Alaska Native LanguagesSt. Lawrence Island Yupik (Siberian) YupikSt. Lawrence Island Yupik (also Siberian Yupik) is spoken in the two St. Lawrence Island villages of Gambell and Savoonga. The language of St. Lawrence Island is nearly identical to the language spoken across the Bering Strait on the tip of the Siberian Chukchi Peninsula. The total Siberian Yupik population in Alaska is about 1,100, and of that number about 1,050 speak the language. Children in both Gambell and Savoonga still learn Siberian Yupik as the first language of the home. Of a population of about 900 Siberian Yupik people in Siberia, there are about 300 speakers, although no children learn it as their first language. Although much linguistic and pedagogical work had been published in Cyrillic on the Siberian side, very little was written for St. Lawrence Island until the 1960s when linguists devised a modern orthography. Researchers at the University of Alaska in Fairbanks revised that orthography in 1971, and since then a wide variety of curriculum materials, including a preliminary dictionary and a practical grammar, have become available for the schools. Siberian Yupik is a distinct language from Central Alaskan Yup'ik. Notice that the former is spelled without an apostrophe.
Aleut
| Alutiiq
| Iñupiaq
| Central Yup'ik
| Siberian Yupik
| Tsimshian
| Haida
|
|
Alaska Native Language Center University of Alaska Fairbanks Box 757680 Fairbanks, AK 99775 (907) 474-7874 [voice] (907) 474-6586 [fax] fyanlp@uaf.edu |
Comments regarding this website: anlc@www.uaf.edu Last modified February 10, 2008 Copyright ©1999-2008 Alaska Native Language Center |