Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Karelian is a language in danger of extinction, with 45% of speakers being over 65 years old and with around 1% of speakers being under 15 years of age. The language is also not known or used at all by a majority of the people in the Republic of Karelia, with around 43% of people using the language. [12]

    • Karelians

      Karelians ( Karelian: karjalaižet, karjalazet, karjalaiset;...

  2. Karelian Proper consists of 1a, 1b and 1e. Karelian Proper ( Karelian Proper: Varšinaiskarjala) is a supradialect of the Karelian language, which is a Finnic language. Karelian Proper is one of two/three Karelian dialects, along with Livvi-Karelian [3] and Ludic.

  3. Karelian at a glance. Native name: Karjalan kieli. Language family: Uralic, Finnic, Eastern. Number of speakers: c. 9.5 million. Spoken in: Republic of Karelia, Russian Federation, and Finland. First written: 13th century. Writing system: Cyrillic and Latin alphabets. Status: recognised minority language in the Republic of Karelia, and Finland.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › KareliansKarelians - Wikipedia

    Karelians ( Karelian: karjalaižet, karjalazet, karjalaiset; Finnish: karjalaiset; Swedish: kareler, karelare; Russian: карелы, romanized : karely) are a Finnic ethnic group who are indigenous to the historical region of Karelia, which is today split between Finland and Russia.

    • 363 (2011)
    • 32,422 (2020)
    • 10,000 (1994)
    • 1,522 (2001)
  5. Karelian language, member of the Finno-Ugric branch of the Uralic language family, spoken in Karelia republic of northwestern Russia and by emigrants in neighbouring Finland. There are two dialects of Karelian—Karelian proper and Olonets.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Karelian language. Karelian, is a Finnic language spoken in Karelia, Russia and Finland. It is spoken by Karelians. [1] It is not to be confused with Livvi-Karelian, which is a different language. References. ↑. Categories: Finnic languages. Languages of Russia. Languages of Finland.

  7. Livvi-Karelian is Finnic language spoken mainly in the northwest of the Russian Federation, and also in southeastern Finland, by about 30,770. In 2010 there were 25,600 speakers of Livvi-Karelian in Russia, mainly in the Olonetsky, Pryazhinsky, Pitkyarantsky and Suoyarvsky districts of the Republic of Karelia, and also in the Leningrad Oblast.