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"Much will be lost. But much has already been saved"

"Much will be lost. But much has already been saved"

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https://www.dailysabah.com/feature/2015/10/08/ubykh-the-language-that-died-with-a-man > Sometimes an obituary for a man also means an obituary for a language, especially if his death breaks the last link to a living tongue. The passing of Tevfik Esenc was also the effective end of the northwestern Caucasian language known as Ubykh, considered extinct since Oct. 7, 1992. > The Ubykh language died with a man who was the last to be a fully competent speaker, Aslankaya told Anadolu Agency (AA). Ubykh used to be one of the richest languages in the region, he said, adding: It had had lots of speakers. > Both the Ubykh people and the language suffered a sad fate. They lived on the eastern shores of the Black Sea until 1864 when Russia subjugated the Muslim population in the northern Caucasus to harsh treatment. During Russian rule, the entire Ubykh population was forced to flee to Turkey, leaving their homeland, identity, culture and language behind. After being expelled from Russia, Ubykh survivors scattered across Turkey, particularly to the Marmara region. > The Ubykh people had stopped speaking their mother tongue in Turkey because they thought it would be discourteousness to speak a foreign language among Turks, Esenc said during the interview. Although Esenc blamed the poverty of the Ubykh people on being exiled by the Russians, Aslankaya said the Turkish authorities of that era did not exert any efforts to resurrect the language. It was a big chance to have a multilingual Anatolia, but I am sorry to say that there were no efforts in Turkey to protect languages that were dying out, he added. > Stressing that the people who spoke endangered languages were forced to only speak Turkish, Aslankaya said: This mentality – to push people to use only Turkish in Turkish lands – caused the death of Ubykh language. > Today, all we know about the Ubykh language is owed to French philologist Georges Dumezil who thought Ubykh was doubly interesting. The language has one of the largest numbers of consonants in the world – 80 in total – but has only two phonemic vowels. Dumezil also conducted several studies in order to try to discover if Ubykh had a link with the Indo-European language family. > Although there was no chance of resurrecting Ubykh as a living language, Dumezil took Esenc to Paris and Oslo many times to preserve as many as pieces of the language as possible. Having studied Ubykh and other Caucasian languages for more than 50 years, Dumezil taped thousands of Ubykh words to compile a French-Ubykh dictionary. In an interview, Dumezil appreciated the collaboration with Esenc to save Ubykh from being totally forgotten, describing the man from Hacıosman as his colleague. > Over the question of whether Esencs death would affect the language, the French linguist said: Much will be lost. But much has already been saved, and unlike ancient Greek or Latin, we have Ubykh speakers on tape. > According to Aslankaya, it is too late to do something to save the Ubykh language, but we can give full support to maintain Caucasian languages, culture and identity, and not let other Caucasian languages disappear like the Ubykh language.

This was very interesting read, and a superb quote!

Ubykh is a phonologically crazy language. Iirc it has the most phonemic consonants and 2 phonemic vowels.

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