Ume Sámi (, , ) is a Sámi language spoken in Sweden and formerly in Norway. According to UNESCO's Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger (2010), there are fewer than 20 speakers of Ume Sami. It was spoken mainly along the Ume River in the south of present-day Arjeplog, in Sorsele and in Arvidsjaur.
The best documented variety of Ume Sami is that of one Lars Sjulsson (born 1871) from Setsele, close to MalÃÂ¥, whose idiolect was documented by W. Schlachter in a 1958 dictionary and subsequent work. Dialect variation exists within the Ume Sami area, however. A main division is between more (north)western dialects such as those of Maskaure, Tärna and Ullisjaure (typically agreeing with Southern Sami), versus more (south)eastern dialects such as those of MalÃÂ¥, Malmesjaure and Mausjaure (typically agreeing with Pite Sami).
and are allophones of and , respectively. When a sound occurs before a plosive or an affricate sound, they are then realized as preaspirated sounds. If an sound occurs before a sound, it is realized as a palatal lateral sound. Some western dialects of the language lack the phoneme.
Four diphthongs are included; , , , . A schwa sound may exist as an allophone of various vowel sounds.
Until 2010, Ume Sámi did not have an official written standard, although it was the first Sámi language to be written extensively (because a private Christian school for Sámi children started in Lycksele 1632, where Ume Sámi was spoken). The New Testament was published in Ume Sámi in 1755 and the first Bible in Sámi was also published in Ume Sámi, in 1811.
The current official orthography is maintained by the Working Group for Ume Sámi, whose most recent recommendation was published in 2016.
Shortcomings:
Unlike its southern neighbor Southern Sámi, Ume Sámi has consonant gradation. However, gradation is more limited than it is in the more northern Sami languages, because it does not occur in the case of short vowels followed by a consonant that can gradate to quantity 1 (that is, Proto-Samic single consonants or geminates). In these cases, only quantity 3 appears. Consonant clusters can gradate regardless of the preceding vowel.
Ume Sámi has 8 cases:
Like other Sámi languages, Ume Sámi distinguishes pronouns in three numbers but not in gender. There are different words for âÂÂweâÂÂ, âÂÂyouâÂÂ, and âÂÂtheyâ depending on whether the referent is the two of us, the two of you, the two of them (dual) or if it includes more than two (three or more).
Verbs in Ume Sámi encode three persons, first, second and third. As with pronouns, verbs also enconde the three grammatical numbers: singular, dual and plural.
Verbs in Ume Sámi encode two tenses, present and past, and two grammatical moods: indicative and imperative.
Ume Sámi, like all Finnic and other Sámi languages, has a negative verb. In Ume Sámi, the negative verb conjugates according to mood (indicative and imperative), person (1st, 2nd and 3rd) and number (singular, dual and plural).
Kinship terms in Ume Sámi mostly descend from proto-Uralic or proto-Samic (see below). As in many Uralic languages, the word for âÂÂsonâ is a borrowing, in Ume Sámi bárnnie, is also borrowed from Germanic barna.
For extended family members, Ume Sámi distinguishes not only the relationship to ego, but also their gender, sometimes their age and their own relationship to one's nuclear family.
Traditionally, the Sámi are reindeer herders, and as such, Sámi languages have developed a wide vocabulary with terms to describe both the animal and actions related to its husbandry. These terms describe not only gender and age but also their color, their position in the herd, and others. Below are only some of the underived words, and many other possibilities exist in compounds, especially with -tjuoke and -ahkka as head words: giätjuoke âÂÂuntamed reindeerâÂÂ, ruadtjuoke, âÂÂa reindeer that digs after urineâÂÂ, tjÃÂ¥natahkka âÂÂa reindeer that is tied to a sledgeâÂÂ, lijrestahkka âÂÂa reindeer that one leadsâÂÂ, etc.