ekk ISO 639

Eesti Keel Autonyms

Estonian, Standard

  • Geography

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A language of Estonia

ekk
Eesti, Eesti Kirjakeel
Eesti Keel
1,050,000 in Estonia (European Commission 2012), including 1,290 speakers of Northeastern Coastal Estonian dialects, 26,800 speakers of North Estonian dialects (24,500 island dialects, 770 eastern dialects, 210 central dialects, and 1,280 western dialects), and 13,800 speakers of South Estonian dialects (9,700 Mulgi and 4,110 Tartu) (2011 census). Total users in all countries: 1,158,140.
Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania
1 (National). Statutory national language (1992, Constitution, Article 52(1)).
Uralic, Finnic
Tallinn (Northern Estonian, Reval), Tartu (Dorpat, Southern Estonian), Mulgi. Dialects are grouped into three groups: Northeastern Coastal Estonian (between Tallinn and Narva), North Estonian (island, western, central, and eastern dialects), and South Estonian (Mulgi, Tartu). All the other dialects are assimilated into Standard Estonian. Standard Estonian is based mostly on North Estonian dialects. Mulgi and Tartu are generally regarded as separate linguistic entities somewhere between Võro [vro] and Standard Estonian. Related to Vod [vot] and Finnish [fin]. A member of macrolanguage Estonian [est].
SVO; 14 cases: affixes indicate case of noun phrases; verb affixes mark person, number of subject, and agreement (obligatory); genitives, adjectives, numerals before noun heads; question word initial; word order distinguishes given and new information; active and passive voice; 4 moods in both voices: indicative, imperative, conditional, oblique; 2 infinitives for all verbs; 4 tenses in both voices and all moods: present, past, perfect, pluperfect; 3 degrees of comparison: positive, comparative, superlative; stress on first syllable; possible secondary stress on third syllable; non-tonal.
Most also use Russian [rus] (European Commission 2006). Many also use English [eng] (European Commission 2006). Some also use Standard German [deu] (European Commission 2006). Also use Finnish [fin].
Taught in primary and secondary schools, in about 87% of the schools; Russian [rus] is the language of instruction in the other 13%. Fully developed. Bible: 1739–1995.
Latin script [Latn].
Some linguistic influences from Russian [rus], German [deu], Swedish [swe], Latvian [lav], Lithuanian [lit], and Finnish [fin]. Christian.
OLAC resources in and about Estonian, Standard
Estonian, Standard
1,840 in Australia (2016 census).
5 (Dispersed)
Non-indigenous.
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Estonian, Standard
5,450 in Canada (2016 census).
Unestablished
Non-indigenous.
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Estonian, Standard
7,300 in Germany (2020 census), based on nationality.
Unestablished
Non-indigenous.
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Estonian, Standard
1,370 in Denmark (2020 census), based on nationality.
Unestablished
Non-indigenous.
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Estonian, Standard
2,720 in Spain (2020 census), based on nationality.
Unestablished
Non-indigenous.
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Estonian, Standard
50,200 in Finland (2021 census).
Kymenlaakso and Uusimaa regions; scattered throughout south coast.
5 (Dispersed)
Non-indigenous. Refugees from World War II or recent immigrants. The traditional community was assimilated to the Swedish-speaking community. Christian.
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Estonian, Standard
3,400 in United Kingdom (2011 census). Ethnic population: 14,000 (2004).
Unestablished
Non-indigenous.
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Estonian, Standard
2,100 in Kazakhstan (Leclerc 2017e).
Unestablished
Non-indigenous.
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Estonian, Standard
2,180 in Latvia (2018).
Unestablished
Non-indigenous.
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Estonian, Standard
5,250 in Norway (2021 census), based on nationality.
Unestablished
Non-indigenous.
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Estonian, Standard
15,600 in Russian Federation (2010 census).
Unestablished
Non-indigenous.
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Estonian, Standard
4,690 in Sweden (2020 census), based on nationality.
Unestablished
Non-indigenous.
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Estonian, Standard
6,040 in United States (2015 census).
Unestablished
Most also use English [eng].
Non-indigenous.
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