Oirat | |
---|---|
ᡆᡕᡅᠷᠠᡑ ᡘᡄᠯᡄᠨ Oyirad kelen ᠮᠣᠩᠭᠣᠯ ᠬᠡᠯᠡᠨ ᠦ ᠣᠶᠢᠷᠠᠳ ᠠᠶᠠᠯᠭᠤ Mongγol kelen-ü Oyirad ayalγu |
|
Spoken in | People's Republic of China, Mongolia, Russia, Kyrgyzstan[1] |
Region | Xinjiang, Gansu, Qinghai, Kalmykia, Khovd, Uvs,[2] Bayan-Ölgii[3] |
Ethnicity | Oirats |
Native speakers | 500,000 (date missing) |
Language family |
Mongolic
|
Writing system | Clear script (China: unofficial), Mongolian script (Mongolia: unofficial, China: official), Cyrillic (Russia: official, Mongolia: official) |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-2 | xal |
ISO 639-3 | either: xal – Oirat xwo – Written Oirat |
Linguasphere | part of 44-BAA-b |
Oirat (Clear script: ᡆᡕᡅᠷᠠᡑ ᡘᡄᠯᡄᠨ[5] Oyirad kelen; Kalmyk: Өөрд, Öörd; Khalkha-Mongolian: Ойрад, Oirad) belongs to the group of Mongolic languages. Scholars differ as to whether Oirat is a distinct language[6] or a major dialect of the Mongolian language.[7] Oirat speaking areas are scattered across the far west of the Mongolian state,[8] the northwest of People's Republic of China (mainly in Xinjiang),[8] and Russia's Caspian coast, where its major variety is Kalmyk.[9] In all three nations, Oirat has become variously endangered or even obsolescent as a direct result of government actions or as a consequence of social and economic policies. Its most widespread dialect, which is spoken in all of these nations, is Torgut.[1][8] The term Oirat or, more precisely, Written Oirat is sometimes also used to refer to the language of historical documents written in the Clear script.[10]
In Mongolia, there are seven historical Oirat dialects, each corresponding to a different tribe:[11]
There are some varieties that are difficult to classify. The Alasha dialect in Alxa League in South Mongolia originally belonged to Oirat[12] and has been classified as such by some because of its phonology.[1] But it has been classified by others as Mongolian proper because of its morphology.[13] The Darkhad dialect in Mongolia's Khövsgöl Province has variously been classified as Oirat, Mongolian proper, or (less often) Buryat.[14]
Oirat is everywhere an endangered language variety. In Russia, the killing of a large fraction of the Kalmyk population and the destruction of their society as consequences of the Kalmyk deportations of 1943, along with the subsequent imposition among them of Russian as the sole official language have rendered the language obsolescent: it is almost exclusively old people that have a fluent command of Kalmyk.[15] In China, while Oirat is still quite widely used in its traditional ranges and there are many monolingual speakers,[16] a combination of government policies and social realities has created an environment deleterious to the use of this language: the Chinese authorities' adoption of Southern Mongolian as the normative Mongolian language,[17] new educational policies which have led to the virtual elimination of Mongolian schools in Xinjiang (there are just two left), policies aiming to curtail nomadism, and the limited occupational prospects in Chinese society for graduates of Mongolian schools.[18] As for Mongolia, the predominance of the Khalkha dialect is bringing about the Khalkhaization of all other varieties of Mongolian.[19]
English | Classical Mongolian | Oirat | |
1 | One | Nigen | Nige(n) |
2 | Two | Qoyar | Khoyor |
3 | Three | Ghurban | Ghurba(n) |
4 | Four | Dorben | Dorbo(n) |
5 | Five | Tabun | Tabu(n) |
6 | Six | Jirghughan | Zurghaa(n) |
7 | Seven | Dologhan | Doloo(n) |
8 | Eight | Naiman | Nayima(n) |
9 | Nine | Yisun | Yesu(n) |
10 | Ten | Arban | Arba(n) |