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Thus the
Ugrians had either to move north or to change nomadic animal breeding. The forefathers of the Ob-Ugrians proceeded northwards and reached the lower and middle reaches of the Ob. The Hungarians' ancestors however became animal
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work needed to prove that they are closer to each other than to other Uralic languages has never been adequately done, and in recent decades a more agnostic position has been taken by many linguists. (See the
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Although the Khanty and Mansi are closely related ethnographically, their languages are not particularly close. It is commonly posited that their languages are related to each other (as the
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of Russia. The name is sometimes also used in a modern context as a cover term for these two peoples, formerly called "Ugrian
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152:. Handbuch Der Orientalistik (Abt. 8, Vol. I). Leiden: BRILL. pp. 395–412.
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Kálmán, Béla (1988). "The history of Ob-Ugric languages". In Denis Sinor (ed.).
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179:. Vol. IX (9th ed.). New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 219.
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family). While all three of these languages are clearly members of the greater
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Ugrian Finns include the Voguls , the
Ostyaks and the Magyars of Hungary
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The tenacity of ethnicity : a
Siberian saga in global perspective
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The Uralic
Languages: Description, History and Foreign Influences
27:Ancestors of the Khanty and Mansi people of Russia
127:. Princeton University Press. pp. 29–31.
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121:Balzer, Marjorie Mandelstam (1999).
85:Classification of Uralic languages
66:) and also to the language of the
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195:"Uralic (Finno-Ugrian) languages"
70:of Hungary (together forming the
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48:Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug
167:Baynes, T. S., ed. (1879).
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38:were the ancestors of the
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80:linguistic reconstruction
176:Encyclopædia Britannica
201:on 10 January 2019.
64:Ob-Ugric languages
30:Historically, the
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197:. Archived from
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108:References
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91:See also
102:Onogurs
68:Magyars
32:Ugrians
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40:Khanty
97:Yugra
52:Finns
44:Mansi
36:Ugors
129:ISBN
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