- ⟨ ⟩, see IPA § Brackets and
transcription delimiters.
Siberian Yupiks, or
Yuits (Russian: Юиты), are a
Yupik people who
reside along the
coast of the Chukchi...
-
Yupik (also
known as
Siberian Yupik,
Bering Strait Yupik[citation needed],
Yuit[citation needed], Yoit[citation needed], "St.
Lawrence Island Yupik", and...
-
Kabardian Kalmyk Karachay-Balkar
Kildin Sami Komi Mari
Moksha Nogai Ossetian (in
North Ossetia–Alania)
Romani Sakha/Yakut
Tatar Tuvan Udmurt Yuit (Yupik)...
- Iñupiat, the
Canadian Inuit, and the
Greenlandic Inuit) and the
Yupik (or
Yuit) of
eastern Siberia and Alaska. A
related third group, the Aleut, who inhabit...
- Mongolic:
Buryats Turkic:
Sakha Eskimo–Aleut: Aleuts,
Siberian Yupiks (
Yuits) Chukotko-Kamchatkan: Chukchi, Koryaks, Alutors, Kereks,
Itelmens Tungusic:...
-
suffix -зиӄ/-сиӄ). The
Chaplino dialect is
spoken by the
majority of
Russian Yuits. The
Chaplino dialect is
close in
lexicon and
grammar to that of the St...
-
religions Alaskan shamanism Inuit religion Tanana shamanism Yupik shamanism Yuit shamanism Sirenik shamanism Andoque religion Anishinaabe beliefs Ojibwe beliefs...
- ў :
Cyrillic letter Short U, used in Belarusian, Dungan,
Siberian Eskimo (
Yuit),
Uzbek Ӯ ӯ :
Cyrillic letter U with macron, used in
Tajik and Carpatho-Rusyn...
-
literature sometimes refers to the Yupʼik
people or
their language as Yuk or
Yuit. In the
Hooper Bay-Chevak and
Nunivak dialects of Yupʼik, both the language...
-
Naukan (Nuvuqaghmiistun) (70 speakers)
Central Siberian Yupik (
Yuit/Yupigestun) ("
Yuit" in Russia, "Yupigestun" in Alaska;
Chaplino and St.
Lawrence Island)...