урумский язык, урум тыль, Urumca, Urum Türkçesi, урумська мова
CLASSIFICATIONTurkic, Kipchak
CODE AUTHORITYISO 639-3
LANGUAGE CODEuum
DOWNLOADAs csv
MORE RESOURCESInformation from: “Europe and North Asia” (211-282) . Tapani Salminen (2007) , C. Moseley · London & New York: Routledge
The number of speakers is not known exactly, but may range in some tens of thousands.
SPEAKER NUMBER TRENDS
TRANSMISSION
A language shift to dominant languages has proceeded rapidly, leaving few child speakers.
Originally spoken in the south of the Crimea, now in a few villages in Donets’k (Donetsk) Province in the southeast of the Ukraine and in some places, notably Trialeti, in Georgia and perhaps elsewhere in Caucasia.
Information from: “World Oral Literature Project” .
Information from: “Ethnologue: Languages of the World, 16th Edition (2009)” . M. Paul Lewis · SIL International
97,700 in Georgia (2000). 95,000 in Ukraine (2000).
Caucasus. Southeast Ukraine, Donetsk Oblast
Information from: “The World Atlas of Language Structures” . Bernard Comrie and David Gil and Martin Haspelmath and Matthew S. Dryer · Oxford University Press
LOCATION INFORMATION
Information from: “The World Atlas of Language Structures” . Bernard Comrie and David Gil and Martin Haspelmath and Matthew S. Dryer · Oxford University Press
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