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Eastern Armenian

Eastern Armenian (Armenian: Արևելահայերեն, romanizedArevelahayeren) is one of the two standardized forms of Modern Armenian, the other being Western Armenian. The two standards form a pluricentric language.

Eastern Armenian
Արևելահայերեն
Native toArmenia, Iran, Georgia, Russia, Ukraine, Central Asia
Native speakers
3.8 million (2013)[1]
Indo-European
Armenian alphabet (virtually always in the reformed orthography, except in Iran)
Language codes
ISO 639-1hy
ISO 639-2arm (B)
hye (T)
ISO 639-3hye
Glottolognucl1235
Map of the Armenian dialects in early 20th century: -owm dialects, corresponding to Eastern Armenian, are shown in green.
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.

Eastern Armenian is spoken in Armenia, Russia, as well as Georgia, and by the Armenian community in Iran. Although the Eastern Armenian spoken by Armenians in Armenia and Iranian-Armenians are similar, there are pronunciation differences with different inflections.[2] Armenians from Iran also have some words that are unique to them. Due to migrations of speakers from Armenia and Iran to the Armenian diaspora, the dialect is now very prominent in countries and regions where only Western Armenian was used. Eastern Armenian is based on the Yerevan dialect.

Official status and recognition edit

Eastern Armenian is, for the most part, mutually intelligible by educated or literate users of Western Armenian – and vice versa. Conversely, semi-literate or illiterate users of lower registers of either variety may have difficulty understanding the other.

The official language, according to law, of Armenia is an unspecified "Armenian".[3] In practice, however, Eastern Armenian is the de facto, day-to-day common language of Armenia. For example, commercial translations are generally completed in Eastern Armenian.

Until 2018, both varieties shared the same ISO 639-3 code: hye. However, on 23 January 2018, a code specifically for Western Armenian was added to ISO 639-3: hyw. (The previous code under ISO 639-1 was hy.)

The Armenian Wikipedia is predominantly composed of Eastern Armenian content. As a result of the amendment to ISO 639-3, a campaign to create a separate Wikipedia for Western Armenian has been approved. This has resulted in separate Wikipedia sites for Eastern Armenian and Western Armenian.

Phonology edit

Vowels edit

Monophthongs edit

Eastern Armenian has six monophthong vowel sounds.

  Front Central Back
Unrounded Rounded
Close i (ի)   u (ու)
Mid ɛ (ե, է)[4]
ə (ը)   ɔ (ո, օ)[4]
Open     ɑ (ա)

Consonants edit

This is the Eastern Armenian Consonantal System using symbols from the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), followed by the corresponding Armenian letter in parentheses.

  Bilabial Labiodental Alveolar Post-
alveolar
Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
Nasal m   (մ)   n   (ն)     ŋ    
Stop aspirated    (փ)      (թ)        (ք)    
voiceless[5]    (պ)      (տ)        (կ)    
voiced b   (բ)   d   (դ)     ɡ   (գ)    
Affricate aspirated     tsʰ   (ց) tʃʰ   (չ)        
voiceless     tsʼ   (ծ) tʃʼ   (ճ)        
voiced     dz   (ձ)    (ջ)        
Fricative voiceless   f   (ֆ) s   (ս) ʃ   (շ)     χ   (խ) h   (հ, յ)[6]
voiced   v   (վ, ւ, ու, ո)[7] z   (զ) ʒ   (ժ)     ʁ   (ղ)  
Approximant   ʋ ɻ~ɾ   (ր)[8]   j   (յ, ե, ի, է)[9]      
Tap              
Trill     r   (ռ)          
Lateral     l   (լ)          
  • Some of the dialects may release the voiceless stops and affricates as ejectives.[10]
Notes

The phonology of Eastern Armenian preserves the Classical Armenian three-way distinction in stops and affricates: one voiced, one voiceless and one aspirated. Compare this to the phonology of the Western Armenian language, which has kept only a two-way distinction: one voiced and one aspirated. (See the Differences in Phonology from Classical Armenian in the Western Armenian language article for details.)

Some Eastern Armenian words contain voiced stop letters pronounced as voiceless aspirated stops, like Western Armenian. For instance, թագավոր (king) is [tʰɑɑˈvɔɾ], not [tʰɑɡɑˈvɔɾ]; other examples are ձիգ ([d͡zikʰ]), ձագ ([d͡zɑkʰ]), կարգ ([kɑɾkʰ]), դադար ([dɑˈtʰɑɾ]), վարագույր ([vɑɾɑˈkʰujɾ]).

Orthography edit

The Eastern Armenian language is written using either Traditional Armenian Orthography or Reformed Armenian Orthography. The controversial reformed orthography was developed during the 1920s in Soviet Armenia and is in widespread use today by Eastern Armenian speakers in Armenia and those in the diaspora that are from Armenia. Eastern Armenian speakers in Iran continue to use the traditional orthography. Nevertheless, writings of either form are mutually intelligible, since the difference between the two orthographies is not large.

Morphology edit

Pronouns edit

Personal pronouns
singular plural
1st person 2nd person 3rd person 1st person 2nd person 3rd person
nominative ես (es) դու (du) նա (na) մենք (menkʿ) դուք (dukʿ) նրանք (nrankʿ)
genitive իմ (im) քո (kʿo) նրա (nra) մեր (mer) ձեր (jer) նրանց (nrancʿ)
dative ինձ (inj) քեզ (kʿez) նրան (nran) մեզ (mez) ձեզ (jez) նրանց (nrancʿ)
accusative ինձ (inj) քեզ (kʿez) նրան (nran) մեզ (mez) ձեզ (jez) նրանց (nrancʿ)
ablative ինձնից (injnicʿ), ինձանից (injanicʿ) քեզնից (kʿeznicʿ), քեզանից (kʿezanicʿ) նրանից (nranicʿ) մեզնից (meznicʿ), մեզանից (mezanicʿ) ձեզնից (jeznicʿ), ձեզանից (jezanicʿ) նրանցից (nrancʿicʿ)
instrumental ինձնով (injnov), ինձանով (injanov) քեզնով (kʿeznov), քեզանով (kʿezanov) նրանով (nranov) մեզնով (meznov), մեզանով (mezanov) ձեզնով (jeznov), ձեզանով (jezanov) նրանցով (nrancʿov)
locative ինձնում (injnum), ինձանում (injanum) քեզնում (kʿeznum), քեզանում (kʿezanum) նրանում (nranum) մեզնում (meznum), մեզանում (mezanum) ձեզնում (jeznum), ձեզանում (jezanum) նրանցում (nrancʿum)

Armenian has T-V distinction, with դու, քո, քեզ used informally and capitalized Դուք, Ձեր, Ձեզ as the polite forms.

Nouns edit

Eastern Armenian nouns have seven cases, one more than Western Armenian. They are: nominative (subject), accusative (direct object), genitive (possession), dative (indirect object), ablative (origin), instrumental (means) and locative (position) Of the seven cases, the nominative and accusative, with exceptions, are the same, and the genitive and dative are the same, meaning that nouns have mostly five distinct forms for case. Nouns in Armenian also decline for number (singular and plural), but do not decline for gender (i.e. masculine or feminine).

Declension in Armenian is based on how the genitive is formed. There are several declensions, but two are the most used (genitive in i, and genitive in u):

Ablative դաշտից
/dɑʃˈtit͡sʰ/
դաշտերից
/dɑʃtɛˈɾit͡sʰ/
/ɡɑˈɾut͡sʰ/ /ɡɑɾinɛˈɾit͡sʰ/
Instrumental դաշտով
/dɑʃˈtɔv/
դաշտերով
/dɑʃtɛˈɾɔv/
/ɡɑˈɾɔv/ /ɡɑɾinɛˈɾɔv/
Locative դաշտում
/dɑʃˈtum/
դաշտերում
/dɑʃtɛˈɾum/
/ɡɑˈɾum/ /ɡɑɾinɛˈɾum/

Two notes:
First, notice that the Ablative form in Eastern Armenian is /-it͡s/, where it is in Western Armenian:

Abl.sg WA karê/EA /ɡɑɾut͡sʰ/

Second, notice that in Western Armenian, the plural forms followed the u-declension, while in Eastern Armenian the plural forms follow the i-declension:

Gen.pl WA karineru/EA /ɡɑɾinɛˈɾi/

Articles edit

Like some other languages such as English, Armenian has definite and indefinite articles. The indefinite article in Eastern Armenian is /mi/, which precedes the noun:

mi ɡiɾkʰ ('a book', Nom.sg), /mi ɡɾkʰi/ ('of a book', Gen.sg)

The definite article is a suffix attached to the noun, and is one of two forms, either /-ə/ or /-n/, depending on whether the final sound is a vowel or a consonant, and whether a following word begins with a vowel or consonant:

/mɑɾdə/ ('the man', Nom.sg)
/ɡɑɾin/ ('the barley' Nom.sg)
but:
/sɑ mɑɾdn ɛ/ ('This is the man')
/sɑ ɡɑɾin ɛ/ ('This is the barley')

Adjectives edit

Adjectives in Armenian do not decline for case or number, and precede the noun:

/lɑv ɡiɾkʰə/ ('the good book', Nom.sg)
/lɑv ɡɾkʰi/ ('of the good book', Gen.sg)

Verbs edit

Verbs in Armenian are based on two basic series of forms, a "present" form and an "imperfect" form. From this, all other tenses and moods are formed with various particles and constructions. There is a third form, the preterite, which in Armenian is a tense in its own right, and takes no other particles or constructions. (See also Armenian verbs and Eastern Armenian verb table for more detailed information.)

The present tense in Eastern Armenian is based on two conjugations (a, e). In Eastern Armenian, the distinct conjugations in e and i merged as e.

  /linɛl/


'to be'

/siɾɛl/


'to love'

/kɑɾdɑl/


'to read'

present participle /siɾum/ /kɑɾdum/
/jɛs/ (I) /ɛm/ /siɾɛm/ /kɑɾdɑm/
/du/ (you. sg) /ɛs/ /siɾɛs/ /kɑɾdɑs/
/nɑ/ (he/she/it) /ɛ/ /siɾi/ /kɑɾdɑ/
/mɛnkʰ/ (we) /ɛnkʰ/ /siɾɛnkʰ/ /kɑɾdɑnkʰ/
/dukʰ/ (you.pl) /ɛkʰ/ /siɾɛkʰ/ /kɑɾdɑkʰ/
/nɾɑnkʰ/ (they) /ɛn/ /siɾɛn/ /kɑɾdɑn/

The present tense (as we know it in English) is made by adding the present tense of linel after the present participle form of the verb:

/jɛs kɑɾdum ɛm ɡiɾkʰə/ (I am reading the book)
/jɛs siɾum ɛm ɑjd ɡiɾkʰə/ (I love that book)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Eastern Armenian at Ethnologue (25th ed., 2022)  
  2. ^ Dolatian H, Sharifzadeh A, Vaux B (2023). A grammar of Iranian Armenian: Parskahayeren or Iranahayeren (pdf). Berlin: Language Science Press. doi:10.5281/zenodo.8177018. ISBN 9783961104192.
  3. ^ Law on Language, Armenia
  4. ^ a b The choice of Armenian symbol depends on the vowel's context in the word. See the Orthography section below for details.
  5. ^ "In some publications, the voiceless plosives are also defined as ejectives or glottalised. Glottalised plosives occur in various Armenian dialects and can also be found in the Eastern Armenian vernacular based on the Yerevan dialect, but according to normative grammars, SMEA [Standard Modern Eastern Armenian] shows no glottalised voiceless plosives." Jasmine Dum-Tragut. Armenian: Modern Eastern Armenian. London Oriental and African Language Library, 2007, ISSN 1382-3485; p. 17
  6. ^ In traditional orthography, /h/ is written in one of two ways, depending on its context. In reformed orthography, /h/ is written only one way, ⟨հ⟩.
  7. ^ In traditional orthography, /v/ is written in one of four ways, depending on its context. In reformed orthography, /v/ is written only one way, ⟨վ⟩.
  8. ^ In practice, only Iranian-Armenians say [ɻ]; Eastern Armenians from Armenia have shifted the Classical Armenian [ɹ] (ր) to [ɾ]. Dolatian, Hossep, Sharifzadeh, Afsheen & Vaux, Bert. 2023. grammar of Iranian Armenian: Parskahayeren or Iranahayeren. Page 22
  9. ^ In traditional orthography, /j/ is written in a number of ways, depending on its context. In reformed orthography, /j/ is written only one way, ⟨յ⟩.
  10. ^ Dum-Tragut, Jasmine (2009). Armenian: Modern Eastern Armenian (PDF) (Thesis). Amsterdam, Netherlands: John Benjamins Publishing Company.

Bibliography edit

  • Dora Sakayan. (2007) Eastern Armenian for the English-speaking World. A Contrastive Approach (with CD-ROM). Yerevan State University Press. ISBN 5808408903

External links edit

  • Arak29 Eastern Armenian
  • Arak29 Western Armenian
  • Arak29 On-Line Dictionaries

Eastern Armenian Online Dictionaries

  • Nayiri.com (Library of Armenian dictionaries):
    • Armenian Explanatory Dictionary (ՀԱՅԵՐԷՆ ԲԱՑԱՏՐԱԿԱՆ ԲԱՌԱՐԱՆ) by Stepan Malkhasiants (about 130,000 entries). Written in traditional Armenian orthography. One of the definitive Armenian dictionaries.
    • Explanatory Dictionary of Contemporary Armenian (ԺԱՄԱՆԱԿԱԿԻՑ ՀԱՅՈՑ ԼԵԶՎԻ ԲԱՑԱՏՐԱԿԱՆ ԲԱՌԱՐԱՆ) published by the Armenian SSR Academy of Sciences between 1969 and 1980. In Eastern Armenian, reformed orthography (about 125,000 headwords).
    • Modern Armenian Explanatory Dictionary (ԱՐԴԻ ՀԱՅԵՐԵՆԻ ԲԱՑԱՏՐԱԿԱՆ ԲԱՌԱՐԱՆ) by Eduard Aghayan (about 135,600 headwords). In Eastern Armenian and reformed orthography.
    • Armenian Language Thesaurus (ՀԱՅՈՑ ԼԵԶՎԻ ՀՈՄԱՆԻՇՆԵՐԻ ԲԱՌԱՐԱՆ) by Ashot Sukiasyan (about 83,000 entries). In Eastern Armenian and reformed orthography.

eastern, armenian, this, article, about, armenian, dialect, historical, region, eastern, armenia, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challe. This article is about the Armenian dialect For the historical region see Eastern Armenia 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 Eastern Armenian news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message Eastern Armenian Armenian Արևելահայերեն romanized Arevelahayeren is one of the two standardized forms of Modern Armenian the other being Western Armenian The two standards form a pluricentric language Eastern ArmenianԱրևելահայերենNative toArmenia Iran Georgia Russia Ukraine Central AsiaNative speakers3 8 million 2013 1 Language familyIndo European ArmenianEastern ArmenianWriting systemArmenian alphabet virtually always in the reformed orthography except in Iran Language codesISO 639 1 span class plainlinks hy span ISO 639 2 span class plainlinks arm span B span class plainlinks hye span T ISO 639 3 a href https iso639 3 sil org code hye class extiw title iso639 3 hye hye a Glottolognucl1235Map of the Armenian dialects in early 20th century owm dialects corresponding to Eastern Armenian are shown in green 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 Eastern Armenian is spoken in Armenia Russia as well as Georgia and by the Armenian community in Iran Although the Eastern Armenian spoken by Armenians in Armenia and Iranian Armenians are similar there are pronunciation differences with different inflections 2 Armenians from Iran also have some words that are unique to them Due to migrations of speakers from Armenia and Iran to the Armenian diaspora the dialect is now very prominent in countries and regions where only Western Armenian was used Eastern Armenian is based on the Yerevan dialect Contents 1 Official status and recognition 2 Phonology 2 1 Vowels 2 1 1 Monophthongs 2 2 Consonants 3 Orthography 4 Morphology 4 1 Pronouns 4 2 Nouns 4 3 Articles 4 4 Adjectives 4 5 Verbs 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksOfficial status and recognition editEastern Armenian is for the most part mutually intelligible by educated or literate users of Western Armenian and vice versa Conversely semi literate or illiterate users of lower registers of either variety may have difficulty understanding the other The official language according to law of Armenia is an unspecified Armenian 3 In practice however Eastern Armenian is the de facto day to day common language of Armenia For example commercial translations are generally completed in Eastern Armenian Until 2018 both varieties shared the same ISO 639 3 code hye However on 23 January 2018 a code specifically for Western Armenian was added to ISO 639 3 hyw The previous code under ISO 639 1 was hy The Armenian Wikipedia is predominantly composed of Eastern Armenian content As a result of the amendment to ISO 639 3 a campaign to create a separate Wikipedia for Western Armenian has been approved This has resulted in separate Wikipedia sites for Eastern Armenian and Western Armenian Phonology editVowels edit Monophthongs edit Eastern Armenian has six monophthong vowel sounds Front Central Back Unrounded Rounded Close i ի u ու Mid ɛ ե է 4 e ը ɔ ո օ 4 Open ɑ ա Consonants edit This is the Eastern Armenian Consonantal System using symbols from the International Phonetic Alphabet IPA followed by the corresponding Armenian letter in parentheses Bilabial Labiodental Alveolar Post alveolar Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal Nasal m մ n ն ŋ Stop aspirated pʰ փ tʰ թ kʰ ք voiceless 5 pʼ պ tʼ տ kʼ կ voiced b բ d դ ɡ գ Affricate aspirated tsʰ ց tʃʰ չ voiceless tsʼ ծ tʃʼ ճ voiced dz ձ dʒ ջ Fricative voiceless f ֆ s ս ʃ շ x խ h հ յ 6 voiced v վ ւ ու ո 7 z զ ʒ ժ ʁ ղ Approximant ʋ ɻ ɾ ր 8 j յ ե ի է 9 Tap Trill r ռ Lateral l լ Some of the dialects may release the voiceless stops and affricates as ejectives 10 Notes The phonology of Eastern Armenian preserves the Classical Armenian three way distinction in stops and affricates one voiced one voiceless and one aspirated Compare this to the phonology of the Western Armenian language which has kept only a two way distinction one voiced and one aspirated See the Differences in Phonology from Classical Armenian in the Western Armenian language article for details Some Eastern Armenian words contain voiced stop letters pronounced as voiceless aspirated stops like Western Armenian For instance թագավոր king is tʰɑkʰɑˈvɔɾ not tʰɑɡɑˈvɔɾ other examples are ձիգ d zikʰ ձագ d zɑkʰ կարգ kɑɾkʰ դադար dɑˈtʰɑɾ վարագույր vɑɾɑˈkʰujɾ Orthography editThe Eastern Armenian language is written using either Traditional Armenian Orthography or Reformed Armenian Orthography The controversial reformed orthography was developed during the 1920s in Soviet Armenia and is in widespread use today by Eastern Armenian speakers in Armenia and those in the diaspora that are from Armenia Eastern Armenian speakers in Iran continue to use the traditional orthography Nevertheless writings of either form are mutually intelligible since the difference between the two orthographies is not large Morphology editPronouns edit Personal pronouns singular plural 1st person 2nd person 3rd person 1st person 2nd person 3rd person nominative ես es դու du նա na մենք menkʿ դուք dukʿ նրանք nrankʿ genitive իմ im քո kʿo նրա nra մեր mer ձեր jer նրանց nrancʿ dative ինձ inj քեզ kʿez նրան nran մեզ mez ձեզ jez նրանց nrancʿ accusative ինձ inj քեզ kʿez նրան nran մեզ mez ձեզ jez նրանց nrancʿ ablative ինձնից injnicʿ ինձանից injanicʿ քեզնից kʿeznicʿ քեզանից kʿezanicʿ նրանից nranicʿ մեզնից meznicʿ մեզանից mezanicʿ ձեզնից jeznicʿ ձեզանից jezanicʿ նրանցից nrancʿicʿ instrumental ինձնով injnov ինձանով injanov քեզնով kʿeznov քեզանով kʿezanov նրանով nranov մեզնով meznov մեզանով mezanov ձեզնով jeznov ձեզանով jezanov նրանցով nrancʿov locative ինձնում injnum ինձանում injanum քեզնում kʿeznum քեզանում kʿezanum նրանում nranum մեզնում meznum մեզանում mezanum ձեզնում jeznum ձեզանում jezanum նրանցում nrancʿum Armenian has T V distinction with դու քո քեզ used informally and capitalized Դուք Ձեր Ձեզ as the polite forms Nouns edit Eastern Armenian nouns have seven cases one more than Western Armenian They are nominative subject accusative direct object genitive possession dative indirect object ablative origin instrumental means and locative position Of the seven cases the nominative and accusative with exceptions are the same and the genitive and dative are the same meaning that nouns have mostly five distinct forms for case Nouns in Armenian also decline for number singular and plural but do not decline for gender i e masculine or feminine Declension in Armenian is based on how the genitive is formed There are several declensions but two are the most used genitive in i and genitive in u Ablative դաշտից dɑʃˈtit sʰ դաշտերից dɑʃtɛˈɾit sʰ ɡɑˈɾut sʰ ɡɑɾinɛˈɾit sʰ Instrumental դաշտով dɑʃˈtɔv դաշտերով dɑʃtɛˈɾɔv ɡɑˈɾɔv ɡɑɾinɛˈɾɔv Locative դաշտում dɑʃˈtum դաշտերում dɑʃtɛˈɾum ɡɑˈɾum ɡɑɾinɛˈɾum Two notes First notice that the Ablative form in Eastern Armenian is it s where it is e in Western Armenian Abl sg WA kare EA ɡɑɾut sʰ Second notice that in Western Armenian the plural forms followed the u declension while in Eastern Armenian the plural forms follow the i declension Gen pl WA karineru EA ɡɑɾinɛˈɾi Articles edit Like some other languages such as English Armenian has definite and indefinite articles The indefinite article in Eastern Armenian is mi which precedes the noun mi ɡiɾkʰ a book Nom sg mi ɡɾkʰi of a book Gen sg The definite article is a suffix attached to the noun and is one of two forms either e or n depending on whether the final sound is a vowel or a consonant and whether a following word begins with a vowel or consonant mɑɾde the man Nom sg ɡɑɾin the barley Nom sg but sɑ mɑɾdn ɛ This is the man sɑ ɡɑɾin ɛ This is the barley Adjectives edit Adjectives in Armenian do not decline for case or number and precede the noun lɑv ɡiɾkʰe the good book Nom sg lɑv ɡɾkʰi of the good book Gen sg Verbs edit Verbs in Armenian are based on two basic series of forms a present form and an imperfect form From this all other tenses and moods are formed with various particles and constructions There is a third form the preterite which in Armenian is a tense in its own right and takes no other particles or constructions See also Armenian verbs and Eastern Armenian verb table for more detailed information The present tense in Eastern Armenian is based on two conjugations a e In Eastern Armenian the distinct conjugations in e and i merged as e linɛl to be siɾɛl to love kɑɾdɑl to read present participle siɾum kɑɾdum jɛs I ɛm siɾɛm kɑɾdɑm du you sg ɛs siɾɛs kɑɾdɑs nɑ he she it ɛ siɾi kɑɾdɑ mɛnkʰ we ɛnkʰ siɾɛnkʰ kɑɾdɑnkʰ dukʰ you pl ɛkʰ siɾɛkʰ kɑɾdɑkʰ nɾɑnkʰ they ɛn siɾɛn kɑɾdɑn The present tense as we know it in English is made by adding the present tense of linel after the present participle form of the verb jɛs kɑɾdum ɛm ɡiɾkʰe I am reading the book jɛs siɾum ɛm ɑjd ɡiɾkʰe I love that book See also editArmenian language Armenian verbs Eastern Armenian verb table Western Armenian language Western Armenia Eastern Armenia Language families and languages IETF language tag hyReferences edit Eastern Armenian at Ethnologue 25th ed 2022 nbsp Dolatian H Sharifzadeh A Vaux B 2023 A grammar of Iranian Armenian Parskahayeren or Iranahayeren pdf Berlin Language Science Press doi 10 5281 zenodo 8177018 ISBN 9783961104192 Law on Language Armenia a b The choice of Armenian symbol depends on the vowel s context in the word See the Orthography section below for details In some publications the voiceless plosives are also defined as ejectives or glottalised Glottalised plosives occur in various Armenian dialects and can also be found in the Eastern Armenian vernacular based on the Yerevan dialect but according to normative grammars SMEA Standard Modern Eastern Armenian shows no glottalised voiceless plosives Jasmine Dum Tragut Armenian Modern Eastern Armenian London Oriental and African Language Library 2007 ISSN 1382 3485 p 17 In traditional orthography h is written in one of two ways depending on its context In reformed orthography h is written only one way հ In traditional orthography v is written in one of four ways depending on its context In reformed orthography v is written only one way վ In practice only Iranian Armenians say ɻ Eastern Armenians from Armenia have shifted the Classical Armenian ɹ ր to ɾ Dolatian Hossep Sharifzadeh Afsheen amp Vaux Bert 2023 grammar of Iranian Armenian Parskahayeren or Iranahayeren Page 22 In traditional orthography j is written in a number of ways depending on its context In reformed orthography j is written only one way յ Dum Tragut Jasmine 2009 Armenian Modern Eastern Armenian PDF Thesis Amsterdam Netherlands John Benjamins Publishing Company Bibliography editDora Sakayan 2007 Eastern Armenian for the English speaking World A Contrastive Approach with CD ROM Yerevan State University Press ISBN 5808408903External links editArak29 Eastern Armenian Arak29 Western Armenian Arak29 On Line Dictionaries Eastern Armenian Online Dictionaries Nayiri com Library of Armenian dictionaries Armenian Explanatory Dictionary ՀԱՅԵՐԷՆ ԲԱՑԱՏՐԱԿԱՆ ԲԱՌԱՐԱՆ by Stepan Malkhasiants about 130 000 entries Written in traditional Armenian orthography One of the definitive Armenian dictionaries Explanatory Dictionary of Contemporary Armenian ԺԱՄԱՆԱԿԱԿԻՑ ՀԱՅՈՑ ԼԵԶՎԻ ԲԱՑԱՏՐԱԿԱՆ ԲԱՌԱՐԱՆ published by the Armenian SSR Academy of Sciences between 1969 and 1980 In Eastern Armenian reformed orthography about 125 000 headwords Modern Armenian Explanatory Dictionary ԱՐԴԻ ՀԱՅԵՐԵՆԻ ԲԱՑԱՏՐԱԿԱՆ ԲԱՌԱՐԱՆ by Eduard Aghayan about 135 600 headwords In Eastern Armenian and reformed orthography Armenian Language Thesaurus ՀԱՅՈՑ ԼԵԶՎԻ ՀՈՄԱՆԻՇՆԵՐԻ ԲԱՌԱՐԱՆ by Ashot Sukiasyan about 83 000 entries In Eastern Armenian and reformed orthography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eastern Armenian amp oldid 1196592795, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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