niv ISO 639

Nivxgu, Нивхгу диф‎ (Nivxgu dif) Autonyms

Gilyak

  • Geography

    RU Sakhalin province: Nekrasovka and Nogliki villages, Chir-Unvd, Moskalvo, Rybnoe, Viakhtu, and other villages; Khabarovsk krai: Aleyevka village, Amur river area.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Russian Federation

niv
Nivkh, Nivkhi
Nivxgu, Нивхгу диф‎ (Nivxgu dif)
200 (2010 census). A few hundred active users (Salminen 2007). Ethnic population: 4,650 (2010 census).
Sakhalin province: Nekrasovka and Nogliki villages, Chir-Unvd, Moskalvo, Rybnoe, Viakhtu, and other villages; Khabarovsk krai: Aleyevka village, Amur river area.
Eastern Russian Federation
8a (Moribund).
Language isolate
Amur, East Sakhalin Gilyak, North Sakhalin Gilyak. Amur and East Sakhalin dialects have difficult inherent mutual intelligibility. North Sakhalin is between them linguistically.
SOV; postpositions; case-marking (8 cases); passives (active, hortative, reflexive, reciprocal); aspect; 31 consonant and 12 vowels; non-tonal; no adjectives.
Seriously endangered (2000 A. Kubrik). Forced resettlement weakened use. Some scattered without regular contact with other speakers. No younger speakers in Amur region and very few on Sakhalin (Salminen 2007). Home. Older adults only. Mixed attitudes, from neutral to mildly positive. Shifted to Russian [rus].
Taught as subject in primary schools through grade 2. Dictionary. Grammar.
Cyrillic script [Cyrl], primary usage. Latin script [Latn], used between 1931–1953.
OLAC resources in and about Gilyak