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Greenlandic language

Greenlandic
kalaallisut
Native to Greenland (Denmark)
 Canada
 Denmark (mainland)
EthnicityGreenlandic Inuit
Native speakers
56,200, 88% of ethnic population (2007)[1]
Eskimo–Aleut
  • Eskimo
    • Inuit
      • Greenlandic
Early forms
Old Greenlandic
  • Middle Greenlandic
Dialects
  • Kalaallisut
  • Tunumiit oraasiat
  • Inuktun
Latin
Scandinavian Braille
Official status
Official language in
 Greenland (Denmark)[2]
Recognised minority
language in
 Denmark (mainland)
Regulated byThe Greenland Language Secretariat Oqaasileriffik
Language codes
ISO 639-1kl
ISO 639-2kal
ISO 639-3kal
GlottologNone
kala1399
ELPKalaallisut
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Greenlandic can be divided into three dialects:

Kalaallisut or, in English, Greenlandic, is the standard dialect and official language of Greenland. This standard national language is now taught to all Greenlanders in school, regardless of their native dialect. It is related to Inuktitut. It reflects almost exclusively the language of western Greenland and has borrowed a great deal of vocabulary from Danish, while Canadian and Alaskan Inuit languages have tended to take words from English or sometimes French and Russian. It is written using the Roman alphabet. The dialect of the Upernavik area in northwest Greenland is somewhat different in sound from the standard dialect.

Tunumiit oraasiat, (or Tunumiisut in Kalaallisut, often East Greenlandic in other languages), is the dialect of eastern Greenland. It differs sharply from other Inuit language variants and has roughly 3,000 speakers.

Avanersuaq is the dialect of the area around Qaanaaq in northern Greenland. It is sometimes called the Thule dialect or North Greenlandic. This area is the northernmost settlement area of the Inuit and has a relatively small number of speakers. It is reputed to be fairly close to the North Baffin dialect, since a group of Inuit from Baffin Island settled in the area during the 19th and early 20th centuries. It counts under 1,000 speakers.

References

[change | change source]
  1. Greenlandic at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  2. Law of Greenlandic Selfrule (see chapter 7)[1] (in Danish)
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Greenlandic language
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