| Lezgian | ||
|---|---|---|
| Лезги чІал | ||
| Pronunciation | [lezɡi tʃʼal] | |
| Spoken in | Russia, also spoken in Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan | |
| Region | Southern Dagestan, western Caspian Sea coast, central Caucasus | |
| Total speakers | about 450,000 | |
| Language family | Northeast Caucasian
|
|
| Language codes | ||
| ISO 639-1 | None | |
| ISO 639-2 | lez | |
| ISO 639-3 | lez | |
| Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. | ||
Lezgian, also called Lezgi, is a language spoken by the Lezgins who live in southern Dagestan (a republic of Russia) and northern Azerbaijan. Lezgian is an official language in Dagestan. See List of official languages by state
Contents |
Geographic distribution
In 1996, Lezgian was spoken by about 257,000 people in Russia, mainly in Southern Dagestan, as well as 171,400 people in Azerbaijan. Lezgian is also spoken in Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan. The total number of speakers is about 451,000.
Related languages
There are nine languages in the Lezgic language family, namely: Lezgian, Tabasaran, Rutul, Aghul, Tsakhur, Budukh, Kryts, Udi and Archi. These languages have the same names as the Lezgic ethnic subgroups.
The Quba dialect spoken in Azerbaijan differs, but not considerably from the standard language.[citation needed]
Grammar
Lezgian is unusual for a Northeast Caucasian language in not having noun classes. Standard Lezgian grammar features 18 noun cases, of which 12 are still used in spoken conversation.
Cases
The four grammatical cases are:
- Absolutive case (basic form of the word, no ending): marks the subject of an intransitive verb and the direct object of a transitive sentence. It is also used to mark a nominal predictate (who or what something turns into/becomes) and as a vocative.
- Ergative case (various endings; the most common are: -ди, -a or -е; [-di, -a or e], which are added to the Absolutive): marks the subject of transitive verbs, and the subject of some compound intransitive verbs.
- Genitive case (ending -н [-n]; added to the Ergative): marks possession. It is also used with the meaning 'of'. The genitive case precedes the noun that it modifies.
- Dative case (ending -з [-z]; added to the Ergative): usually marks the indirect object of sentences, that is the recipent of an action. It is also used to mark the subject of some verbs (mainly about emotions) and to express a point of time and direction.
- There are fourteen Locative cases:
- Adessive case (ending -в [-v]; added to the Ergative): marks the object of some verbs to mean 'near by'.
- Adelative case (ending -вай [-vaj]; added to the Ergative): expresses movement from somewhere. It is also used with the verb 'to be able' and to express an accidental action.
- Addirective case (ending -вди [-vdi]; added to the Ergative): used as an instrumental case, but also sometimes used with its original meaning, 'in the direction of', and more rarely 'near by'.
- The Postessive case (ending -хъ [-qh]; added to the Ergative): means 'behind', 'in exchange for', and 'with.' In a construction with the verb ава (ava), it means 'there is'.
Postelative case (ending -хъай [-qhaj]; added to the Ergative): can either mean 'from' or 'who is feared'.- Postdirective case (ending -хъди [-qhdi]; added to the Ergative): rarely used case, meaning 'toward(s)'.
- Subessive case (ending -к [-k]; added to the Ergative): means either 'below' or 'participates'.
- Subelative case (ending -кай [-kaj]; added to the Ergative): means either 'from below', 'from', '(from) against', 'with' or 'out of'. It is also used to mark Y in the construction 'X becomes out-of-Y' and can express the topic of a sentence or the cause of emotions.
- Subdirective case (ending -кди [-kdi]; added to the Ergative): expresses cause, and can mean 'because' or 'of' (when in sentences such as 'the man died of a disease'.
- Inessive case (endings -а or -е [-a or -e]; added to Absolutive): means 'at', 'in' or 'during/whilst'.
- Inelative case (endings -ай or -ей [-aj or -ej]; added to Inessive): means 'out of' or 'in return for'.
- Superessive case (ending -л [-l]; added to the Inessive): means 'on', and also to express the cause of some emotions.
- Superelative case (ending -лай [-laj]; added to the Inessive): means 'off', 'after' or 'than'.
- Superdirective case (ending -лди [-ldi]; added to the Inessive): means 'onto', 'until', 'in' (when followed by an adjective) and to mark the language being used.
Declension
There are two declensions.
First Declension
| Case | Singular | Plural |
| Absolutive | буба buba | бубаяр bubajar |
| Ergative | бубади bubadi | бубайри bubajri |
| Genitive | бубадин bubadin | бубайрин bubajrin |
| Dative | бубадиз bubadiz | бубайриз bubajriz |
| Adessive | бубадив bubadiv | бубайрив bubairiv |
| Adelative | бубадивай bubadivaj | бубайривай bubairnaj |
| Addirective | бубадивди bubadivdi | бубайривди bubajrivdn |
| Postessive | бубадихъ bubadiqʰ | бубайрихъ bubajriqʰ |
| Postelative | бубадихъай bubadiqʰaj | бубайрихъай bubajriqʰaj |
| Postdirective | бубадихъди bubadiqʰdi | буабайрихъди buabajriqʰdi |
| Subessive | бубадик bubadikʰ | бубайрик bubajrikʰ |
| Subelative | бубадикай bubadikʰaj | бубайрикай bubajrikʰaj |
| Subdirective | бубадикди bubadikʰdi | бубайрикди bubajrikʰdi |
| Inessive | бубада bubada | бубайра bubajra |
| Inelative | бубадай bubalaj | бубайрай bubajraj |
| Superessive | бубадал bubadal | бубайрал bubajral |
| Superelative | бубадалай bubadalaj | бубайралай bubajralaj |
| Superdirective | бубадалди bubadaldi | бубайралди bubajraldi |
Phonology
Vowels
| Front | Central | Back | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| plain | rounded | |||
| Close | i (и) | y (уь) | u (у) | |
| Mid | e (е; э) | |||
| Open | æ (я) | a (а) | ||
- /a/ has two main allophones: [ɑ] and [ʌ]; the former prevails in closed (esp. before uvulars and /r/) the latter in open syllables
- /a/ is also very often rounded after labialized consonants, which may then lose labialization.
- /e/ is open ([ɛ]) in stressed syllables
- if a vowel plus /n/ sequence is not followed by a vowel, the /n/ may be deleted and the vowel nasalized. Thus /zun/ ('I') can be pronounced [zũ].
Consonants
There are fifty four consonants in Lezgian. Characters to the right are the letters of the Lezian Cyrillic Alphabet. One should note that aspiration is not normally indicated in the orthography, despite the fact that it is phonemic:
| Labial | Dental | Post- alveolar |
Velar | Uvular | Glottal | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| plain | lab. | plain | lab. | plain | lab. | |||||
| Nasal | m м | n н | ||||||||
| Plosive | voiced | b б | d д | dʷ дв | g г | gʷ гв | ||||
| voiceless | p п | t т | tʷ тв | k к | kʷ кв | q къ | qʷ къв | ʔ ъ | ||
| aspirated | pʰ п | tʰ т | tʷʰ тв | kʰ к | kʷʰ кв | qʰ хъ | qʷʰ хъв | |||
| ejective | pʼ пI | tʼ тI | tʷʼ тIв | kʼ кI | kʷʼ кIв | qʼ кь | qʷʼ кьв | |||
| Affricate | voiceless | t͡s ц | t͡sʷ цв | t͡ʃ ч | ||||||
| aspirated | t͡sʰ ц | t͡sʷʰ цв | t͡ʃʰ ч | |||||||
| ejective | t͡sʼ цI | t͡sʷʼ цIв | t͡ʃʼ чI | |||||||
| Fricative | voiced | z з | zʷ зв | ʒ ж | ʁ гъ | ʁʷ гъв | ||||
| voiceless | f ф | s с | sʷ св | ʃ ш | x | χ х | χʷ хв | h гь | ||
| Approximant | l л | w в | ||||||||
| Trill | r р | |||||||||
Vocabulary
Numbers
The numbers of Lezgi are:
ноль nolʔ - zero
сад sad - one
кьвед qʷ’ed - two
пуд pud - three
кьуд q’ud - four
вад vad - five
ругуд rugud - six
ирид irid - seven
муьжуьд myʒyd - eight
кIуьд k’yd - nine
цIуд ts’ud- ten
цIусад ts’usad - eleven
цIикьвед ts’iqʷ’ed - twelve
цIипуд ts’ipud - thirteen
цIикьуд ts’iq’ud - fourteen
цIувад ts’uvad - fifteen
цIуругуд ts’urugud - sixteen
цIерид ts’erid - seventeen
цIемуьжуьд ts’emyʒud - eighteen
цIекIуьд ts’ek’yd - nineteen
къад qad - twenty
яхцIур jaxts’ur - forty
пудкъад pudqad - sixty
кьудкъад q’udqal - eighty
виш viʃ - one hundred
агьзур aɣeur - one thousand
Nouns following a number are always in the singular. Numbers precede the noun. "сад" and "кьвед" loose their final "-д" before a noun.
Lezgi numerals work in a similar fashion to the French ones, and are based on the vigesimal system in which "20" not "10" is the base number. "Twenty" in Lezgi is "къад", and higher numbers are formed by adding the suffix -ни to the word (which becomes "къанни" - the same change occurs in пудкъад and кьудкъад) and putting the remaining number afterwards. This way 24 for instance is къанни кьуд "20 and 4" and 37 къанни цIерид "20 and 17". Numbers over 40 are formed similarly ( яхцIур becomes яхцIурни). 60 and 80 are treated likewise. For numbers over 100 we just put a number of hundreds then (if need be) the word with a suffix, then the remaining number 659 is thus ругуд вишни яхцIурни цIекIуьд'. The same procedure follows for 1000, too... 1989 is агьзурни кIуьд вишни кьудкъанни кIуьд in Lezgi
References
- ^ Chitoran & Babaliyeva (2007:2153)
Bibliography
- Chitoran, Ioanna; Babaliyeva, Ayten (2007), "An acoustic description of high vowel syncope in Lezgian", Proceedings of the 16th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences, pp. 2153-2156
- Haspelmath, Martin. 1993. A grammar of Lezgian. (Mouton grammar library; 9). Berlin & New York: Mouton de Gruyter. – ISBN 3-11-013735-6
- Talibov, Bukar B. and Magomed M. Gadžiev. 1966. Lezginsko-russkij slovar’. Moskva: Izd. Sovetskaja Ėnciklopedija.
External links
- Notes on the Lezgi language
- the Lezgi language
- Ethnologue report for Lezgi
- Languages of the World report
|
|||||||||||
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)




