Structural characteristics generally said to be typical of Uralic languages include:
Grammar • extensive use of independent
suffixes (
agglutination) • a large set of
grammatical cases marked with agglutinative suffixes (13–14 cases on average; mainly later developments: Proto-Uralic is reconstructed with 6 cases), e.g.: • Erzya: 12 cases • Estonian: 14 cases (15 cases with instructive) • Finnish: 15 cases • Hungarian: 18 cases (together 34 grammatical cases and case-like suffixes) • Inari Sámi: 9 cases • Komi: in certain dialects as many as 27 cases • Moksha: 13 cases • Nenets: 7 cases • Northern Sámi: 6 cases • Udmurt: 16 cases • Veps: 24 cases • Northern Mansi: 6 cases • Eastern Mansi: 8 cases • unique Uralic case system, from which all modern Uralic languages derive their case systems. • nominative singular has no case suffix. • accusative (Proto-Uralic
*-m) and genitive (
*-n) suffixes are
nasal consonants. Many languages have merged the two. • the Uralic locative suffix
*-nA exists in all Uralic languages in various cases, e.g. Hungarian
superessive, Finnish
essive (
-na), Northern Sámi
essive, Erzyan
inessive, and Nenets
locative. • a lack of
grammatical gender, including one pronoun for both
he and
she; for example,
hän in Finnish,
tämä in Votic,
tämā or
ta (short form for tämā) in Livonian,
tema or
ta (short form for tema) in Estonian,
сійӧ () in Komi,
ő in Hungarian. •
negative verb, which exists in many Uralic languages (notably absent in Hungarian) • use of postpositions as opposed to prepositions (prepositions are uncommon). •
possessive suffixes • the
genitive is also used to express possession in some languages, e.g.
Estonian mu koer,
colloquial Finnish mun koira,
Northern Sámi mu beana 'my dog' (literally 'dog of me'). Separate
possessive adjectives and
possessive pronouns, such as
my and
your, are rare. •
dual, in the Samoyedic, Ob-Ugric and Sámi languages and reconstructed for Proto-Uralic •
plural markers -j (i) and -t (-d, -q) have a common origin (e.g. in Finnish, Estonian, Võro, Erzya, Sámi languages, Samoyedic languages). Hungarian, however, has -i- before the possessive suffixes and -k elsewhere. The plural marker -k is also used in the Sámi languages, but there is a regular merging of final -k and -t in Sámi, so it can come from either ending. • Possessions are expressed by a possessor in the adessive or dative case, the verb "be" (the
copula, instead of the verb "have") and the possessed with or without a possessive suffix. The grammatical subject of the sentence is thus the possessed. In Finnish, for example, the possessor is in the
adessive case: "Minulla on kala", literally "At me is fish", i.e. "I have a fish", whereas in Hungarian, the possessor is in the
dative case, but appears overtly only if it is contrastive, while the possessed has a possessive ending indicating the number and person of the possessor: "(Nekem) van egy halam", literally "(To me [dative]) is a fish-my" ("(For me) there is a fish of mine"), i.e. "(As for me,) I have a fish". • expressions that include a
numeral are singular if they refer to things which form a single group, e.g. "négy csomó" in Hungarian, "njeallje čuolmma" in Northern Sámi, "neli sõlme" in Estonian, and "neljä solmua" in Finnish, each of which means "four knots", but the literal approximation is "four knot". (This approximation is accurate only for Hungarian among these examples, as in Northern Sámi the noun is in the singular
accusative/
genitive case and in Finnish and Estonian the singular noun is in the
partitive case, such that the number points to a part of a larger mass, like "four of knot(s)".)
Phonology •
Vowel harmony: this is present in many but by no means all Uralic 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. It is lacking in Sámi,
Permic,
Selkup and
standard Estonian, while it does exist in
Võro and elsewhere in
South Estonian, as well as in
Kihnu Island subdialect of North Estonian. (Although
double dot diacritics are used in writing Uralic languages, the languages do not exhibit
Germanic umlaut, a different type of vowel
assimilation.) • Large vowel inventories. For example, some
Selkup varieties have over twenty different
monophthongs. •
Palatalization of consonants; in this context, palatalization means a secondary articulation, where the middle of the tongue is tense. For example, pairs like – [n], or [c] – [t] are contrasted in Hungarian, as in
hattyú "swan". Some Sámi languages, for example
Skolt Sámi, distinguish three degrees: plain [l], palatalized , and palatal , where has a primary alveolar articulation, while has a primary palatal articulation. Original Uralic palatalization is phonemic, independent of the following vowel and traceable to the millennia-old
Proto-Uralic. It is different from Slavic palatalization, which is of more recent origin. The
Finnic languages have lost palatalization, but several of them have reacquired it, so Finnic palatalization (where extant) was originally dependent on the following vowel and does not correlate to palatalization elsewhere in Uralic. • Lack of phonologically contrastive
tone. • In many Uralic languages, the stress is always on the first syllable, though Nganasan shows (essentially) penultimate stress, and a number of languages of the central region (Erzya, Mari, Udmurt and Komi-Permyak) synchronically exhibit a lexical accent. The Erzya language can vary its stress in words to give specific nuances to sentential meaning.
Lexicography Basic vocabulary of about 200 words, including body parts (e.g. eye, heart, head, foot, mouth), family members (e.g. father, mother-in-law), animals (e.g. viper, partridge, fish), nature objects (e.g. tree, stone, nest, water), basic verbs (e.g. live, fall, run, make, see, suck, go, die, swim, know), basic pronouns (e.g. who, what, we, you, I), numerals (e.g. two, five); derivatives increase the number of common words.
Selected cognates The following is a very brief selection of cognates in basic vocabulary across the Uralic family, which may serve to give an idea of the sound changes involved. This is not a list of translations: cognates have a common origin, but their meaning may be shifted and loanwords may have replaced them. Orthographical notes: The hacek denotes postalveolar articulation ( , , ) (In Northern Sámi, ( ), while the acute denotes a secondary palatal articulation ( , , ) or, in Hungarian, vowel length. The Finnish letter and the letter in other languages represent the high rounded vowel ; the letters and are the front vowels and . As is apparent from the list, Finnish is the most conservative of the Uralic languages presented here, with nearly half the words on the list above identical to their Proto-Uralic reconstructions and most of the remainder only having minor changes, such as the conflation of *ś into /s/, or widespread changes such as the loss of *x and alteration of *ï. Finnish has also preserved old Indo-European borrowings relatively unchanged. (An example is
porsas ("pig"), loaned from
Proto-Indo-European *porḱos or pre-
Proto-Indo-Iranian *porśos, unchanged since loaning save for loss of
palatalization, *ś > s. , contrary to any of the
Germanic languages.-->)
Mutual intelligibility The Estonian philologist
Mall Hellam proposed cognate sentences that she asserted to be mutually intelligible among the three most widely spoken Uralic languages: Hungarian, Finnish, and Estonian: • . • . • . • . However, linguist
Geoffrey Pullum reports that neither Finns nor Hungarians could understand the other language's version of the sentence.
Comparison No Uralic language has exactly the idealized typological profile of the family. Typological features with varying presence among the modern Uralic language groups include: Notes: : : : : : : : ==Proposed relations with other language families==