Baydak A.V. «Means of expressing animateness/inanimateness in the Selkup language» // 2010. №338 C.7-12
Baydak Alexandra V. «On derivational word family with the meaning 'life' in the Selkup language» // 2009. №329 C.12-15
Bykonya V.V. «Reflection of man's cognitive activity in Selkup names of flora and fauna» // 2013. №2 C.19-23
Dubrovskaya N.V. «Special features of the semantic derivation of the noun 'tree; trunk, stem, bole; firewood; wood; stick» // Language and Culture 2013. №4 (24) C.24-36
Normanskaja Julia V. «Clothes Vocabulary in the Proto-Samoyed Language» // Tomsk State University Journal of Philology 2020. №68 C.42-57
Normanskaja Julia V. «How the Dialect Affiliation of the Selkup Dialect of Ivankino Village, Kolpashevo District, Changed in the 20th Century» // Tomsk State University Journal of Philology 2020. №66 C.144-157
Urmanchieva Anna Yu. «On the Possible Links of the Mansi and Selkup Languages (Based on Ethnonymic Data)» // Tomsk State University Journal of Philology 2020. №65 C.146-157
Il’yina L’udmila Alekseevna «The Selkup verb grammeme of «indirect visual evidentiality»: an exception or a typological regularity?» // Siberian Journal of Philology 2013. №1 C.152-159
Ilyina Lyudmila A. «Ways of expressing comparative relations in the southern dialects of the Selkup language» // Siberian Journal of Philology 2025. №1 C.196-208
Burkova S. I., Koryakov Yu. B., Kashkin E. V., Kazakevich O. A., Koshkareva N. B., Kuznetsova A. I. «The lexicon of qualities and its polysemy in an online dialect atlas of Yamal: the concept of ‘slippery’» // 2015. №1 C.209-220
Dubrovskaya Natalia Victorovna «Derivational Structure of Polysemy: the Types of Derivative Meanings of the Selkup Noun» // Siberian Journal of Philology 2014. №1 C.211-218
Kovylin Sergei V. «“Materials for acquaintance with the Ostyak dialect of the Narym krai” for 1887 of st. Makarius (Nevsky): inflectional verb morphology» // Siberian Journal of Philology 2024. №3 C.211-230
Kovylin S. V. «The negative existential predicates nʲetu- ‘be absent’ and nʲetu ‘there is no’ in the Central and Southern dialects of the Selkup language» // Siberian Journal of Philology 2016. №4 C.255-264