FINNO-UGRIC LANGUAGE
The finno-ugric language family is the group of idioms spoken by the ugro-finnic people since ever, today entirely settled in the states of Finland, Etsonia and Hungary. It is included in the group of Uralic and Finno permic languages that includes the Sami language, spoken by all the others people who have been living in between Baltice Sea and Urals Mountains area since the Neolithic Age.
The main Finno-Ugric languages survived in Europe are: the Finnish with its latin alphabet of 27 letters, official language in Finland and the European Union, but spreaded since ever in Karelia and Finnmark regions, firstly attested in the "birch bark letter" in XIII century AD; the official language of Estonia and known since the XVI century through some prayers books; the Livonian idiom, went exstint in XXI century AD as minorance in Latvia as historic track of the Livonia Ducky; the Hungarian language written with a latin alphabet of 44 letters and signs, still adopted officially in Hungary, Austria, Slovenia, the Vojvodina region and in the EU, also spoken in Transylvania region, in Croatia, Slovakia, Czech Republic and Ukraine, since the X century AD within the immense hungarian reign ruled by the Arpad dinasty.
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