Uralic Typology Pages
Anne Tamm, 29 April 2021
This is the workspace for Uralic Typology. The interactive page contains the news about upcoming events, a forum and a collection of links and data sources on Uralic languages. The purpose of these pages is the following:
- to advance the scientific study of the Uralic languages (official languages as well as variants) and define their structures within the context of cross-linguistic diversity;
- to further mutual awareness, dialogue, and co-operation between the international community of linguists specialized on the particular Uralic languages and those interested in the Uralic data across theoretical frameworks and subdisciplines;
- to provide an interactive workspace for academic and educational events concerning the Uralic languages;
- to provide an interactive workspace for working towards a database structure (more in Russian) that is useful for linguists across linguistic frameworks, in the spirit of linguistic typology;
- and by doing so, to identify the areas of critically missing research and to increase the quality of education and the advancement of new curricula of the Uralic linguistics.
Maps and languages
Events
Grammar Watch
Courses, links to courses and materials
- links to the materials of the courses
Uralic databases
Uralic projects
Uralic corpora and sources of texts
Uralic lexical resources, documentation, online dictionaries
Uralic culture, blogs and sites
Other typological databases containing Uralic languages
Journals and series of publications on Uralic languages
Comprehensive volumes on Uralic languages
Typological and Uralic societies, associations, and lists
Typological journals
Fieldworker's kit
Where to study or research the Uralic languages?
Grants to research the Uralic languages
Low Society - Glamorous Grassroots:
Roots and Trees: Language genealogy
Parents' page: Materials for Parents who are concerned about keeping their children's language
Elementary Practical Vocabulary in Uralic Languages (under construction)
Various linguistic tools
- Leipzig Glossing Rules here
- Syntax tree generator here (Iron Creek)
- Syntax tree generator here
Participants and consultants of this collection of links, since 2008
This website is moderated and open to the general academic public. Please contact anne.tamm at jhu.edu for adding new information.This page is created in cooperation between the representatives of the following institutions:
- University of Tartu (Helle Metslang, Sveta Edygarova)
- University of Vienna (Johanna Laakso)
- Institute of the Estonian Language (Sven-Erik Soosaar)
- University of Helsinki (Riho Grünthal, Seppo Kittilä)
- University of Stockholm (Matti Miestamo)
- Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest (Ferenc Havas)
- University of Szeged (Katalin Sipőcz)
- Central European University (Anne Tamm)
- Research Institute for Linguistics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences (Marianne Bakró-Nagy)
- More links to consultants and participants