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Lithuanian is the official language of Lithuania, spoken by
about 4 million native Lithuanians. The Lithuanian name for the language is Lietuvių kalba.
In older literature on Baltic languages, "Lithuanian" can sometimes refer to Baltic Languages in general.
History
The Lithuanian language still retains much of the original sound system and morphological peculiarities of
the prototypal Indo-European language and therefore is
fascinating for linguistic study. Some reconstructions have concluded that Lithuanian is the language most closely related to
Proto-Indo-European [1] . Some linguists have speculated that
proto-Baltic languages split from other Indo-European languages before 1000 BCE.
Between 400-600, the Lithuanian and Latvian languages split from
the Western Baltic (Prussian) language group, which subsequently
became extinct. The first known written Lithuanian text dates from a hymnal translation in 1545. Printed books in Lithuanian language are known since 1547, but the level
of literacy among Lithuanians was low in the 16th – 18th centuries and books were not easily available. Literacy in
Lithuania strongly increased during the 19th century, despite victimization, made by Russian authorities (which reached its peak
after suppression of January Uprising, in 1864 – 1904, when Russian officials forbade any public spoken usage
of Lithuanian language and usage of Latin alphabet for written language).
Lithuanian has been official language in Lithuania since 1918 year. During Soviet period
( 1944 – 1990, see History of Lithuania), it was used in official affairs along with
Russian language, which was official in the USSR and had priority over Lithuanian language.
Classification
Lithuanian is one of two (the other is Latvian) living Baltic languages, which is a separate branch of the Indo-European languages, but perhaps closest to the Slavic family.
Geographic distribution
Lithuanian is spoken mainly in Lithuania. It is also spoken in Argentina, Australia, Belarus, Brazil, Canada, Estonia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Poland, Russia, Sweden, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, United
Kingdom, Uruguay, USA,
and Uzbekistan.
2,955,200 in Lithuania (including 3,460 Tatar) or about 80% of the population (1998) speak Lithuanian. The population total
speaking Lithuanian for all countries is 4,000,000 (1993 UBS).
Official status
Lithuanian is the official language of Lithuania.
Dialects
The Lithuanian language has two main dialects: Aukshtaitish (Aukštaičių, Highland Lithuanian) and Zhemaitish (Samogitian, Žemaičių, Lowland Lithuanian). See maps at
[2] .
Standard Lithuanian is based on Western Aukshtaitish. Intelligibility between Aukshtaitish and Zhemaitish is considered
difficult by most Lithuanians. Second languages Russian and
English are used with foreigners.
Sounds
Vowels
Lithuanian has 12 written vowels. In addition to the standard Roman letters, the ogonek accent is used to indicate long vowels, and is a historical relic of a time when these vowels were nasalized
(as ogonek vowels are in modern Polish).
| Majuscule |
A |
Ą |
E |
Ę |
Ė |
I |
Į |
Y |
O |
U |
Ų |
Ū |
| Minuscule |
a |
ą |
e |
ę |
ė |
i |
į |
y |
o |
u |
ų |
ū |
| IPA |
a |
aː |
ɛ |
ɛː |
eː |
i |
iː |
iː |
o |
u |
uː |
uː |
Consonants
Lithuanian uses 20 consonant characters, drawn from the Roman alphabet. In addition, the digraph "Ch" represents a velar
fricative (IPA [x]); the pronunciation of other digraphs can be deduced from their component
elements.
| Majuscule |
B |
C |
Č |
D |
F |
G |
H |
J |
K |
L |
M |
N |
P |
R |
S |
Š |
T |
V |
Z |
Ž |
| Minuscule |
b |
c |
č |
d |
f |
g |
h |
j |
k |
l |
m |
n |
p |
r |
s |
š |
t |
v |
z |
ž |
| IPA |
b |
c |
ʧ |
d |
f |
g |
ɣ |
j |
k |
l |
m |
n |
p |
r |
s |
ʃ |
t |
ʋ |
z |
ʒ |
Phonology
Consonants
| |
labial |
dental |
alveo-
dental |
alveolar |
alveo-
palatal |
velar |
| stops |
voiceless |
p |
t |
|
|
|
k |
| voiced |
b |
d |
|
|
|
g |
| fricatives |
voiceless |
f |
|
s |
|
ʃ |
x |
| voiced |
|
|
z |
|
ʒ |
ɣ |
| affricates |
voiced |
|
|
ʣ |
|
ʤ |
|
| voiceless |
|
|
ʦ |
|
ʧ |
|
| nasal |
m |
|
|
n |
|
|
| liquid |
lateral |
|
|
|
l |
|
|
| glide |
ʋ |
|
|
|
|
j |
| rhotic trill |
|
|
|
r |
|
|
All consonants (except /j/) have two forms: palatalized and non-palatalized.
(Adapted from http://www.lituanus.org/1982_1/82_1_02.htm .)
Vowels
There are two possible ways to posit the Lithuanian vowel system. The traditional pattern has six long vowels and five short
ones, with length as the distinctive feature:
| |
front
|
central |
back
|
| long |
short |
long |
short |
| high |
iː |
i |
|
uː |
u |
| mid |
eː |
|
|
oː |
o |
| mid-low |
ɛː |
ɛ |
|
|
|
| low |
|
|
aː |
|
a |
(Adapted from http://www.lituanus.org/1982_1/82_1_02.htm .)
However, at least one researcher suggests that a tense vs. lax distiction may be the actual distinguishing feature, or at
least equally important as length. Such a hypothesis yields the chart below, where 'long' and 'short' have been preserved to
parallel the terminology used above.
| |
front
|
back
|
| long |
short |
long |
short |
| high |
iː |
ɪ |
uː |
ʊ |
| mid |
eː |
|
oː |
ɔ |
| low |
ɶ |
ɛ |
aː |
ɑ |
(Adapted from http://www.lituanus.org/1972/72_1_05.htm .)
Historical sound changes
Grammar
There are two grammatical genders in Lithuanian. It has a
free and mobile stress. Lithuanian language is inflected. It has 5 noun and 3
adjective declensions and 3
verbal conjugations. All verbs have present,
past, past
iterative and future tenses of
the indicative mood, conditional and imperative moods (both without distinction of tenses) and infinitive. These forms, except the infinitive, are conjugative, having 2 singular, 2 plural persons and
the 3rd person form common both for plural and singular. Nouns and other declinable words are declined in seven cases: nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, instrumental, three types of locative, and vocative (nouns only).
The 1st scientific Compendium of Lithuanian language was published 1856/57 by August Schleicher, a professor at Prague University.
Vocabulary
Writing system
Like many of the Indo-European languages, Lithuanian employs modified Roman script. It is comprised of 32 letters. Collation order
presents one surprise: "Y" is moved to occur between I Ogonek (Į) and J.
| A |
Ą |
B |
C |
Č |
D |
E |
Ę |
Ė |
F |
G |
H |
I |
Į |
Y |
J |
K |
L |
M |
N |
O |
P |
R |
S |
Š |
T |
U |
Ų |
Ū |
V |
Z |
Ž |
| a |
ą |
b |
c |
č |
d |
e |
ę |
ė |
f |
g |
h |
i |
į |
y |
j |
k |
l |
m |
n |
o |
p |
r |
s |
š |
t |
u |
ų |
ū |
v |
z |
ž |
Acute, grave, and macron/tilde accents can be used to mark stress and vowel length. However, these are generally not written,
except in dictionaries and where needed for clarity. In addition, the following digraphs are used, but are treated as sequences
of two letters for collation purposes. It should be noted that the "Ch" digraph represents a velar fricative, while the others
are straightforward compositions of their component letters.
| Ch |
Dz |
Dž |
Ie |
Uo |
| ch |
dz |
dž |
ie |
uo |
Examples
There is a Lithuanian language Wikipedia at [3]
Related article
Martynas Mažvydas, author of the first book in the
Lithuanian language
External links
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