Komi-Permyak Language

Komi-Permyak language (перем коми кыв /ˈperem ˈkomi kɨv/ or коми-пермяцкӧй кыв /ˈkomi perˈmʲackəj kɨv/) is one of two regional varieties of the pluricentrical Komi language, the other variety being Komi-Zyrian.

Komi is a Uralic language closely related to Udmurt.

The Komi-Permyak language, spoken in Perm Krai of Russia and written using the Komi Cyrillic alphabet, was co-official with Russian in the Komi Okrug of the Perm Krai.

Read more about Komi-Permyak Language:  Glottonym, Dialects, Phonology, Writing System, Grammar, Some Phrases, Bibliography

Famous quotes containing the word language:

    We have tried so hard to adulterate our hearts, and have so greatly abused the microscope to study the hideous excrescences and shameful warts which cover them and which we take pleasure in magnifying, that it is impossible for us to speak the language of other men.
    Charles Baudelaire (1821–1867)