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The majority of Mansi men carry haplogroup N, which is commonly found among Uralic-speaking peoples. 60 percent of them carry its subclade N1b-P43 and 16 percent belong to subclade N1c. [ 15 ] The maternal lineages among Mansi are more heterogeneous.
The base dialect of the Mansi literary language is the Sosva dialect, a representative of the northern language. Fixed word order is typical in Mansi. Adverbials and participles play an important role in sentence construction. [citation needed] In the 2020–2021 census, 2229 people claimed to speak Mansi natively. [3]
The first plausible mention of a people speaking a Uralic language is ... There are many possible ... uniting Mansi with Hungarian rather than Khanty has been a ...
For example, English has about 450 million native speakers but, depending on the criterion chosen, can be said to have as many as two billion speakers. [2] There are also difficulties in obtaining reliable counts of speakers, which vary over time because of population change and language shift.
Khanty and Mansi languages at the beginning of the 20th century [2] [3] Khanty (also spelled Khanti or Hanti ), previously known as Ostyak ( / ˈ ɒ s t j æ k / ), [ 4 ] is a Uralic language family composed of multiple dialect continuua , varyingly considered a language or a collection of distinct languages, spoken in the Khanty-Mansi and ...
Khanty man in Tomsk, 2006. Khanty family standing in front of a chum, their traditional tent Most Khanty people live in the Khanty–Mansi Autonomous Okrug in western Siberia
Northern Mansi (ма̄ньси ла̄тыӈ, pronounced [maːnʲɕi laːtəŋ] ⓘ) is the sole surviving member of the Mansi languages, spoken in Russia in the Khanty–Mansi Autonomous Okrug and Sverdlovsk Oblast. Northern Mansi has strong Russian, Komi, Nenets, and Northern Khanty influence, and is the literary Mansi language. There is no ...
Two common phonetic features of the Ugric languages are a rearrangement of the Proto-Uralic (PU) system of sibilant consonants and a lenition of velar consonants: [5]. PU *s and *š merged and developed into a non-sibilant sound (possibly [θ] or []), yielding Mansi /t/, Khanty *ɬ → /t/ or /l/ (depending on dialect), and were lost in Hungarian.