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3 The Tungusic language family

  • Sofia Oskolskaya
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Abstract

The Tungusic languages form a small family spread widely across eastern Siberia, the Russian Far East, and northern regions of China. The family’s structural features are typical for the area of Northern Asia: vowel harmony, grammatical categories expressed with suffixes, grammaticalized number, person, case systems, numerous categories expressed on a verb, head-final syntax. Tungusic classification is still debatable. There is a consensus only regarding four branches (Ewenic, Udiheic, Nanaic, Jurchenic); however, the chronology of splits from Proto-Tungusic remains unclear. The daughter languages differ in many ways. Ewenic, the most northern branch, has the most complex morphology, including more numerous case and verbal paradigms. The Jurchenic branch exhibits the simplest grammatical structure. Languages of the Udiheic and Nanaic branches occupy the middle of a continuum between Ewenic and Jurchenic languages. Hezhe and Kili are regarded as mixed languages which share features from more than one branch due to language contact. Contact-induced phenomena are attested in all other languages, as well. For example, the genitive case marker in the Tungusic languages of China could have arisen due to contact with Mongolic languages; the Negidal repetitive verbal suffix was preserved under the influence of the neighbouring Nanaic languages.

Abstract

The Tungusic languages form a small family spread widely across eastern Siberia, the Russian Far East, and northern regions of China. The family’s structural features are typical for the area of Northern Asia: vowel harmony, grammatical categories expressed with suffixes, grammaticalized number, person, case systems, numerous categories expressed on a verb, head-final syntax. Tungusic classification is still debatable. There is a consensus only regarding four branches (Ewenic, Udiheic, Nanaic, Jurchenic); however, the chronology of splits from Proto-Tungusic remains unclear. The daughter languages differ in many ways. Ewenic, the most northern branch, has the most complex morphology, including more numerous case and verbal paradigms. The Jurchenic branch exhibits the simplest grammatical structure. Languages of the Udiheic and Nanaic branches occupy the middle of a continuum between Ewenic and Jurchenic languages. Hezhe and Kili are regarded as mixed languages which share features from more than one branch due to language contact. Contact-induced phenomena are attested in all other languages, as well. For example, the genitive case marker in the Tungusic languages of China could have arisen due to contact with Mongolic languages; the Negidal repetitive verbal suffix was preserved under the influence of the neighbouring Nanaic languages.

Heruntergeladen am 20.10.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110556216-003/html?lang=de
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