sel ISO 639
шӧльӄумыт әты (šöľqumyt әty) Autonyms
Selkup
Visualizations
A language of Russian Federation
- ISO 639
- sel
- Alternate Names
- Central Selkups, Chumyl’ Khumyt, Northern Selkups, Ostyak Samoyed, Shöl Khumyt, Shösh Gulla, Syusugulla
- Autonym
- шӧльӄумыт әты (šöľqumyt әty)
- Population
- 1,020 (2010 census). Central Selkup: 200 speakers, Northern Selkup: 1,000 to 1,500 speakers, Southern Selkup: less than 100 speakers (Salminen 2007). Ethnic population: 3,900 (2010 census).
- Location
- Tomsk province: Yamalo-Nenets autonomous district; Krasnoyarsk krai: Krasnoselkup region, Krasnoselkup, Krasnoselkupskaya Tolka, and Ratta villages; Krasnoyarsk district, Farkovo; Purovsk region, Tolka Purovskaya village; Turukhan river basin; Baikha (all northern dialect); north Tomsk province area villages (southern dialect).
- Language Maps
- Central Russian Federation
- Language Status
- 6b (Threatened).
- Classification
- Uralic, Samoyed, Southern Samoyed
- Dialects
- Taz (Northern Sel’kup, Tazov-Baishyan), Tym (Kety), Narym (Central Selkup), Srednyaya Ob-Ket (Southern Sel’kup). Dialect continuum with difficult or impossible intelligibility between extremes. Southern speakers separated geographically from others. Northern Selkup literature not usable by Southern and Central.
- Language Use
- In Ratta and Purovskaya Tolka almost everybody knows Selkup, including children and other ethnicities. Some of all ages. Northern dialect spoken by 90% of people, but not mastered by young adults and children. Southern dialect spoken by 30%; 10–15 adults, all over 70, speak fluently. Most children are monolingual Russian [rus] speakers (Salminen 2007). Mixed attitudes. Attitudes are positive among Northern Selkups, neutral among Central and Southern Selkups. Also use Russian [rus], in most key domains, except perhaps among family.
- Language Development
- Taught as subject in primary schools through grade 4 in northern dialect. Dictionary. Grammar.
- Writing
- Cyrillic script [Cyrl].
- Other Comments
- Formerly lingua franca for Ket, Evenki, Nenets, and Khanty. Traditional religion.
- Language Resources
- OLAC resources in and about Selkup
