koi ISO 639

Komi-Permyak

  • Geography

    RU Perm krai: west of central Ural mountains. Kirov province: Afanasievo district (Zyudin dialect).
  • Language Cloud

A language of Russian Federation

koi
Kama Permyak, Komi-Perm, Komi-Permian, Komi-Permyaki, Komi-Permyan, Komi-Permyat, Permian, Permyak
63,100 in Russian Federation (2010 census). Ethnic population: 94,500 (2010 census). Total users in all countries: 64,200.
Perm krai: west of central Ural mountains. Kirov province: Afanasievo district (Zyudin dialect).
Western Russian Federation
6b (Threatened).
Uralic, Permian, Komi
Zyudin, North Permyak (Kochin-Kam), South Permyak (Inyven), Yazva (Komi-Yazva). Zyudin dialect is moribund or nearly extinct (2021 D. Zaitsev). Lexical similarity: 80% with Komi-Zyrian [kpv] and Udmurt [udm]. A member of macrolanguage Komi [kom].
In the Komi-Permyak area there are villages where people speak hardly any other language except Komi-Permyak. Some young people, all adults. Many children learn the language, but only in rural areas do they continue to use it as adults. Also use Russian [rus].
Dictionary. Grammar. Texts. NT: 2019.
Cyrillic script [Cyrl], primary usage. Latin script [Latn], official usage between 1932–1938. Old Permic script [Perm], no longer in use.
Some literature available. Ancient literary and cultural traditions. More densely populated and mixed, higher education, and more assimilated to national culture than Komi-Zyrian. Christian, traditional religion.
OLAC resources in and about Komi-Permyak
Komi-Permyak
1,100 in Kazakhstan (Leclerc 2017e).
Unestablished
Non-indigenous.
View other languages of Kazakhstan