Mator language explained

Mator
States:Russia
Region:northern Sayan Mountains
Extinct:1839
Familycolor:Uralic
Fam2:Samoyedic
Dia1:Mator
Dia2:Taygi
Dia3:Karagas
Linglist:mtm
Linglist2:ymt
Glotto:mato1250
Glottorefname:Mator-Taigi-Karagas
Glotto2:nucl1288
Glottorefname2:Nuclear Mator
Map:Kamas.png
Mapcaption:Traditional distribution of the extinct Sayan Samoyedic languages including Mator[1] [2]
Ethnicity:, possibly also Soyots, Karagas
Also Known As:Motor, Mator-Taigi-Karagas
Lc2:ymt
Ld2:Mator-Taygi-Karagas (deprecated)
Lc1:mtm
Ld1:Mator
Dia4:Soyot

Mator or Motor is an extinct Uralic language belonging to the group of Samoyedic languages, extinct since the 1840s. It was spoken in the northern region of the Sayan Mountains in Siberia, close to the Mongolian north border. The speakers of Mator,, lived in a wide area from the eastern parts of the Minusinsk District (okrug) along the Yenisei River to the region of Lake Baikal. Three dialects of Mator were recorded: Mator proper as well as Taygi and Karagas (occasionally portrayed as separate languages, but their differences are few). Mator was influenced by Mongolic, Tungusic and Turkic languages before it went extinct, and may have even been possibly influenced by the Iranic languages.[3] Today the term "Mator people" is simply a name of a seok of the Koibal, one of the five territorial sub-division groups of the Khakas. (Note that the name "Koibal" likewise derives from the related Samoyedic Koibal language).

Mator has been frequently grouped together with Selkup and Kamassian as "South Samoyedic". This is however a grouping by geographical area, and not considered to constitute an actual sub-branch of the Samoyedic languages.

Lexicon

Below are some Mator words from Helimski 1997.

Bibliography

. Eugene Helimski. 1997. Die Matorische Sprache: Wörterbuch – Grundzüge der Grammatik – Sprachgeschichte. Szeged. Studia Uralo-Altaica. 41.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Rantanen . Timo . Tolvanen . Harri . Roose . Meeli . Ylikoski . Jussi . Vesakoski . Outi . 2022-06-08 . Best practices for spatial language data harmonization, sharing and map creation—A case study of Uralic . PLOS ONE . en . 17 . 6 . e0269648 . 10.1371/journal.pone.0269648. free . 35675367 . 9176854 . 2022PLoSO..1769648R .
  2. Rantanen, Timo, Vesakoski, Outi, Ylikoski, Jussi, & Tolvanen, Harri. (2021). Geographical database of the Uralic languages (v1.0) [Data set]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4784188
  3. Book: Helimski, Eugen . Die Matorische Sprache . 1997 . Szeged.