements in most components of the grammar, but most profoundly in the verbal morphology. The Aleut component comprises the majority of the vocabulary, all the derivational morphology, part of the simple sentence syntax, nominal inflection and certain other grammatical means. The Russian components comprise verbal inflection, negation, infinitive forms, part of the simple sentence syntax and all of the compound sentence syntax.[3]
Originally, the language was spoken in Copper Island, from where it takes its name, but all the population of that island was moved to Bering island in 1970.
See also
Citations
- ↑ Ernst Håkon Jahr & Ingvild Broch (1996) Language Contact in the Arctic: Northern Pidgins and Contact Languages, Walter de Gruyter
- ↑ Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin; Bank, Sebastian, eds. (2016). "Mednyj Aleut". Glottolog 2.7. Jena: Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History.
- ↑ Donald Winford. An Introduction to Contact Linguistics. Blackwell Publishing.
Sources
- http://languageserver.uni-graz.at/ls/art?id=981
- Christopher Moseley (2008) Encyclopedia of the world's endangered languages, p. 42. (15 fluent speakers in the late 1980s.)
- http://archives.conlang.info/so/gentua/vonjhuanjhian.html