Skolt Sami Website Links For
Sami
 

Information About

Skolt Sami




  region Finland and Russia
  speakers ~400
  iso1 sms
  iso2 sms
  iso3 sms
  familycolor Uralic
  fam1 Uralic
  fam2 Finno-Ugric
  fam3 Finno-Permic
  fam4 Finno-Volgaic
  fam5 Finno-Lappic
  fam6 Sami
  fam7 Eastern
  script Latin Alphabet


Skolt Sami ''()'' is a Finno-Ugric , Sami Language spoken by approximately 400 speakers in Finland , mainly in Sevettijärvi, and approximately 20–30 speakers of the Njuõˊttjäuˊrr (Notozero) dialect in an area surrounding Lake Lovozero in Russia . Skolt Sami used to also be spoken on the Neiden area of Norway , although it has died out there. It is written using a Roman Orthography that was made official in 1973.


HISTORY

Skolt Sámi was spoken in four villages on Finnish territory prior to the Second World War. In Petsamo , Skolt Sámi was spoken in Suonikylä and the village of Petsamo. This area was ceded to Russia in the Second World War , and the Skolts were evacuated to the villages of Inari , Sevettijärvi and Nellim in the Inari municipality.


STATUS


Skolt Sami is spoken by approximately 400 individuals, nearly all of whom live in Finland; very few speakers remain today on the Russian side. On the Finnish side of the border, the language is recognized by the government as one of the official Sami Languages used in Lapland and can thus be used by anyone conducting official business in that area. It is an official language in the municipality of Inari , and elementary schools there offer courses in the language, both for native speakers and for students learning it as a foreign language. Only a small number of youths do learn the language and continue to use it actively. Skolt Sami is thus a seriously Endangered Language , even more seriously than Inari Sami in the same Municipality , which has a nearly equal number of speakers.

In 1993, Language Immersion programs for children younger than 7 were created. At present, however, no funding has been forthcoming for these programs in years and as a result they are on hold. These programs were extremely important in creating the youngest generation of Skolt Sami speakers.

Like Inari Sami , Skolt Sami has recently borne witness to a new phenomenon, namely it is being used in rock songs
sung by Tiina Sanila , who has published two full-length CDs in Skolt Sami to date.

In addition, 2005 saw the first time that it was possible to use Skolt Sámi in a Finnish matriculation examination, albeit as a foreign language.


WRITING SYSTEM


Skolt Sami uses the standard Latin Alphabet with the addition of some special characters:

The letters Q/q, W/w, X/x, Y/y and Ö/ö are also used, although only in foreign words or loans.

A short period of voicelessness or ''h'' before geminate consonants is observed, but this is not marked, e.g., ''joˊkke'' ‘to the river’ is pronounced . The epenthetic vowels are not phonemic or syllabic, and are thus not marked, e.g., ''mieˊll'' ‘sandbank’ cf. ''mielle'' {Link without Title} ‘to the mind’.


PHONOLOGY

Special features of this Sami language include a highly complex vowel system and a suprasegmental contrast of palatalized vs. non-palatalized stress groups; palatalized stress groups are indicated by a “softener mark”, represented by the free-standing acute accent (ˊ).


Vowels


The system of vowel phonemes is as follows; their orthographic representations are given in brackets.

Notes:

Long and short vowels contrast phonologically: cf. ''leˊtt'' ‘vessel’ vs. ''leeˊtt'' ‘vessels’. All vowels can occur as both long and short.

The vowels can combine to form twelve opening Diphthong s:

All diphthongs can occur as both long and short, 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.


Consonants


The inventory of consonant phonemes is the following; their orthographic representations are given in brackets:

1Unvoiced stops and affricates are pronounced preaspirated after vowels and Sonorant consonants.

2Voiced stops and affricates are usually pronounced just weakly voiced.

3 has the allophone {Link without Title} in initial position.

Consonants may be phonemically short or long ( Geminate ) both word-medially or word-finally; both are exceedingly common. Long and short consonants also contrast in consonant clusters, cf. ''kuõskkâd'' 'to touch' : ''kuõskâm'' 'I touch'.


Suprasegmentals


There is one phonemic Suprasegmental , the Palatalizing suprasegmental that affects the pronunciation of an entire syllable. In written language the palatalizing suprasegmental is indicated with a free-standing acute accent between a stressed vowel and the following consonant, as follows:

::''vääˊrr'' 'mountain, hill' (suprasegmental palatalization present)
::cf. ''väärr'' 'trip' (no suprasegmental palatalization)

The suprasegmental palatalization has three distinct phonetic effects:



Stress


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 penult syllable also has tertiary stress, even though it would be expected to have secondary stress.

Zero stress can be said to be a feature of Conjunctions , Postpositions , Particles and monosyllabic pronouns.


GRAMMAR


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.


Cases


Skolt Sámi has 9 cases in the singular, although the genitive and accusative are often the same:


Nominative


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.


Genitive


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 nowadays more commonly used in its place.


Accusative


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 tääˊlv'' (the entire winter).


Locative


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:



Illative


The . This case is used to indicate:



Comitative


The Comitative marker in the singular is ''-in'' and ''-vuiˊm'' in the plural. The comitative is used to state ''with whom or what'' something was done:


To form the comitative singular, use the genitive singular form of the word as the Root and ''-in''. To form the comitative plural, use the plural genitive root and ''-vuiˊm''.


Abessive


The Abessive marker is ''-tää'' in both the singular and the plural. It always has a tertiary stress.



Essive


The dual form of the Essive is still used with pronouns, but not with nouns and does not appear at all in the Plural .


Partitive


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 ''''.

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 ''pueˊrab ko kåˊll''


Pronouns


The Personal Pronoun s have three numbers - singular, plural and Dual . The following table contains personal pronouns in the nominative and genitive/accusative cases.

The next table demonstrates the declension of a personal pronoun ''he/she'' (no gender distinction) in various cases:


Verbs


Person


Skolt Sami Verb s conjugate for four Grammatical Person s:



Mood


Skolt Sami has 5 Grammatical Mood s:



Grammatical number


Skolt Sami Verb s conjugate for three Grammatical Number s:



Tense


Skolt Sami has 2 Simple Tenses :


and 2 Compound Tenses :



Verbal nouns


Skolt Sami verbs have 6 nominal forms:



Negative verb


Skolt Sami, like Finnish, the other Sámi languages and Estonian, has a Negative Verb . In Skolt Sami, the negative verb conjugates according to Mood (indicative, imperative and optative), Person (1st, 2nd, 3rd and 4th) and Number (singular, dual and plural).

Ind. pres. Imperative Optative
sg. du/pl. sg. du/pl. sg. du/pl.
1 jiõm jeäˊp 1 - - 1 ? jeällap
jim jep
2 jiõk jeäˊped 2 jieˊl jieˊlled 2 jieˊl jieˊlled
jik jeˊped jeˊl jeˊlled jeˊl jeˊlled
3 ij jiâ, jeä, jie 3 - - 3 jeälas jeällaz
4 jeäˊt

Note that ''ij'' + ''leat'' is usually written as ''iˊlla'', ''iˊlleäkku'', ''iˊllää'' or ''iˊllä'' and ''ij'' + ''leat'' is usually written as ''jeäˊla'' or ''jeäˊlä''.

Unlike the other Sami languages, Skolt Sami no longer has separate forms for the dual and plural of the negative verb and uses the plural forms for both instead.


REFERENCES




EXTERNAL LINKS