Livonian language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Livonian
Līvõ kēļ
Spoken in: Latvia 
Region: Livonia
Total speakers: Less than 150
Language family: Uralic
 Finno-Ugric
  Finno-Lappic
   Baltic-Finnic
    Livonian
Language codes
ISO 639-1: none
ISO 639-2: fiu (Other Finno-Ugric languages)
ISO 639-3: liv

Livonian (Līvõ kēļ) belongs to the Finnic branch of the Finno-Ugric languages. A highly endangered language, it is now spoken by some 35 people, of whom only 10 are fluent.[1] It is related to Finnish, spoken on the other side of the Gulf of Finland, and Estonian, with high mutual intelligibility among all of them. The native land of the Livonian people is Livonia, located in Latvia, north of the Kurzeme peninsula. Some ethnic Livonians are learning or have learnt the language in an attempt to revive it. Unfortunately this is problematic, as ethnic Livonians are in an extreme minority and have little opportunity to make common use of the language.

The Livonian alphabet is a hybrid which mixes Latvian and Estonian orthography.

Livonian alphabet:

A/a, Ā/ā, Ä/ä, Ǟ/ǟ, B/b, D/d, Ḑ/ḑ, E/e, Ē/ē, F/f, G/g, H/h, I/i, Ī/ī, J/j, K/k, L/l, Ļ/ļ, M/m, N/n, Ņ/ņ, O/o, Ō/ō, Ȯ/ȯ, Ȱ/ȱ, Õ/õ, Ȭ/ȭ P/p, R/r, Ŗ/ŗ, S/s, Š/š, T/t, Ț/ț, U/u, Ū/ū, V/v, Z/z, Ž/ž.

Contents

Livonian has 8 vowels, and differentiates between long and short sounds by marking long vowels with a "¯".

Letter Phonetic Value Letter Phonetic Value
a [ɑ] o [o]
ā [ɑ:] ō [o:]
ä [æ] ȯ [ʊ]
ǟ [æ:] ȱ [ʊ:]
e [ɛ] õ stressed: [ɨ]
unstressed: [ə]
ē [ɛ:] ȭ stressed: [ɨ:]
unstressed: [ə:]
i [i] u [u]
ī [i:] ū [u:]

Livonian has 23 consonants. They are as follows;

Letter Phonetic Value Letter Phonetic Value
b [b] ņ [ɲ]
d [d̪] p [p]
[ɟ] r [r]
f [f] ŗ [rʲ]
g [ɡ] s [s]
h [h] š [ʃ]
j [j] t [t̪]
k [k] ț [c]
l [l] v [v]
ļ [ʎ] z [z]
m [m] ž [ʒ]
n [n], but [ŋ] if
preceding [k]
or [g].

Main article: Livonian grammar

In the 19th century about 2,000 people still spoke Livonian. Various historical events have led to the near total language death of Livonian:

  • Hello! – Tēriņtš!
  • breakfast - Jõõdõõsöömä
  • Good morning! - Jõvā ūomõg! / Jõvvõ ūomõgt!
  • Good day! - Jõvā pǟva! / Jõvvõ päuvõ!
  • Thank you! - Tienū!
  • Happy new year! - Vȯndzist Ūdtāigastõ!
  • die - kõõlmä
  • one – ikš
  • two – kakš
  • three – kuolm
  • four – nēļa
  • five – vīž
  • six – kūž
  • seven – seis
  • eight – kōdõks
  • nine – īdõks
  • ten – kim

Mustā Plagā Valsō

Kubbõ āt tuļ immõr satunnõd mingizt.
Mustā lupāt um vȯrd tutkām jūs.
Nǟlgalizt nīelõb min mȯistõmõt rõkūd
Sigžtūļ käds ikš dadžā ja ūgõb.
Mitikš äb tō ku sa kēratõkst pǟgiñ:
Um jõvīst, až sāina pǟl kēratõd "A".
Võid stalažod arrõ, až sainõ äb sȭita -
Ma vāgiž set kītõb, ku jõvīst tīed sa
Ja tikkiž ja tegīž um lagtõd sin tōmi
Sīest, mis sinnõn tīemõst ja mis sinā võid.
Až suggõbõd suodād ja revolūtsijõd,
Siz nustām sīes pāikal. Pǟdõ ka mēg.
Až nai ikškõrd vāldiž ka mäddõn tīeb sillõ.
Īezõ palābõd sīlmad, kus pīegiļtiz irm.
Siz grumā touvõd mäd' āndabõd villõ
Ja kõzzist pīkstõbõd pimdõd joud.
Ni īdskubs himnõ mēg lōlam īe pierrõ,
Sīest mēi ta kāitsõb ja sīnda ka tōks.
Sīest lōlam mēg: "Julgizt ni, veļīd, tīe jūrõ!"
Täuds sidāms oppõrmīel põrāndõks.
Leb Valst āigastsadā võilõb se kāngaz,
Mustā ku loptõmõt mōīlmarūim.
Kuñš īebõd pandõkst, kūoõd ja kuodād,
Täddõn nagrõs muidlõb kūolõn pǟlū.
Lyrics by Tõnu Trubetsky
Translated by Valt Ernštreit

Min izāmō – The national anthem of the Livonians

  • Fanny de Siviers. 2000. Parlons Live: une langue de la Baltique. Paris: L'Harmattan. ISBN 2-7475-1337-8.

  1. ^ ed. György Nanovfszky: Nyelvrokonaink. Budapest, 2000.

Wikisource has original text related to this article:
Finno-Ugric languages
Ugric Hungarian | Khanty | Mansi
Permic Komi | Komi-Permyak | Udmurt
Finno-Volgaic Mari | Erzya | Moksha | Merya† | Meshcherian† | Muromian†
Sami Akkala Sami† | Inari Sami | Kemi Sami† | Kildin Sami | Lule Sami | Northern Sami | Pite Sami | Skolt Sami | Southern Sami | Ter Sami | Ume Sami
Baltic-Finnic Estonian | Finnish | Ingrian | Karelian | Kven | Livonian | Ludic | Meänkieli | South Estonian | Veps | Votic | Võro
† denotes extinct
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