nio ISO 639

Ня”‎ (Nja’), Ӈана”са‎ (Ŋanaʿsa) Autonyms

Nganasan

  • Geography

    RU Krasnoyarsk krai: Duinka region, Ust-Avam and Volochanka villages; Khatang region, Novaya village; northernmost people in Russia, Siberia, Taimyr peninsula.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Russian Federation

nio
Nya, Tavgi Samoyed
Ня”‎ (Nja’), Ӈана”са‎ (Ŋanaʿsa)
50 (Gusev 2015). Ethnic population: 860 (2010 census). A group of about 100 lead a semi-nomadic life in Dudypta river region near Ust’-Avam (Salminen 2007).
Krasnoyarsk krai: Duinka region, Ust-Avam and Volochanka villages; Khatang region, Novaya village; northernmost people in Russia, Siberia, Taimyr peninsula.
Central Russian Federation
8a (Moribund).
Uralic, Samoyed, Northern Samoyed
Avam (West Nganasan), Khatang.
SOV; case-marking (7 cases); 3 numbers; verbs agree with their subjects in number and person.
Limited use in the home. Older adults only. Mixed attitudes, from neutral to mildly positive. Ethnic pride expressed and status enhanced by knowledge of Nganasan. Shifted to Russian [rus] (Leisiö 2006). Also use Dolgan [dlg]. Used as L2 by Tundra Enets [enh].
Dictionary. Grammar.
Cyrillic script [Cyrl].
2 ethnic groups: Avam and Vadeyev. From 1960s–1980s resettled in villages formerly used as winter quarters or trading posts along migratory routes in 1940s. Previous intermittent contact with Tundra Enets and Nenets, and formerly officially were considered part of them. Resettlement brought close contact with Russian, Ukrainian [ukr], Belarusian [bel], and Tatar [tat]. Traditional religion.
OLAC resources in and about Nganasan