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About Estonian. Helle Metslang Florence, April 2010. Topics. Estonian in myths and facts Rise and development of Estonian Development of written / standard Estonian Estonian dialects Characteristic features of Estonian Publications about Estonian. Estonian in myths and facts: a legend.
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About Estonian Helle Metslang Florence, April 2010
Topics • Estonian in myths and facts • Rise and development of Estonian • Development of written / standard Estonian • Estonian dialects • Characteristic features of Estonian • Publications about Estonian
Estonian in myths and facts: a legend Once upon a time Estonian had won the second prize after Italian at the beauty contest of languages with the sentence Sõida tasa üle silla ‘ride slowly across the bridge’.
Is Estonian a difficult language? There is a myth among learners of Estonian that Estonian is a difficult language. It is true that e.g. the abundance of noun forms and stem alternations or the aspect that is manifested in the object makes Estonian different from the Indo-European languages, which learners are mostly familiar with. However, the main categories, lexicalization and grammaticalization processes, and the abundance of loan vocabulary blend Estonian into the European context.
Some facts about Estonian: speakers of Estonian • 1,1 million people speak Estonian as a native language • About 950 000 of them live in the Republic of Estonia. • Estonians live also in Sweden, Canada, USA, Russia, Australia, Finland, Germany etc.
Status of Estonian • Estonian (as also e.g. Icelandic) is today one of the smallest languages in the world that functions as official language in all spheres of use: administration, media, literature, theatre, business, school, universities, research, etc. • From 1.5.2004 Estonian is one of the official languages ot the EU.
Related languages • Estonian belongs to the Finnic group of the Finno-Ugric language family • Other Finnic languages: Finnish, Livonian, Vepsian, Votian, Karelian, Izhorian • Most distant Finno-Ugric languages: Khanty, Mansi, Hungarian
The development of Estonian • As a language as its own Estonian evolved between the 13th-16th centuries: common changes in the local tribal dialects resulted in the formation of the common language • Ancient Estonian was influenced by various Germanic, Baltic and Slavonic languages. This is proved e.g. by multiple loan words. • German influence in the 13th-19th c. • Standard Estonian started to take shape in the 16th–17th centuries, it was mostly developed by the German clergy
Someof the common changes in the local tribal dialects • palatalization of the consonants (kan’n : kan’ni ‚plaything’, cf. kann:kannu ‚jug’) • apocope (*jalka > jalG ‚leg’), syncope (*kastanut > kastnut participle of kastma ‚water’) • change of the negation verb (cf. Finnish en, et) into the negation particle ei, ep • loss of the possessive suffixes, of the potential mood, of the essive case; • rise of the new comitative case (*keelen kaas > keele kaas > keele kaa > keeleGa ‚with the tongue’) and of the quotative mood (tulevat ’is said to come’)
An example of reconstructions of the Estonian language (Andrus Saareste) 'Once an old honest man had a very ill-tempered wife’ Pre-13th c.: Kõrdan oli ühdellä vanhalla auvoisalla meehellä ülin kurja nainõn 13th c.: Kordan oli ühdelä vanhala auvosala mehelä ülin kurja nainõn 16th c.: Korra oli ühel vanal auosal mehel väen kaas kuri naine 17th-18th c.: Korra oli ühel vanal auusal mehel väega kuri naine 20th c.: Kord oli ühel vanal ausal mehel väga kuri naine
The first recordings of Estonian • In the 13th century German and Scandinavian crusaders reached Estonia, one of the last pagan countries in Europe • The crusades are described in the early 13th century in the Latin chronicle Heinrici Chronicon Livoniae, which already contains words and fragments of sentences in Estonian.
The first continuous Estonian text 1524-1528 The Kullamaa Manuscript. This Catholic text contains two prayers - the Lord's Prayer and the Hail Mary -, and the Creed.
The oldest extant pages of a book: the Wanradt-Koell Catechism (1535)
Grammars of Estonian • Missionary grammars in the 17th-18th c. • 1637 Heinrich Stahl ”Anführung zu der Ehstnischen Sprach” – the first grammar of Estonian • 1884 Karl August Hermann “Eesti grammatik” – the first grammar in Estonian
Development of the Standard Estonian in the 19th/20th c. • During the National Awakening in the mid-19th century, the Estonian language rapidly advanced from being the spoken idiom of the peasants to becoming a cultural language. • During the first decades of the 20th century, the Estonian intelligentsia set themselves the conscious task of turning the Estonian language into a European cultural language.
Standardization and development of Estonian in the first decades of the 20th c. Two trends: • Johannes Voldemar Veski: systematic development of the standard language • Johannes Aavik: language reform. He tried to make the literary language richer and more beautiful. He relied on the material provided by the Finnish language and Estonian dialects, but also coined artificial words and forms.
Aavik and his sympathizers used the reformed language in print medium, e.g. in the series “Hirmu ja õuduse jutud” (Stories of fear and horror). The covers were designed by Johannes Aavik. (“Vaimude maja” ‘House of ghosts’) The propaganda of the language reform
Estonian dialects • Standard Estonian has been mostly formed from the dialects of North Estonian. • Mulgi, Tartu, Võro and Seto dialects in the South Estonian language area • The North Estonian language area includes the northeast coastal, eastern, central, western and insular dialects.
Estonian dialects: an example ‘Our nightingale has gone elsewhere this year’ Standard Estonian:Meie ööbik on tänavu mujale läinud Saaremaa (insular dialect): Meide ööbik aa seaesta maeale läin Muhumaa (insular dialect) : Meite üöbik uo sieoasta mõjale läin Northern-Virumaa (coastal dialect): Meie kirikiut one tänävu mojale lähänd Setomaa (Võru dialect): Mii sisas'k om timahavva muialõ l'änüq
Some characteristic features of the Estonian language 1 • large number of cases - 14 productive cases • no accusative case – the object can be in the partitive, genitive or nominative case • no articles (either definite or indefinite)
Some characteristic features of the Estonian language 2 • no grammatical gender either of nouns or personal pronouns. (As the pronoun tema can refer to both man and woman (occasionally even to a thing), an Estonian speaker does not face problems of political correctness as do those who speak Indo-European languages) • quotative and jussive mood • differentiation between three quantities
Sound • The Estonian language is rich in vowels: the 26 Estonian phonemes include 9 vowels: u, o, a, õ, ü, ö, ä, e, i • A few exceptions excluded, the main stress in Estonian words falls on the first syllable, the frequent secondary stress on oddsyllables
Three quantities Estonian has differentiation between three quantities of syllables. The 2nd and 3rd quantities are not distinguished in spelling; the meaning and pronunciation of the word becomes clear from the contents. koli ‘trash’ kooli genitive of kool ‘school’ kooli partitive and short illative of kool ‘school’ koli ‘trash’ kolli genitive of koll 'bogey' kolli partitive of koll 'bogey'
Vocabulary Simple and compound words, derivations. Old and new loanwords.
Morphology: declination 14 cases, incl. 3 grammatical cases, 6 local cases (3 interior and 3 exterior local cases) Grammatical cases: Nominativeilus tüdruk ‘(a) beautiful girl’ Genitiveilusa tüdruku Partitiveilusa-t tüdruku-t
Semantic cases: interior local cases Illative ilusa-sse maja-sse / majja ‘into a beautiful house’ Inessive ilusa-s maja-s ‘in a beautiful house’ Elative ilusa-st maja-st ‘from a beautiful house’
Semantic cases: exterior local cases Allative ilusa-le tüdruku-le ‘to a beautifiul girl’ Adessive ilusa-l tüdruku-l ‘by a beautiful girl’ Ablative ilusa-lt tüdruku-lt ‘from a beautiful girl’
Other semantic cases Translative ilusa-ks tüdruku-ks (to turn) ‘(in) to a beautiful girl’ Terminative ilusa tüdruku-ni ‘up to a beautiful girl’ Essive ilusa tüdruku-na ‘as a beautiful girl’ ‘Abessive ilusa tüdruku-ta ‘without a beautiful girl’ Comitative ilusa tüdruku-ga ‘with a beautiful girl’
To compare: cases in Finnish • 15 cases • No terminative • Old cases: Comitative: talo-i-neen ‘with his house(s)’ Instructive: talo-in Accusative (7 pronouns): minu-t, sinu-t etc.
Estonian and Finnish verb forms: examples 1 E ma ela-n ‘I live’ F minä elä-n I live-1SG E ta ela-b ‘s/he lives’ s/he live-1PL F hän elää s/he live:3PL E nad ela-si-d ‘they lived’ F he el-i-vät they live-PST-3PL
Estonian and Finnish verb forms: examples 2 E sa ole-d ela-nud ‘You have lived’ F sinä ole-t elä-nyt you (SG) be-2SG live-PRTC E ta ela-vat ‘s/he is said to live’ s/he live-QUOT E ela-ta-ks ‘one would live’ F ele-ttä-isi live-IMPS-COND
Estonian and Finnish verb forms: examples 3 E te ei ela ‘you do not live’ you NEG live F te e-tte elä you NEG-2PL live E är-ge ela-ge (you) ‘don’t live!’ NEG-2PL live-2PL F äl-kää elä-kö NEG-2PL live-IMP E ela! ‘live!’ F elä! live
Dialects: dictionary, texts Literary language: normative dictionary, explanatory dictionary Books about Estonian
Publications of the universities of Tartu and Tallinn and of the Institute of Estonian language
Yearbooks of the Mother Tongue Society and Estonian Association of Applied Linguistics
Publications about Estonian from the typological point of view “Estonian: typological studies” I-V, ed. by Mati Erelt, University of Tartu, 1996-2001 Linguistic typology and universals (STUF) 2009, 1-2: Estonian in typological perspective (guest editor Helle Metslang)
References 1 Erelt, Mati (ed.) 2003, Estonian Language. (Linguistica Uralica. Supplementary Series. Volume. 1).Tallinn: Estonian Academy Publishers. Grünthal, Riho 2000, Typological characteristics of the Finnic languages: a reappraisal. – Laakso, Johanna (ed.), Facing Finnic. Some challenges to historical and contact linguistics. (Castrenianumin toimitteita 59.) Helsinki, 31-63 Kehayov, Petar 2008, An Areal-Typological Perspective to Evidentiality: the Cases of the Balkan and Baltic Linguistic Areas. Tartu, University of Tartu Press
References 2 Klaas, Birute 1997, The quotative mood in the Baltic Sea areal. - Estonian: typological studies II. Ed. by Mati Erelt. (Publications of the Department of Estonian of the University of Tartu 8.) Tartu: 73-97 Metslang, Helle 1996, The developments of the futures in the Finno-Ugric languages. - Estonian: Typological Studies I. Ed. by M. Erelt. (Publications of the Department of Estonian of the University of Tartu 4.) Tartu: 123-144. Moskovoj, A. 1989, Zur typologischen Charakteristik der estnischen Fragepartikel kas. - SFU 2, lk. 84-90.