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Selkups are the only ones who speak Southern Samoyedic languages nowadays.
(3) Most decisively, it is found in all branches of Uralic, including Samoyedic.
Samoyedic can refer to:
The chapter means "Northern Samoyedic peoples", the title means Finno-Ugric guide.
In: The History of the Finno-Ugric and Samoyedic Peoples.
Mator has been frequently grouped together with Selkup and Kamassian as "South Samoyedic".
Samoyedic is one of the principal branches of the Uralic language family, and its ancestor is Proto-Uralic.
(Note that the name "Koibal" likewise derives from the related Samoyedic Koibal language.)
Finno-Ugric and Samoyedic are listed in ISO 639-5 as primary branches of Uralic.
A recent competing proposal instead unites Ugric and Samoyedic in an "East Uralic" group for which shared innovations can be noted.
Nenets people, Enets people, Nganasan people speak Northern Samoyedic languages.
It has been also part of a wider language area covering also the Southern Samoyedic languages Kamassian and Mator.
While the tribes around Lake Baikal were Mongol-speaking, those to the west spoke Turkic, Samoyedic, or Yeniseian languages.
Proponents of the traditional binary division note, however, that the invocation of extensive contact influence on vocabulary is at odds with the grammatical conservatism of Samoyedic.
The Altai Turks may be related to neighboring Ugric, Samoyedic, Ket, or Mongols.
Besides the Turkic tribes mentioned above, there is indication that modern Tuvans are descended also from Mongolic, Samoyedic, and Kettic groups of peoples.
The indigenous population of the Polar Urals consists of the Nenets and Samoyedic peoples who are widespread through the Siberia and have their own languages.
The correlation between these two stem classes is however not perfect, and alternate possibilities exist for explaining both vowel length in Finnic and vowel sequences in Samoyedic.
By the early 17th century the term Uriankhai was a general Mongolian term for all the dispersed bands to the northwest, whether Samoyedic, Turkic, or Mongol in origin.
Subsequently, Turkic, Mongolic, and Tungusic came to be referred to as Altaic languages, whereas Finno-Ugric and Samoyedic were called Uralic.
Siberian Tatars' ancestry was partly from Turkic and Mongol peoples, but their main ancestors are Samoyedic, Ket, and Ugric tribes.
I always thought the two were interchangeable: anorak from the Inuit Eskimo for "a long pullover hooded jacket," and parka from the Samoyedic Russian for the same outerwear.
The protolanguages would be Sami, (Baltic-)Finnic, Mordva, Mari, Permic, Magyar, Khanti, Mansi, and Samoyedic.
Müller put forward and promoted the theory of a "Turanian" family of languages or speech, comprising the Finnic, Samoyedic, Tataric, Mongolic, and Tungusic languages.
It exists in Hungarian and various Baltic-Finnic languages, and is present to some degree elsewhere, such as in Mordvinic, Mari, Eastern Khanty, and Samoyedic.