Finno-Permic languages
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Finno-Permic
Finnic
|
|
|---|---|
| Geographic distribution: |
Northern Fennoscandia, Baltic states, Southwestern, Southeastern, and Ural region of Russia |
| Genetic classification: |
Uralic Finno-Ugric Finno-Permic |
| Subdivisions: | |
| ISO 639-2 and 639-5: | fiu |
The Finnic or Finno-Permic languages[1] form one of the main branches of the Finno-Ugric languages that split from it around 2500 - 3000 BC. Finno-Permic is estimated to have branched into Permic languages and Finno-Volgaic languages around 2000 BC. [2]
The term Finnic languages have often been used to designate all the Finno-Permic languages, based on an earlier belief that Permic languages would be much more closer related to the Baltic Finnic languages than to Hungarian. [2]
In the past, the Finno-Permic languages together with the Ugric languages were thought to constitute a closer Finno-Ugric group of languages, separating this entity more sharply from the Samoyedic languages. Today, however, Finno-Permic and Ugric are increasingly seen to be as far apart from each another as from Samoyedic.[citation needed]
Interpretation of grouping the Finnic/Finno-Permic languages can also vary among different scholars. The following proposals for classification are listed by Ruhlen (1987): [3] and by Angela Marcantonio in 2002 [4]
| Finnic/Finno-Permic languages by Collinder, 1965 |
Finnic/Finno-Permic languages by Austerlitz 1968 |
Finnic/Finno-Permic languages by Sauvageot & Menges 1973 |
Finnic/Finno-Permic languages by Harms 1974 |
Finnic/Finno-Permic languages by Vogelin & Vogelin 1977 |
|
|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
[edit] Notes
- ^ also referred to as Finno-Permian languages
- ^ a b The Finno-Ugric republics and the Russian state By Rein Taagepera; ISBN 0415919770 p.32-33
- ^ Merritt Ruhlen (1987) "A Guide to the World's Languages: Volume I, Classification", Stanford University Press, ISBN 0-8047-1250-6, p. 69
- ^ The Uralic Language Family: Facts, Myths and Statistics; By Angela Marcantonio; p57; ISBN 0631231706
[edit] References
- Abondolo, Daniel (ed., 1998), The Uralic Languages, London and New York, ISBN 0-415-08198-X.

