Mongolic languages

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Mongolic
Geographic
distribution:
Central Asia
Genetic
classification
:
Altaic[1] (controversial)
 Mongolic
Subdivisions:


The Mongolic languages are a group of thirteen languages spoken in Central Asia. Some linguists propose the grouping of Mongolic with Turkic (of which Turkish is a member) and Tungusic as Altaic languages, but this hypothesis is not universally agreed upon.

The best-known member of this language family, Mongolian (in Cyrillic orthography as used in Mongolia, Монгол Хэл, and in the vertical Uygur-derived script as used in Inner Mongolia, China, mongγol kele), is the primary language of most of the residents of Mongolia, and is spoken by around 5.7 million people in Mongolia, Russia, and Inner Mongolia. Nikudari, an archaic and unclassified Mongolian language, remains preserved by a few hundred speakers in Herat, Afghanistan.

[edit] Classification

Mongolic

  • Central Mongolic
  • Western Mongolic (Oirat-Kalmyk-Darkhat)
  • Northern Mongolic
    • Buryat (Dialects: Bargu, Khori, Aga, Ekhirit, Unga, Nizhne-Udinsk, Barguzin, Tunka, Oka, Alar, Bohaan, Bulagat)
    • Khamnigan Mongol
  • Northeastern Mongolic
  • Southeastern Mongolic (i.e., the Qinghai-Gansu Sprachbund Mongolic languages)
  • South-Central Mongolic
  • Southwestern Mongolic

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ "[1] Ethnologue"
  • Janhunen, J. 2003. The Mongolic Languages. London.
an:Luengas mongols

br:Yezhoù mongolek cv:Монгол чĕлхисем cs:Mongolské jazyky de:Mongolische Sprachen es:Lenguas mongólicas hsb:Mongolske rěče io:Mongola lingui mn:Монгол хэлний бүлэг nl:Mongoolse talen pl:Języki mongolskie pt:Línguas mongólicas ru:Монгольские языки fi:Mongolilaiset kielet sv:Mongolspråk zh:蒙古语族

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