
Episode 13 Europe’s Non-Indo-European Languages
Language Families of the World
Dr John McWhorter
Film Review
Besides Indo-European languages, Caucasian (see The Caucasian Languages) and Uralic languages are also spoken in Europe. The main Uralic languages are Hungarian, Finnish, Estonian, Sami (spoken in the region formerly known as Lapland in northern Finland), Mari (spoken in the Mari republic of the Russian Federation) and Mordivinic (spoken in the Mordovia Republic of the Russian Federation). Uralic languages most likely predated Russian, and the Russian language has adopted the Uralic practice of using a preposition, rather than a verb to designate possession.
McWhorter believes the Uralic language family first emerged in Russia west of the Ural mountains. Because the Uralic languages are far older than Indo-European languages, the differences between them are far greater. Linguists believe Uralic speakers inhabited most of Western Europe before the arrival of Indo-European speakers. Hungarian speakers were the last Uralic speakers to arrive when aggressive Hun migrants forced them from their Siberian homeland.
Uralic languages all use separate verb prefixes and suffixes to indicate both tense and the identity of the person(s) performing the action (I,you, he/she/it, we they). In addition, their nouns have case markings indicating position and direction, as well as subject, object and possession. Owing to the absence of invasion, occupation, etc, requiring foreign adults to learn Uralic languages (as with English and Persian), all employ extremely irregular grammatical principles.
However, like English, their nouns have no genders. Likewise written Uralic languages are spelled like they sound, which McWhorter credits for Finnish children learning to read much younger than other European children.
All Uralic language have an extensive written literature.
Film can be viewed free with a library card on Kanopy.
https://www.kanopy.com/en/pukeariki/watch/video/6120000/6120022
“Sami (spoken in the region formerly known as Lapland in northern Finland)“
Still known as Lap[p]land and attached to the Swedish region with the very same name.
Here in Fennoscandia, Sami is only divided into Northern Sami and Southern Sami.
LikeLike
There is a Sami region in Norway too, attached to the Swedish and Finnish, but is named Finnmark. This due to the Norwegian old tradition to refer Samis as Finns.
The three regions was once one (including the Kola peninsula), before the Nordic borders was defined.
I just noticed one detail about the map. The actual south end of FS1 is futher north and don’t cross mid Sweden. As drawn, the north region neighbouring the one I’m living in is included, but nobody speaks Sami there. There may be some people still living there, speaking an older version of Finnish, due to lumberjack jobs long time ago.
LikeLike
Sorry …
“… before the Nordic borders …” should be “… before the present Nordic-Russian borders …”
LikeLike
Thanks for the clarification, SasjaL.
LikeLike
Pingback: The Caucasian Languages | Worldtruth
Pingback: Europe’s Non-Indo-European Languages | Worldtruth