Moksha language


The Moksha language is a member of the Mordvinic branch of the Uralic languages, with around 2,000 native speakers.
Moksha is the majority language in the western part of Mordovia.
Its closest relative is the Erzya language, with which it is not mutually intelligible. Moksha is also considered to be closely related to the extinct Meshcherian and Muromian languages.

Official status

Moksha is one of the three official languages in Mordovia. The right to one's own language is guaranteed by the Constitution of the Mordovia Republic. The republican law of Mordovia N 19-3 issued in 1998 declares Moksha one of its state languages and regulates its usage in various spheres: in state bodies such as Mordovian Parliament, official documents and seals, education, mass-media, information about goods, geographical names, road signs. However, the actual usage of Moksha and Erzya is rather limited.

Education

The first few Moksha schools were devised in the 19th century by Russian Christian missionaries. Since 1973 Moksha language was allowed to be used as language of instruction in first 3 grades of elementary school in rural areas and as a subject on a voluntary basis.
The medium in universities of Mordovia is Russian, but the philological faculties of Mordovian State University and Mordovian State Pedagogical Institute offer a teacher course of Moksha. Mordovian State University also provides a course of Moksha for other humanitarian and some technical specialities. According to the annual statistics of the Russian Ministry of Education in 2014-2015 year there were 48 Moksha-medium schools where 644 students were taught, and 202 schools where Moksha was studied as a subject by 15,783 students. Since 2010, study of Moksha in schools of Mordovia is not compulsory, but can be chosen only by parents.

Dialects

The Moksha languages is divided into three dialects:
The dialects may be divided with another principle depending on their vowel system:
The standard literary Moksha language is based on the central group with ä.

Phonology

Vowels

There are eight vowels with limited allophony and reduction of unstressed vowels.
Moksha has lost the original Uralic system of vowel harmony but maintains consonant-vowel harmony.
FrontCentralBack
Close


Mid


Open


There are some restrictions for the occurrence of vowels within a word:
  1. is an allophone of the phoneme after phonemically non-palatalized consonants.
  2. does not occur after non-palatalized consonants, only after their palatalized counterparts.
  3. and do not fully contrast after phonemically palatalized or non-palatalized consonants.
  4. * Similar to, does not occur after non-palatalized consonants either, only after their palatalized counterparts.
  5. * After palatalized consonants, occurs at the end of words, and when followed by another palatalized consonant.
  6. * after palatalized consonants occurs only before non-palatalized consonants, i.e. in the environment.
  7. The mid vowels' occurrence varies by the position within the word:
  8. * In native words, are rare in the second syllable, but common in borrowings from e.g. Russian.
  9. * are never found in the third and following syllables, where only occurs.
  10. * at the end of words is only found in one-syllable words. In longer words, word-final always stands for .
Unstressed and are slightly reduced and shortened and.

Consonants

There are 33 consonants in Moksha.
is realized as a sibilant before the plural suffix in south-east dialects.
Palatalization, characteristic of Uralic languages, is contrastive only for dental consonants, which can be either "soft" or " hard". In Moksha Cyrillic alphabet the palatalization is designated like in Russian: either by a "soft sign" after a "soft" consonant or by writing "soft" vowels after a "soft" consonant. In scientific transliteration the acute accent or apostrophe are used.
All other consonants have palatalized allophones before the front vowels as well. The alveolo-palatal affricate lacks non-palatalized counterpart, while postalveolar fricatives lack palatalized counterparts.

Devoicing

Unusually for a Uralic language, there is also a series of voiceless liquid consonants: . These have arisen from Proto-Mordvinic consonant clusters of a sonorant followed by a voiceless stop or affricate:.
Before certain inflectional and derivational endings, devoicing continues to exist as a phonological process in Moksha. This affects all other voiced consonants as well, including the nasal consonants and semivowels. No voiceless nasals are however found in Moksha: the devoicing of nasals produces voiceless oral stops. Altogether the following devoicing processes apply:
E.g. before the nominative plural :
Devoicing is however morphological rather than phonological, due to the loss of earlier voiceless stops from some consonant clusters, and due to the creation of new consonant clusters of voiced liquid + voiceless stop. Compare the following oppositions:
Non-high vowels are inherently longer than high vowels and tend to draw the stress. If a high vowel appears in the first syllable which follow the syllable with non-high vowels, then the stress moves to that second or third syllable. If all the vowels of a word are either non-high or high, then the stress falls on the first syllable.
Stressed vowels are longer than unstressed ones in the same position like in Russian. Unstressed vowels undergo some degree of vowel reduction.

Grammar

Morphosyntax

Like other Uralic languages, Moksha is an agglutinating language with elaborate systems of case-marking and conjugation, postpositions, no grammatical gender, and no articles.

Case

Moksha has 13 productive cases, many of which are primarily locative cases. Locative cases in Moksha express ideas that Indo-European languages such as English normally code by prepositions.
However, also similarly to Indo-European prepositions, many of the uses of locative cases convey ideas other than simple motion or location. These include such expressions of time, purpose, or beneficiary relations. Some of the functions of Moksha cases are listed below:
There is controversy about the status of the three remaining cases in Moksha. Some researchers see the following three cases as borderline derivational affixes.
As in other Uralic languages, locative cases in Moksha can be classified according to three criteria: the spatial position, the motion status, and within the latter, the direction of the movement. The table below shows these relationships schematically:

Pronouns

Writing system

Moksha has been written using Cyrillic with spelling rules identical to those of Russian since the 18th century and as a consequence of that vowels are not differentiated in a straightforward way, however they can be predicted more or less from Moksha phonotactics. The 1993 spelling reform defines that in the first syllable must be written with the "hard" sign . The version of the Moksha Cyrillic alphabet used in 1924-1927 had several extra letters, either digraphs or single letters with diacritics. Although the use of the Latin script for Moksha was officially approved by the CIK VCKNA on June 25, 1932, it was never implemented.

Literature

Before 1917 about 100 books and pamphlets mostly of religious character were published. More than 200 manuscripts including at least 50 wordlists were not printed. In the 19th century the Russian Orthodox Missionary Society in Kazan published Moksha primers and elementary textbooks of the Russian language for the Mokshas. Among them were two fascicles with samples of Moksha folk poetry. The great native scholar Makar Evsevyev collected Moksha folk songs published in one volume in 1897. Early in the Soviet period, social and political literature predominated among published works. Printing of Moksha language books was all done in Moscow until the establishment of the Mordvinian national district in 1928. Official conferences in 1928 and 1935 decreed the northwest dialect to be the basis for the literary language.

Common expressions (Moksha–Russian–English)