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Avar language

Avar (магӏарул мацӏ, maǥarul macʼ [maʕarul mat͡sʼ], "language of the mountains" or авар мацӏ, awar macʼ [awar mat͡sʼ], "Avar language"), also known as Avaric,[2][3] is a Northeast Caucasian language of the Avar–Andic subgroup that is spoken by Avars, primarily in Dagestan. In 2010, there were approximately 1 million speakers in Dagestan and elsewhere in Russia.

Avar
Avaric
ماعارۇل ماض, магӏарул мацӏ, maⱨarul maⱬ
, اوار ماض, авар мацӏ, avar maⱬ
Native toNorth Caucasus, Azerbaijan
EthnicityAvars
Native speakers
800,000 (2021)[1]
Cyrillic (current)
Arabic, Latin
Official status
Official language in
 Russia
Language codes
ISO 639-1av – Avaric
ISO 639-2ava – Avaric
ISO 639-3Either:
ava – Avaric
oav – Old Avar
– Old Avar
Glottologavar1256
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Geographic distribution edit

It is spoken mainly in the western and southern parts of the Russian Caucasus republic of Dagestan, and the Balaken, Zaqatala regions of north-western Azerbaijan.[1] Some Avars live in other regions of Russia. There are also small communities of speakers living in the Russian republics of Chechnya and Kalmykia; in Georgia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine, Jordan, and the Marmara Sea region of Turkey. It is spoken by about 800,000 people worldwide. UNESCO classifies Avar as vulnerable to extinction.[4]

Status edit

It is one of six literary languages of Dagestan, where it is spoken not only by the Avar, but also serves as the language of communication between different ethnic and linguistic groups.

Dialects edit

Glottolog lists 14 dialects of Avar, some of which correspond to the villages where they are spoken. The dialects are listed in alphabetical order based on their name in Glottolog:

Phonology edit

There are competing analyses of the distinction transcribed in the table with the length sign ː. Length is part of the distinction, but so is articulatory strength, so they have been analyzed as fortis and lenis.[citation needed] The fortis affricates are long in the fricative part of the contour, e.g. [tsː] (tss), not in the stop part as in geminate affricates in languages such as Japanese and Italian [tːs] (tts). Laver (1994) analyzes e.g. [t͡ɬː] as a two-segment affricate–fricative sequence [t͡ɬɬ] (/t𐞛ɬ/ = /tɬɬ/).[6]

Avar Vowels
Front Back
High i u
Mid e o
Low a

Avar has five phonemic vowels: /a e i o u/.

Lexical accent edit

In Avar, accent is contrastive, free and mobile, independent of the number of syllables in the word. Changes in lexical accent placement indicate different semantic meaning and grammatical meanings of a word:

  • ра́гӏи ‛word’ ~ рагӏи́ ‛fodder’
  • nom.pl. ру́гънал ~ gen.sg. ругъна́л ‛wound’

Morphosyntax edit

Avar is an agglutinative language, of SOV order.

Adverbs do not inflect, outside of inflection for noun class in some adverbs of place: e.g. the /b/ in /ʒani-b/ "inside" and /t͡se-b-e/ "in front". Adverbs of place also distinguish locative, allative, and ablative forms suffixally, such as /ʒani-b/ "inside", /ʒani-b-e/ "to the inside", and /ʒani-sa/ "from the inside". /-go/ is an emphatic suffix taken by underived adjectives.

Writing systems edit

There were some attempts to write the Avar language in the Georgian alphabet as early as the 14th century.[7][8] The use of Arabic script for representing Avar in marginal glosses began in the 15th century. The use of Arabic, which is known as ajam, is still known today.[8]

As part of Soviet language re-education policies in 1928 the Ajam was replaced by a Latin alphabet, which in 1938 was in turn replaced by the current Cyrillic script. Essentially, it is the Russian alphabet plus one additional letter called palochka (stick, Ӏ). As that letter cannot be typed with common keyboard layouts, it is often replaced with a capital Latin letter i ( I ), small Latin letter L ( l ), or the numerical digit 1.

Current orthography edit

The Avar language is usually written in the Cyrillic script. The letters of the alphabet are (with their pronunciation given below in IPA transcription):[5][9]

А а
/a/
Б б
/b/
В в
/w/
Г г
/ɡ/
Гъ гъ
/ʁ/
Гь гь
/ɦ/
ГӀ гӏ
/ʕ/
Д д
/d/
Е е
/e/, /je/
Ё ё
/jo/
Ж ж
/ʒ/
З з
/z/
И и
/i/
Й й
/j/
К к
/k/
Къ къ
/q͡χːʼ/
Кь кь
/t͡ɬːʼ/
КӀ кӏ
/kʼ/
КӀкӏ кӏкӏ
/kːʼ/
Кк кк
/kː/
Л л
/l/
ЛӀ лӏ
/t͡ɬː/
Лъ лъ
/ɬ/
Лълъ лълъ
/ɬː/
М м
/m/
Н н
/n/
О о
/o/
П п
/p/
Р р
/r/
С с
/s/
Сс сс
/sː/
Т т
/t/
ТӀ тӏ
/tʼ/
У у
/u/
Ф ф
/f/
Х х
/χ/
Хх хх
/χː/
Хъ хъ
/q͡χː/
Хь хь
/x/
Хьхь хьхь
/xː/
ХӀ хӏ
/ʜ/
Ц ц
/t͡s/
Цц цц
/t͡sː/
ЦӀ цӏ
/t͡sʼ/
ЦӀцӏ цӏцӏ
/t͡sːʼ/
Ч ч
/t͡ʃ/
Чч чч
/t͡ʃː/
ЧӀ чӏ
/t͡ʃʼ/
ЧӀчӏ чӏчӏ
/t͡ʃːʼ/
Ш ш
/ʃ/
Щ щ
/ʃː/
Ъ ъ
/ʔ/
Ы ы
/ɨ/
Ь ь
/ʲ/ 
Э э
/e/
Ю ю
/ju/
Я я
/ja/

Comparison chart edit

Compiled according to:[10][11][12][13][14]

Arabic Script Writing conventions edit

One feature of Avar Arabic script is that similar to alphabets succh as Uyghyr and Kurdish, the script does not omit vowels and does not rely on diacritics to represent vowels when need be. Instead, modified letters with dot placement and accents have been standardized to represent vowels. Thus, Avar Arabic script is no longer an "impure abjad" unlike its parent systems (Arabic, Persian, and Ottoman), it now resembles a proper "alphabet".

While this was not the case for most of the several centuries during which Arabic alphabet has been used for Avar, this has become the case in the latest and most common conventions. This was indeed not the case at the time of writing of a linguistic article for the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society in 1881.[13]

As an example, in Avar Arabic Script, four varieties of the letter yāʼ ("ی") have been developed, each with a distinct function.

Varieties of "ی"
Leter Cyrillic Equivalent IPA Functionn
ئ - / ъ /ʔ/ Used at the beginning of words starting with vowels "О о" [o], "У у" [u], "Э э" [e], and "И и" [i]. Has no sound of its own, but acts as "vowel carrier". Similar to writing conventions of Uyghyr and Kurdish
ئې، ې Э э / Е е /e/ Similar letter exists in Pashto, Uzbek, and Uyghyr orthographies.
ئێ، ێ И и / Ы ы /i~ɨ/ Similar letter exists in Kurdish orthography, but for the vowel [e].
ي Й й /j/ Equivalent to English "y" sound.

Nevertheless, Avar Arabic script does retain two diacritics.

First is "shadda" (ـّـ), used for gemination. While in Cyrillic, two back to back letters, including digraphs are written, in Arabic script, shadda is used.

Second diacritic in use in Avar Arabic script is ḍammah (ـُـ). In Arabic, Persian, and historically in Ottoman Turkish, this diacritic is used to represent [o] or [u]. But in Avar, this diacritic is used for labialization [◌ʷ] and not for any sort of vowel. So, it is the case that this diacritic is used in conjunction with a follow-up vowel. For example, the sound "зва" [zʷa] is written as "زُا".

This diacritic can optionally be used in conjunction with shadda. For example, the sound "ссвa" [sːʷa] is written as "سُّا".

If a word starts with a vowel, if it's an [a] sound, it is written with alif "ا". Otherwise, the vowel needs to be preceded by a "vowel carrier", which is hamza-ya' (ئـ). No need for such a carrier in the middle of words. Below table demonstrates vowels in Avar Arabic Script.

Vowel Table
А а О о У у Э э / Е е И и
[a] [o] [u] [e] [i]
Vowel at the beginning of a word
ا ئۈ ئۇ ئېـ ئێـ
Vowel in the middle or end of a word
ـا، ا ـۈ، ۈ ـۇ، ۇ ېـ، ـېـ، ـې ێـ، ـێـ، ـێ

Writing Comparison edit

Arabic Alphabet (2007)[15] Cyrillic Alphabet (2007) Latin Alphabet


نۈڸ ماڨێڸ وێڮانا، ڨالدا ڸۇق - ڸۇقۇن،
ڨۇردا كُېر ڃُان ئۇنېو، بێدا وېضّۇن دۇن؛
ڨۇرۇڬێ باطاڸۇن صېوې ئۇناڬۈ،
صۈ ڸارال راعالدا عۈدۈو كّۈلېو دۇن.
ڸار چُاخّۇلېب بۇڬۈ چابخێل گّالاڅان،
ڸێن گانضۇلېب بۇڬۈ ڬانڃازدا طاسان؛
طاراماغادێسېب قُال بالېب بۇڬۈ،
قۈ ڸێگێلان دێصا سۈعاب راڨالدا

Нолъ макьилъ вихьана, кьалда лъукъ-лъукъун,
Кьурда квер чIван унев, бида вецIцIун дун;
Кьуруги батIалъун цеве унаго,
Цо лъарал рагIалда гIодов кколев дун.
Лъар чваххулеб буго чабхил кIкIалахъан,
Лъин кIанцIулеб буго ганчIазда тIасан;
ТIарамагъадисеб къвал балеб буго,
Къо лъикIилан дица согIаб ракьалда.

Noļ maꝗiļ viҳana, ꝗalda ļuq-ļuqun,
Ꝗurda кvеr çvan unеv, bida vеⱬⱬun dun;
Ꝗuruⱨ baţaļun s̶еvе unago,
Co ļaral raⱨalda ⱨodov ккolеv dun.
Łar cvaxxulеb bugo cabxil ⱪⱪalax̶an,
Łin ⱪanⱬulеb bugo gançazda ţaсan;
Ţaramaƣadiсеb qval balеb bugo,
Qo ļiⱪilan dis̶a сoⱨab raꝗalda.

Literature edit

The literary language is based on the болмацӏ (bolmacʼ)[citation needed]bo = "army" or "country", and macʼ = "language"—the common language used between speakers of different dialects and languages. The bolmacʼ in turn was mainly derived from the dialect of Khunzakh, the capital and cultural centre of the Avar region, with some influence from the southern dialects. Nowadays the literary language is influencing the dialects, levelling out their differences.[citation needed]

The most famous figure of modern Avar literature is Rasul Gamzatov (died November 3, 2003), the People's Poet of Dagestan. Translations of his works into Russian have gained him a wide audience all over the former Soviet Union.[citation needed]

Sample sentences edit

English Avar Transliteration IPA
Hello! Ворчӏами! Worch’ami! /wort͡ʃ’ami/
How are you doing? Щиб хӏaл бугеб? Shchib hal bugeb? /ʃːib ʜal bugeb/
How are you? Иш кин бугеб? Ish kin bugeb? /iʃ kin bugeb/
What is your name? Дуда цӏар щиб? Duda c’ar shchib? /duda t͡s’ar ʃːib/
How old are you? Дур чан сон бугеб? Dur chan son bugeb? /dur t͡ʃan son bugeb/
Where are you going? Mун киве ина вугев? Mun kiwe ina wugew? /mun kiwe ina wugew/
Sorry! Тӏаса лъугьа! T’asa łuḩa! /t’asa ɬuha/
Where is the little boy going? Киве гьитӏинав вас унев вугев? Kiwe ḩit’inaw was unew wugew? /kiwe hit’inaw was unew wugew/
The boy broke a bottle. Васас шиша бекана. Wasas shisha bekana. /wasas ʃiʃa bekana/
They are building the road. Гьез нух бале (гьабулеб) буго. Ḩez nux́ bale (ḩabuleb) bugo. /hez nuχ bale (habuleb) bugo/

Sample text edit

Avar Translation
Cyrillic Latin Arabic
Я, зобалазда вугев нижер Эмен, дур цӀар гӀадамаз мукъадасаблъун рикӀкӀаги, дур ПарччахӀлъи тӀаде щваги. Зобалаздаго гӀадин ракьалдаги дур амру билълъанхъаги. Жакъа нижер бетӀербахъиялъе хинкӀ-чед кье нижее. Нижер налъи-хӀакъалда тӀасаги лъугьа, нижерго налъулазда тӀаса нижги лъугьарал ругин. Нижер хӀалбихьизеги биччаге, Квешалдаса цӀуне ниж. Ja, zobalazda wugew niƶer Emen, dur ⱬar ⱨadamaz muqadasabļun, riⱪⱪagi, dur Parccaħļi ţade şşvagi. Zobalazdago ⱨadin raꝗaldagi dur amru biļļanӿijaļe. Ƶaqa niƶer beţerbaӿijaļe xinⱪ-ced ꝗe niƶeje. Niƶer naļi-ħaqalda ţasagi ļuha, niƶergo naļulazda, ţasa niƶgi ļuharal rugin.niƶer ħalbiҳizegi biccage, Kveşaldasa ⱬune niƶ.

يا، زۈبالازدا وۇڬېو نێجېر ئېمېن، دۇر ضار عاداماز مۇقاداسابڸۇن رێگّاڬێ، دۇر پارچّاحڸێ طادې شُّاڬێ. زۈبالازداڬۈ عادێن راڨالداڬێ دۇر امرۇ بێڸّانڅاڬێ. جاقا نێجېر بېطېرباڅێياڸې جێنگ-چېدڨ ڨې نێجېيې. نێجېر ناڸێ-حاقالدا طاساڬێ ڸۇﻫا، نێجېرڬۈ ناڸۇلازدا طاسا نێجرێ ڸۇﻫارال رۇڬێن. نێجېر حالبێڮێزېڬێ بێچّارێ، کُێشالداسا ضۇنې نێج.‎

Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done, as in heaven, so on earth. Give us this day our daily bread, And forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors. And bring us not into temptation, but deliver us from the evil one.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Avar at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)  
    Old Avar at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)  
  2. ^ "Documentation for ISO 639 identifier: ava". ISO 639-2 Registration Authority - Library of Congress. Retrieved 2017-07-05. Name: Avaric
  3. ^ "Documentation for ISO 639 identifier: ava". ISO 639-3 Registration Authority - SIL International. Retrieved 2017-07-05. Name: Avaric
  4. ^ "UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger". UNESCO. Retrieved 19 April 2015.
  5. ^ a b Consonant Systems of the North-East Caucasian Languages on TITUS DIDACTICA
  6. ^ Laver (1994) Principles of Phonetics p. 371.
  7. ^ Simon Crisp, "Language Planning and the Orthography of Avar", Folia Slavica 7, 1–2 (1984): 91–104.
  8. ^ a b Simon Crisp, "The Formation and Development of Literary Avar", pp. 143–62, in Isabelle T. Kreindler, ed., Sociolinguistic Perspectives on Soviet National Languages: Their Past, Present and Future, Contributions to the Sociology of Language, 40 (Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 1985).
  9. ^ Omniglot on the Avar alphabet, language and pronunciation
  10. ^ Саидов М. Д. (1948). "Возникновение письменности у аварцев" (Языки Дагестана ed.). Махач-Кала. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  11. ^ (II) (Культура и письменность Востока ed.). Б. 1928: 176–177. Archived from the original on 2022-04-02. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  12. ^ Алексеев М. Е. (2001). "Аварский язык. — Языки Российской Федерации и соседних государств. — М.: Наука". М.: 24–34. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  13. ^ a b Graham, C. (1881). Art. XI.— The Avâr Language. Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain & Ireland, 13(03), 291–352. doi:10.1017/s0035869x00017858 [1]
  14. ^ http://avar.me/
  15. ^ "Avar (Магӏарул мацӏ / Авар мацӏ)". www.omniglot.com. Retrieved 2023-08-14.

External links edit

  • Avar language corpus 2017-10-11 at the Wayback Machine (in English, Russian, Polish and Belarusian)
  • Avar Cyrillic-Latin text and website converter
  • Online Avar–Russian dictionary, including Arabic and Latin scripts
  • Avar language information in Russian

avar, language, this, article, about, language, spoken, dagestan, language, spoken, medieval, europe, pannonian, avars, language, confused, with, awar, language, spoken, papua, guinea, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, im. This article is about the language spoken in Dagestan For the language spoken in medieval Europe see Pannonian Avars Language Not to be confused with the Awar language spoken in Papua New Guinea This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Avar language news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Avar magӏarul macӏ maǥarul macʼ maʕarul mat sʼ language of the mountains or avar macӏ awar macʼ awar mat sʼ Avar language also known as Avaric 2 3 is a Northeast Caucasian language of the Avar Andic subgroup that is spoken by Avars primarily in Dagestan In 2010 there were approximately 1 million speakers in Dagestan and elsewhere in Russia AvarAvaricماعارۇل ماض magӏarul macӏ maⱨarul maⱬ اوار ماض avar macӏ avar maⱬNative toNorth Caucasus AzerbaijanEthnicityAvarsNative speakers800 000 2021 1 Language familyNortheast Caucasian Avar AndicAvarWriting systemCyrillic current Arabic LatinOfficial statusOfficial language in Russia DagestanLanguage codesISO 639 1 span class plainlinks av span AvaricISO 639 2 span class plainlinks ava span AvaricISO 639 3Either a href https iso639 3 sil org code ava class extiw title iso639 3 ava ava a Avaric a href https iso639 3 sil org code oav class extiw title iso639 3 oav oav a Old AvarLinguist List Old AvarGlottologavar1256This article contains IPA phonetic symbols Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Unicode characters For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA Contents 1 Geographic distribution 2 Status 3 Dialects 4 Phonology 4 1 Lexical accent 5 Morphosyntax 6 Writing systems 6 1 Current orthography 6 2 Comparison chart 6 3 Arabic Script Writing conventions 6 4 Writing Comparison 7 Literature 8 Sample sentences 9 Sample text 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksGeographic distribution editIt is spoken mainly in the western and southern parts of the Russian Caucasus republic of Dagestan and the Balaken Zaqatala regions of north western Azerbaijan 1 Some Avars live in other regions of Russia There are also small communities of speakers living in the Russian republics of Chechnya and Kalmykia in Georgia Kazakhstan Ukraine Jordan and the Marmara Sea region of Turkey It is spoken by about 800 000 people worldwide UNESCO classifies Avar as vulnerable to extinction 4 Status editIt is one of six literary languages of Dagestan where it is spoken not only by the Avar but also serves as the language of communication between different ethnic and linguistic groups Dialects editGlottolog lists 14 dialects of Avar some of which correspond to the villages where they are spoken The dialects are listed in alphabetical order based on their name in Glottolog Ancux Antsukh Ancuh Andalal Gxdatl Bacadin Batlux Hid Karax Kaxib Keleb Salatav Shulanin Untib Xunzax Khunzakh Xunzah Zakataly ZaqatalaPhonology editConsonant phonemes of Avar 5 Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar Uvular Pharyngeal Glottalcentral laterallenis fortis lenis fortis lenis fortis lenis fortis lenis fortisNasal m nPlosive voiced b d ɡvoiceless p t k kː ʔejective tʼ kʼ kːʼAffricate voiceless t s t sː t ʃ t ʃː t ɬː q xːejective t sʼ t sːʼ t ʃʼ t ʃːʼ t ɬːʼ q xːʼFricative voiceless s sː ʃ ʃː ɬ ɬː x xː x xː ʜvoiced z ʒ ʁ ʕ ɦTrill rApproximant w l jThere are competing analyses of the distinction transcribed in the table with the length sign ː Length is part of the distinction but so is articulatory strength so they have been analyzed as fortis and lenis citation needed The fortis affricates are long in the fricative part of the contour e g tsː tss not in the stop part as in geminate affricates in languages such as Japanese and Italian tːs tts Laver 1994 analyzes e g t ɬː as a two segment affricate fricative sequence t ɬɬ t ɬ tɬɬ 6 Avar Vowels Front BackHigh i uMid e oLow aAvar has five phonemic vowels a e i o u Lexical accent edit In Avar accent is contrastive free and mobile independent of the number of syllables in the word Changes in lexical accent placement indicate different semantic meaning and grammatical meanings of a word ra gӏi word ragӏi fodder nom pl ru gnal gen sg rugna l wound Morphosyntax editAvar is an agglutinative language of SOV order Adverbs do not inflect outside of inflection for noun class in some adverbs of place e g the b in ʒani b inside and t se b e in front Adverbs of place also distinguish locative allative and ablative forms suffixally such as ʒani b inside ʒani b e to the inside and ʒani sa from the inside go is an emphatic suffix taken by underived adjectives Writing systems editThere were some attempts to write the Avar language in the Georgian alphabet as early as the 14th century 7 8 The use of Arabic script for representing Avar in marginal glosses began in the 15th century The use of Arabic which is known as ajam is still known today 8 As part of Soviet language re education policies in 1928 the Ajam was replaced by a Latin alphabet which in 1938 was in turn replaced by the current Cyrillic script Essentially it is the Russian alphabet plus one additional letter called palochka stick Ӏ As that letter cannot be typed with common keyboard layouts it is often replaced with a capital Latin letter i I small Latin letter L l or the numerical digit 1 Current orthography edit The Avar language is usually written in the Cyrillic script The letters of the alphabet are with their pronunciation given below in IPA transcription 5 9 A a a B b b V v w G g ɡ G g ʁ G g ɦ GӀ gӏ ʕ D d d E e e je Yo yo jo Zh zh ʒ Z z z I i i J j j K k k K k q xːʼ K k t ɬːʼ KӀ kӏ kʼ KӀkӏ kӏkӏ kːʼ Kk kk kː L l l LӀ lӏ t ɬː L l ɬ Ll ll ɬː M m m N n n O o o P p p R r r S s s Ss ss sː T t t TӀ tӏ tʼ U u u F f f H h x Hh hh xː H h q xː H h x Hh hh xː HӀ hӏ ʜ C c t s Cc cc t sː CӀ cӏ t sʼ CӀcӏ cӏcӏ t sːʼ Ch ch t ʃ Chch chch t ʃː ChӀ chӏ t ʃʼ ChӀchӏ chӏchӏ t ʃːʼ Sh sh ʃ Sh sh ʃː ʔ Y y ɨ ʲ E e e Yu yu ju Ya ya ja Comparison chart edit Compiled according to 10 11 12 13 14 Cyrillic Latin Arabic IPAA a A a آ ا a B b B b ب b V v V v و w G g G g ڬ ɡ G G Ƣ ƣ غ ʁ G g H h ﻫ ɦ GӀ gӀ Ⱨ ⱨ ع ʕ D d D d د d E e E e Je je ئې ې يې e je Yo yo Jo jo يۈ jo Zh zh Ƶ ƶ ج ʒ Z z Z z ز z I i I i ئێ ێ i J j J j ي j K k K k ك k Kk kk Kk kk ك kː K k Q q ق q xʼː K k Ꝗ ꝗ ڨ t ɬʼː KӀ kӀ Ⱪ ⱪ گ kʼ KӀkӀ kӀkӀ Ⱪⱪ ⱪⱪ گ kʼː L l L l ل l L l L l ڸ t ɬ Ll ll Ll ll ڸ t ɬː M m M m م m N n N n ن n O o O o ئۈ ۈ o P p P p ف p PӀ pӀ P p ڣ pʼ R r R r ر r S s S s س s Ss ss Ss ss س sː T t T t ت t TӀ tӀ Ţ ţ ط tʼ U u U u ئۇ ۇ u F f F f ف f H h X x خ x Hh hh Xx xx خ xː H h Ӿ ӿ څ q xː H h Ҳ ҳ ڮ x Hh hh Ҳҳ ҳҳ ڮ xː HӀ hӀ Ħ ħ ح ʜ C c Ꞩ ꞩ ص t s Cc cc Ꞩꞩ ꞩꞩ ص t sː CӀ cӀ Ⱬ ⱬ ض t sʼ CӀcӀ cӀcӀ Ⱬⱬ ⱬⱬ ض t sʼː Ch ch C c چ t ʃ Chch chch Cc cc چ t ʃː ChӀ chӀ C c ڃ t ʃʼ ChӀchӀ chӀchӀ Cc cc ڃ t ʃʼː Sh sh S s ش ʃ Sh sh Ss ss ش ʃː ئ ʔ Y y Y y ئێ ێ ɨ J j ي ʲ E e E e ئې ې e Yu yu Ju ju يۇ ju Ya ya Ja ja يا ja Arabic Cyrillic Latin IPAا A a A a a ب B b B b b ت T t T t t ت Tv tv Tv tv tʷ ج Zh zh Ƶ ƶ ʒ ج Zhv zhv Ƶv ƶv ʒʷ ڃ ChӀ chӀ C c t ʃʼ ڃ ChӀv chӀv Cv cv t ʃʼʷ ڃ ChӀchӀ chӀchӀ Cc cc t ʃʼː ڃ ChӀchӀv chӀchӀv Ccv ccv t ʃʼːʷ چ Ch ch C c t ʃ چ Chv chv Cv cv t ʃʷ چ Chch chch Cc cc t ʃː چ Chchv chchv Ccv ccv t ʃːʷ ح HӀ hӀ Ħ ħ ʜ ح HӀv hӀv Ħv ħv ʜʷ خ H h X x x خ Hv hv Xv xv xʷ خ Hh hh Xx xx xː خ Hhv hhv Xxv xxv xːʷ څ H h Ӿ ӿ q xː څ Hv hv Ӿv ӿv q xːʷ د D d D d d د Dv dv Dv dv dʷ ر R r R r r ز Z z Z z z ز Zv zv Zv zv zʷ س S s S s s س Sv sv Sv sv sʷ س Ss ss Ss ss sː س Ssv ssv Ssv ssv sːʷ ش Sh sh S s ʃ ش Shv shv Sv sv ʃʷ ش Sh sh Ss ss ʃː ش Shv shv Ssv ssv ʃːʷ ص C c Ꞩ ꞩ t s ص Cc cc Ꞩꞩ ꞩꞩ t sː ض CӀ cӀ Ⱬ ⱬ t sʼ ض CӀv cӀv Ⱬv ⱬv t sʼʷ ض CӀcӀ cӀcӀ Ⱬⱬ ⱬⱬ t sʼː ض CӀcӀv cӀcӀv Ⱬⱬv ⱬⱬv t sʼːʷ ط TӀ tӀ Ţ ţ tʼ ط TӀv tӀv Ţv ţv tʼʷ ع GӀ gӀ Ⱨ ⱨ ʕ غ G G Ƣ ƣ ʁ غ Gv Gv Ƣv ƣv ʁʷ ف P p P p p F f F f f ڣ PӀ pӀ P p pʼ ق K k Q q q xʼː ق Kv kv Qv qv q xʼːʷ ڨ K k Ꝗ ꝗ t ɬʼː ڨ Kv kv Ꝗv ꝗv t ɬʼːʷ ك K k K k k ك Kv kv Kv kv kʷ ك Kk kk Kk kk kː ك Kkv kkv Kkv kkv kːʷ گ KӀ kӀ Ⱪ ⱪ kʼ گ KӀv kӀv Ⱪv ⱪv kʼʷ گ KӀkӀ kӀkӀ Ⱪⱪ ⱪⱪ kʼː گ KӀkӀv kӀkӀv Ⱪⱪv ⱪⱪv kʼːʷ ڬ G g G g ɡ ڬ Gv gv Gv gv ɡʷ ڮ H h Ҳ ҳ x ڮ Hv hv Ҳv ҳv xʷ ڮ Hh hh Ҳҳ ҳҳ xː ل L l L l l ڸ L l L l t ɬ ڸ Lv lv Lv lv t ɬʷ ڸ Ll ll Ll ll t ɬː ڸ Llv llv Llv llv t ɬːʷ م M m M m m ن N n N n n و V v V v w ئۈ ۈ O o O o o ئۇ ۇ U u U u u ﻫ Gv gv Hv hv ɦʷ ﻫ G g H h ɦ ئې ې E e E e e ئې ې يې E e E e Je je e je ئێ ێ I i I i i Y y Y y ɨ ي J j J j j J j ʲ يا Ya ya Ja ja ja يۈ Yo yo Jo jo jo يۇ Yu yu Ju ju ju ئ ʔ ئ v v v ʔʷ Arabic Script Writing conventions edit One feature of Avar Arabic script is that similar to alphabets succh as Uyghyr and Kurdish the script does not omit vowels and does not rely on diacritics to represent vowels when need be Instead modified letters with dot placement and accents have been standardized to represent vowels Thus Avar Arabic script is no longer an impure abjad unlike its parent systems Arabic Persian and Ottoman it now resembles a proper alphabet While this was not the case for most of the several centuries during which Arabic alphabet has been used for Avar this has become the case in the latest and most common conventions This was indeed not the case at the time of writing of a linguistic article for the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society in 1881 13 As an example in Avar Arabic Script four varieties of the letter yaʼ ی have been developed each with a distinct function Varieties of ی Leter Cyrillic Equivalent IPA Functionnئ ʔ Used at the beginning of words starting with vowels O o o U u u E e e and I i i Has no sound of its own but acts as vowel carrier Similar to writing conventions of Uyghyr and Kurdishئې ې E e E e e Similar letter exists in Pashto Uzbek and Uyghyr orthographies ئێ ێ I i Y y i ɨ Similar letter exists in Kurdish orthography but for the vowel e ي J j j Equivalent to English y sound Nevertheless Avar Arabic script does retain two diacritics First is shadda ـ ـ used for gemination While in Cyrillic two back to back letters including digraphs are written in Arabic script shadda is used Second diacritic in use in Avar Arabic script is ḍammah ـ ـ In Arabic Persian and historically in Ottoman Turkish this diacritic is used to represent o or u But in Avar this diacritic is used for labialization ʷ and not for any sort of vowel So it is the case that this diacritic is used in conjunction with a follow up vowel For example the sound zva zʷa is written as ز ا This diacritic can optionally be used in conjunction with shadda For example the sound ssva sːʷa is written as س ا If a word starts with a vowel if it s an a sound it is written with alif ا Otherwise the vowel needs to be preceded by a vowel carrier which is hamza ya ئـ No need for such a carrier in the middle of words Below table demonstrates vowels in Avar Arabic Script Vowel Table A a O o U u E e E e I i a o u e i Vowel at the beginning of a wordا ئۈ ئۇ ئېـ ئێـ Vowel in the middle or end of a wordـا ا ـۈ ۈ ـۇ ۇ ېـ ـېـ ـې ێـ ـێـ ـێ Writing Comparison edit Arabic Alphabet 2007 15 Cyrillic Alphabet 2007 Latin Alphabetنۈڸ ماڨێڸ وێڮانا ڨالدا ڸۇق ڸۇقۇن ڨۇردا ك ېر ڃ ان ئۇنېو بێدا وېض ۇن دۇن ڨۇرۇڬێ باطاڸۇن صېوې ئۇناڬۈ صۈ ڸارال راعالدا عۈدۈو ك ۈلېو دۇن ڸار چ اخ ۇلېب بۇڬۈ چابخێل گ الاڅان ڸێن گانضۇلېب بۇڬۈ ڬانڃازدا طاسان طاراماغادێسېب ق ال بالېب بۇڬۈ قۈ ڸێگێلان دێصا سۈعاب راڨالدا Nol makil vihana kalda luk lukun Kurda kver chIvan unev bida vecIcIun dun Kurugi batIalun ceve unago Co laral ragIalda gIodov kkolev dun Lar chvahhuleb bugo chabhil kIkIalahan Lin kIancIuleb bugo ganchIazda tIasan TIaramagadiseb kval baleb bugo Ko likIilan dica sogIab rakalda Nol maꝗil viҳana ꝗalda luq luqun Ꝗurda kver cvan unev bida veⱬⱬun dun Ꝗuruⱨ baţalun s eve unago Co laral raⱨalda ⱨodov kkolev dun Lar cvaxxuleb bugo cabxil ⱪⱪalax an Lin ⱪanⱬuleb bugo gancazda ţasan Ţaramaƣadiseb qval baleb bugo Qo liⱪilan dis a soⱨab raꝗalda Literature editThe literary language is based on the bolmacӏ bolmacʼ citation needed bo army or country and macʼ language the common language used between speakers of different dialects and languages The bolmacʼ in turn was mainly derived from the dialect of Khunzakh the capital and cultural centre of the Avar region with some influence from the southern dialects Nowadays the literary language is influencing the dialects levelling out their differences citation needed The most famous figure of modern Avar literature is Rasul Gamzatov died November 3 2003 the People s Poet of Dagestan Translations of his works into Russian have gained him a wide audience all over the former Soviet Union citation needed Sample sentences editEnglish Avar Transliteration IPAHello Vorchӏami Worch ami wort ʃ ami How are you doing Shib hӏal bugeb Shchib hal bugeb ʃːib ʜal bugeb How are you Ish kin bugeb Ish kin bugeb iʃ kin bugeb What is your name Duda cӏar shib Duda c ar shchib duda t s ar ʃːib How old are you Dur chan son bugeb Dur chan son bugeb dur t ʃan son bugeb Where are you going Mun kive ina vugev Mun kiwe ina wugew mun kiwe ina wugew Sorry Tӏasa luga T asa luḩa t asa ɬuha Where is the little boy going Kive gitӏinav vas unev vugev Kiwe ḩit inaw was unew wugew kiwe hit inaw was unew wugew The boy broke a bottle Vasas shisha bekana Wasas shisha bekana wasas ʃiʃa bekana They are building the road Gez nuh bale gabuleb bugo Ḩez nux bale ḩabuleb bugo hez nux bale habuleb bugo Sample text editAvar TranslationCyrillic Latin ArabicYa zobalazda vugev nizher Emen dur cӀar gӀadamaz mukadasablun rikӀkӀagi dur ParchchahӀli tӀade shvagi Zobalazdago gӀadin rakaldagi dur amru billanhagi Zhaka nizher betӀerbahiyale hinkӀ ched ke nizhee Nizher nali hӀakalda tӀasagi luga nizhergo nalulazda tӀasa nizhgi lugaral rugin Nizher hӀalbihizegi bichchage Kveshaldasa cӀune nizh Ja zobalazda wugew niƶer Emen dur ⱬar ⱨadamaz muqadasablun riⱪⱪagi dur Parccaħli ţade ssvagi Zobalazdago ⱨadin raꝗaldagi dur amru billanӿijale Ƶaqa niƶer beţerbaӿijale xinⱪ ced ꝗe niƶeje Niƶer nali ħaqalda ţasagi luha niƶergo nalulazda ţasa niƶgi luharal rugin niƶer ħalbiҳizegi biccage Kvesaldasa ⱬune niƶ يا زۈبالازدا وۇڬېو نێجېر ئېمېن دۇر ضار عاداماز مۇقاداسابڸۇن رێگ اڬێ دۇر پارچ احڸێ طادې ش اڬێ زۈبالازداڬۈ عادێن راڨالداڬێ دۇر امرۇ بێڸ انڅاڬێ جاقا نێجېر بېطېرباڅێياڸې جێنگ چېدڨ ڨې نێجېيې نێجېر ناڸێ حاقالدا طاساڬێ ڸۇﻫا نێجېرڬۈ ناڸۇلازدا طاسا نێجرێ ڸۇﻫارال رۇڬێن نێجېر حالبێڮێزېڬێ بێچ ارێ ک ێشالداسا ضۇنې نێج Our Father who art in heaven hallowed be thy name Thy kingdom come Thy will be done as in heaven so on earth Give us this day our daily bread And forgive us our debts as we also have forgiven our debtors And bring us not into temptation but deliver us from the evil one See also edit nbsp Russia portal nbsp Languages portalNortheast Caucasian languages Languages of the CaucasusReferences edit a b Avar at Ethnologue 25th ed 2022 nbsp Old Avar at Ethnologue 25th ed 2022 nbsp Documentation for ISO 639 identifier ava ISO 639 2 Registration Authority Library of Congress Retrieved 2017 07 05 Name Avaric Documentation for ISO 639 identifier ava ISO 639 3 Registration Authority SIL International Retrieved 2017 07 05 Name Avaric UNESCO Atlas of the World s Languages in Danger UNESCO Retrieved 19 April 2015 a b Consonant Systems of the North East Caucasian Languages on TITUS DIDACTICA Laver 1994 Principles of Phonetics p 371 Simon Crisp Language Planning and the Orthography of Avar Folia Slavica 7 1 2 1984 91 104 a b Simon Crisp The Formation and Development of Literary Avar pp 143 62 in Isabelle T Kreindler ed Sociolinguistic Perspectives on Soviet National Languages Their Past Present and Future Contributions to the Sociology of Language 40 Berlin Mouton de Gruyter 1985 Omniglot on the Avar alphabet language and pronunciation Saidov M D 1948 Vozniknovenie pismennosti u avarcev Yazyki Dagestana ed Mahach Kala a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Novyj alfavit dlya narodnostej Dagestana II Kultura i pismennost Vostoka ed B 1928 176 177 Archived from the original on 2022 04 02 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Alekseev M E 2001 Avarskij yazyk Yazyki Rossijskoj Federacii i sosednih gosudarstv M Nauka M 24 34 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Graham C 1881 Art XI The Avar Language Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain amp Ireland 13 03 291 352 doi 10 1017 s0035869x00017858 1 http avar me Avar Magӏarul macӏ Avar macӏ www omniglot com Retrieved 2023 08 14 External links edit nbsp Avaric edition of Wikipedia the free encyclopedia RFE RL North Caucasus Radio also includes Chechen and Adyghe Avar language corpus Archived 2017 10 11 at the Wayback Machine in English Russian Polish and Belarusian Avar Cyrillic Latin text and website converter Online Avar Russian dictionary including Arabic and Latin scripts Avar language information in Russian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Avar language amp oldid 1205349077, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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