Lezgic languages

Northeast Caucasian language family
Lezgic
Geographic
distribution
 Dagestan
 Azerbaijan
Linguistic classificationNortheast Caucasian
  • Lezgic
Subdivisions
  • Archi (Peripheral Lezgic)
  • Samur (Nuclear Lezgic)
Glottologlezg1248
  Lezgic

The Lezgic languages are one of seven branches of the Northeast Caucasian language family. Lezgin and Tabasaran are literary languages.

Classification

  • Peripheral: Archi – 970 speakers[1]
  • Samur[2] (Nuclear Lezgic)
    • Eastern Samur
      • Udi – 6,600 speakers
      • Lezgin–Aghul–Tabasaran[2]
        • Lezgin – 630,000 speakers
        • Aghul – 29,300 speakers
        • Tabasaran – 126,900 speakers
    • Southern Samur
      • Kryts – 5,000
      • Budukh – 200 speakers
      • Jek – 1500 speakers
    • Western Samur
      • Rutul – 36,400 speakers
      • Tsakhur – 22,300 speakers

The voicing of ejective consonants

The Lezgic languages are relevant to the glottalic theory of Indo-European, because several have undergone the voicing of ejectives that have been postulated but widely derided as improbable in that family. The correspondences have not been well worked out (Rutul is inconsistent in the examples), but a few examples are:

  • Non-Lezgic: Avar tstsʼar; Lezgic: Rutul dur, Tsakhur do 'name'
  • Non-Lezgic: Archi motʃʼor, Lak tʃʼiri; Lezgic: Rutul mitʃʼri, Tabassaran midʒir, Aɡul mudʒur 'beard'
  • Non-Lezgic: Avar motsʼ; Lezgic: Tabassaran vaz 'moon'

A similar change has taken place in non-initial position in the Nakh languages.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ Ethnologue report for Archi
  2. ^ a b Languages in the Caucasus, by Wolfgang Schulze (2009) Archived 2011-06-10 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Paul Fallon, 2002. The synchronic and diachronic phonology of ejectives, p 245.

External links

  • Lezgic basic lexica at the Global Lexicostatistical Database
  • v
  • t
  • e
Caucasian
(areal)
South
(Kartvelian)
Northeast
(Caspian)
Avar–Andic
Dargin
Lezgic
Nakh
Tsezic (Didoic)
Others
Northwest
(Pontic)
Indo-
European
Iranian
Slavic
Others
Turkic
Kipchak
Oghuz
Others
  • Italics indicate extinct languages
  • Languages between parentheses are varieties of the language on their left.
See also
Languages of Armenia
Languages of Azerbaijan
Languages of Georgia
Languages of Russia
Authority control databases: National Edit this at Wikidata
  • Germany