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Uralic languages
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Uralic languages

The Uralic languages are a family of about 20 related languages spoken by circa 20 million people in eastern and northern Europe and in northwestern Asia.

Merritt Ruhlen (A Guide to the World's Languages, Stanford UP, 1991) adds the Palaeosiberian language, Yukaghir as coordinate with Samoyedic and Finno-Ugric. This theory however is not universally accepted among linguistics.

There is some debate about a possible relationship between the family as a whole and the Altaic languages; a few scholars also consider the Uralic languages to be related to the Indo-European languages, see also Nostratic language.

The most spoken members of the family are Hungarian, Finnish, and Estonian, all of the Finno-Ugric branch.

Some characteristic features of these languages are:

Family tree

Trace the subtrees in the corresponding articles.

External links