Recent Articles



































Livonian language



         


Livonian (Līvo kēļ) belongs to the Finnic branch of the Finno-Ugric languages. It is now spoken by only about 35 people, 10 of them fluently. It is related to Finnish, spoken on the other side of the Gulf of Finland, and Estonian. The native land of Livonians is Latvia, north of Kurzeme peninsula. It is one of the most endangered languages in the world.


Livonian (Liv)
Spoken in: Latvia
Region: Livonia
Total speakers: 150-1,500
Ranking: Not in top 100
Genetic classification: Uralic languages
 Finno-Ugric languages
  Finno-Lappic
   ISO 639-1
-
ISO 639-2fiu
SILLIV


Its ortography is a derivation of both Latvian and Estonian ortography

Roman alphabet:

A/a, (Ā/ā), B/b, C/c, Č/č, D/d, Ḑ/ḑ, E/e, (Ē/ē), F/f, G/g, Ģ/ģ, H/h, I/i, (Ī/ī), J/j, K/k, Ķ/ķ, L/l, Ļ/ļ, M/m, N/n, Ņ/ņ, O/o, (Ō/ō), Ȯ/ȯ, (Ȱ/ȱ), P/p, [Q/q], R/r, Ŗ/ŗ, S/s, ?/?, Z/z, ?/?, T/t, Ț/ț, U/u, (Ū/ū), V/v, (W/w), Õ/õ, (Ȭ/ȭ), Ä/ä, (Ǟ/ǟ), Ö/ö, (Ȫ/ȫ), Ü/ü, [X/x], Y/y, (Ȳ/ȳ)

[Top]




  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License