'Nivkh' or 'Gilyak' (ethnonym: нивхгу,
Japanese: ニヴフ語/ギリヤーク語 nivuhu-go/giriyāku-go)) is a language spoken in
Outer Manchuria, in the basin of the
Amgun (a tributary of the
Amur), along the lower reaches of the
Amur itself, and on the northern half of
Sakhalin. 'Gilyak' is the Manchu appellation. Its speakers are known as the
Nivkhs.
Nivkh is a
language isolate; i.e., it does not appear to be related to any other language. For classification convenience, it is included in the group of
Paleosiberian languages. Many words in the Nivkh language bear a certain resemblance to words of similar meaning in other
Paleosiberian languages,
Ainu,
Korean, or
Altaic languages, but no regular sound changes have been discovered to systematically account for the vocabularies of these various languages, so any lexical similarities are considered to be due to chance or to borrowing. Recently, the Nivkh language was included in the controversial
Eurasiatic languages hypothesis by
Joseph Greenberg.
The lexical and phonological differences between the dialect spoken by the Nivkhs of the Amur River basin and the dialect spoken by the Nivkhs of Sakhalin Island are so great that some linguists have classified them as two distinct languages belonging to a small Nivkh language family. Other linguists have emphasized the high degree of variability of usage among all Nivkhs; even within the Amur or Sakhalin dialect zone, there is said to be great diversity depending on the village, clan, or even individual speaker.
The population of ethnic Nivkhs has been reasonably stable over the past century, with 4,549 Nivkhs counted in 1897, and 4,673 in 1989. However, the number of native speakers of the Nivkh language among these has dropped from 100% to 23.3% in the same period, so that there are now just over 1,000 first-language speakers left.
Sounds
Consonants
Vowels
The vowel system of Nivkh is unusual, being described by
Ian Maddieson as "defective." It is actually a rotated system in which a gap in the mid front region of the
vowel space is compensated for by moving vowels around. The centralised has been described by Maddieson (1984) as complementing a gap caused by the lack of an ordinary mid front vowel.
The mid front vowel expected in a five-vowel system may have in the past developed into a close-to-mid front unrounded diphthong, represented in Maddieson's description of the language as .
References
Bibliography
★ Gruzdeva, Ekaterina. 1998. ''Nivkh'', Lincom Europa, Munich, ISBN 3895860395
★ Maddieson, Ian. 1984. ''Patterns of sounds'',
Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0521265363
External links
★
The Nivkhs from
The Red Book
★
Sound Materials of the Nivkh Language The World's Largest Sound Archive of the Nivkh Language on the Web
★
Nivkh alphabet and language at
Omniglot