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Laz grammar

Laz is a South Caucasian language. It is sometimes considered as a southern dialect of Zan languages, the northern dialect being the Mingrelian language.

Today, the area where Laz is spoken stretches from the village Sarpi of Khelvachauri district in Georgia to the village Kemer of Rize province in Turkey. Laz is spoken also in Western Turkey in the villages created by Laz muhajirs in 1877–1878. In Georgia, out of Sarpi, the Laz language islets were also in Abkhazia, but the fate of them is obscure at present.

Laz is divided into three dialects: Khopa-Chkhala, Vitze-Arkabe and Atina-Artasheni. Dialectical classification is mainly conditioned by phonetic characteristics. More specifically, the crucial point is the reflexes of the Kartvelian phoneme [qʼ], which is maintained only in the Khopa-Chkhala dialect but has different reflections in Vitze-Arkabe and Atina-Artasheni dialects (see below).

Phonology and writing system edit

Vowels edit

Laz vowel inventory consists of five sounds: a, e, i, o, u.

Laz vowel scheme
front back
nonlabial labial
high i [i] u [u]
mid e [ɛ] o [ɔ]
low a [ɑ]

Consonants edit

The consonant inventory of Laz varies among the dialects. A full set of sounds is present in the Khopa-Chkhala dialect, while the Vitze-Arkabe and Atina-Artasheni dialects lost glottalized uvular q.

Consolidated table of Laz consonants
labial dental alveolar velar uvular laryngeal
nasals m ⟨m⟩ n ⟨n⟩
stops voiced b ⟨b⟩ d ⟨d⟩ ɡ ⟨g⟩
voiceless aspirated p ⟨p⟩ t ⟨t⟩ k ⟨k⟩
glottalized ⟨p̌⟩ ⟨t̆⟩ ⟨ǩ⟩ ⟨q⟩
affricates voiced d͡z ⟨ž⟩ d͡ʒ ⟨c⟩
voiceless aspirated t͡s ⟨ʒ⟩ t͡ʃ ⟨ç⟩
glottalized t͡sʼ ⟨ǯ⟩ t͡ʃʼ ⟨ç̌⟩
fricatives voiced v ⟨v⟩ z ⟨z⟩ ʒ ⟨j⟩ ɣ ⟨ğ⟩
voiceless f ⟨f⟩ s ⟨s⟩ ʃ ⟨ş⟩ x ⟨x⟩ h ⟨h⟩
liquids l ⟨l⟩ r ⟨r⟩
glides j ⟨y⟩

Phonological processes edit

Uvular q sound change edit

Glottalized uvular q is preserved only in the Khopa-Chkhala dialect before the vowels and the consonants v and l. This sound is also evidenced after glottalized stops and affricates in several words, such as p̌qorop (I love smb./sth.); ǩqorop (I love you); t̆qubi (twins), ǯqv-/ǯqvin- (to reconcile); ç̌qint̆i (fresh-soft and unripe). But in the most of cases *t̆q → t̆ǩ; *ǯq → ǯǩ; *ç̌q → ç̌ǩ.

In the Vitze-Arkabe dialect, in the neighborhood of consonants *q → ǩ (exception is the verb ovapu ← *oqvapu "to be"). In the word-initial prevocalic and in the intervocalic positions *q → ∅.

In Atina-Artasheni dialect:

  • in word-initial prevocalic position q → ∅. E.g. *qoropa → oropa "love", *qona → ona "cornfield" etc.
  • in intervocalic position *q → y/∅. E.g. *loqa → *loʔa → loya/loa "sweet", *luqu → *luʔu → luu "cabbage" etc.
  • word-initial qv → ǩv/v. E.g. qvali → ǩvali/vali "cheese, *qvaci → ǩvaci/vaci "testicle" etc.
  • intervocalic qv → y. E.g. *oqvapu → oyapu "to be/become", *iqven → iyen "s/he will be/become" etc.
  • in all other cases q → ∅

Regressive assimilation edit

The most common types are:

  • regressive voicing:
    • s → z
    • t → d
    • k → g
    • ş → j
    • ç → c
    • p → b
  • regressive devoicing:
    • b → p
    • g → k
  • regressive glottalization
    • b → p̌
    • p → p̌
    • g → ǩ

Dissimilative deletion of consonant edit

In some morphological contexts featuring two consonants n split only with a vowel, the former can be deleted. miqonun → miqoun (I have {an animate object}), iqvasinon → iqvasion (s/he will be), mulunan → *muluan → mulvan (they are coming).

Another dissimilation, presumably sporadic, occurs in deǩiǩe → deiǩe (minute); note also that the Arabic source of this word دقيقة daqīqa contains a uvular [q], and as above uvulars are unstable in Laz.

Intervocalic reduction of r edit

This process is evidenced in the Khopa-Chkhala and Vitze-Arkabe dialects, where in intervocalic position facultatively r → y → ∅.

Palatalization of velars edit

In the Atina-Artasheni dialect, the velars followed by the front vowels e and i and the glide y transform to alveolar affricates:

  • g → c
  • ǩ → ç̌
  • k → ç

Alphabet edit

 
A Laz newspaper in 1928

Laz is written in a Georgian script or in the Latin script (as used in Turkish, but with specific Laz extensions).

Georgian (Mkhedruli) Latin (Turkey) Latin (rare) IPA
Orthographic alphabets Transcriptions
a a ɑ
b b b
g g ɡ
d d d
e e ɛ
v v v
z z z
t t t
i i i
ǩ, or
l l l
m m m
n n n
y y j
o o ɔ
p̌, or
j ž ʒ
r r r
s s s
t̆, or
u u u
p p p
k k k
ğ ɣ ɣ
q
ş š ʃ
ç č t͡ʃ
ʒ, or з [1] c t͡s
ž, or ʒ d͡z
ǯ, or зʼ [1] ċ t͡sʼ
ç̌, or çʼ č’ t͡ʃʼ
x x x
c ǯ d͡ʒ
h h h
f f f

Grammatical cases edit

Laz has eight grammatical cases: nominative, ergative, dative, genitive, lative, ablative, instrumental and almost extinct adverbial.

  Marker
Nominative -i/-e
Ergative -k
Dative -s
Genitive -
Lative -işa
Ablative -işe
Instrumental -ite
Adverbial -ot

Example of adjective declension edit

  Marker Stem: mcveş- ("old")
Nominative -i mcveş-i
Ergative -k mcveş-i-k
Dative -s mcveş-i-s
Genitive - mcveş-
Lative -işa mcveş-işa
Ablative -işe mcveş-işe
Instrumental -ite mcveş-ite
Adverbial -ot mcveş-ot

Example of noun declension edit

  Marker Stem: ǩoç- ("man")
Nominative -i ǩoç-i
Ergative -k ǩoç-i-k
Dative -s ǩoç-i-s
Genitive - ǩoç-
Lative -işa ǩoç-işa
Ablative -işe ǩoç-işe
Instrumental -ite ǩoç-ite
Adverbial -ot n/a

Nouns edit

As in other South Caucasian languages, Laz distinguishes two classes of nouns and classifies objects as:

  • 'Intelligent' entities. Respective interrogative is mi? (who?)
  • 'Non-intelligent' entities. Respective interrogative is mu? (what?)

Noun classification scheme edit

Concrete Abstract
Animate Inanimate
Human and "sentient" beings (e.g. God, deities, angels) Animals Inanimate physical entities Abstract objects
Intelligent Non-Intelligent
mi? ("who?") mu? ("what?")

Numerals edit

The Laz numerals are near identical to their Megrelian equivalents with minor phonetic differences. The number system is vigesimal like in Georgian.

Cardinal numbers edit

Almost all basic Laz cardinal numbers stem from the Proto-Kartvelian language, except ar(t) (one) and eči (twenty), which are reconstructed only for the Karto-Zan chronological level, having regular phonetical reflexes in Zan (Megrelo-Laz) and Georgian. The numeral šilya (thousand) is a Pontic Greek loanword and is more commonly used than original Laz vitoši.

Laz cardinal numbers compared to Megrelian, Georgian and Svan edit

  Laz Megrelian Georgian Svan
1 ar(t) arti erti ešxu
2 jur/cur žiri/žəri ori yori
3 sum sumi sami semi
4 otxo otxi otxi oštxw
5 xut xuti xuti woxušd
6 anşi amšvi ekvsi usgwa
7 şkvit škviti švidi išgwid
8 ovro ruo rva ara
9 çxoro čxoro cxra čxara
10 vit viti ati ešd
11 vitoar vitaarti tertmeṭi ešdešxu
12 vitojur vitožiri tormeṭi ešdori
13 vitosum vitosumi cameṭi ešdsemi
14 vitotxo vitaantxi totxmeṭi ešdoštx
15 vitoxut vitoxuti txutmeṭi ešdoxušd
20 eçi eči oci yerwešd
21 eçidoar ečdoarti ocdaerti yerwešdiešxu
30 eçidovit ečdoviti ocdaati semešd
40 jurneçi žaarneči ormoci woštxuešd
50 jurneçidovit žaarnečdoviti ormocdaati woxušdešd
60 sumeneçi sumoneči samoci usgwašd
70 sumeneçidovit sumonečdoviti samocdaati išgvidašd
80 otxoneçi otxoneči otxmoci arašd
90 otxoneçidovit otxonečdoviti otxmocdaati chxarašd
100 oşi oši asi ašir
101 oşi do ar ošarti aserti ašir i ešxu
102 oşi do jur ošžiri asori ašir i yori
110 oşi do vit ošviti asati ašir i ešd
200 juroşi žiroši orasi yori ašir
500 xutoşi xutoši xutasi woxušd aršir
1000 şilya/vitoşi antasi atasi atas
1999 şilya çxoroş

otxoneçdovit̆oçxoro

antas čxoroš

otxonečdovitočxoro

atas cxraas

otxmocdacxrameṭi

atas čxara ašir

chxarašd chxara

2000 jurşilya žiri antasi ori atasi yori atas
10000 vit şilya viti antasi ati atasi ešd atas

Ordinal numbers edit

Ordinal numbers in Laz are produced with the circumfix ma-...-a, which, in contrast with Megrelian, may be extended with suffix -n. The circumfix ma-...-a originates from Proto-Kartvelian and has regular phonetical equivalents in Georgian (me-...-e) and Svan (me-...-e)

Ordinal numbers' derivation rule edit

Laz Megrelian Georgian Svan
ma-NUMBER-a(ni) ma-NUMBER-a me-NUMBER-e me-NUMBER-e

Laz ordinal numbers compared to Megrelian, Georgian and Svan edit

  Laz Megrelian Georgian Svan
1st maartani ṗirveli ṗirveli manḳwi
2nd majura(ni) mažira meore merme
3rd masuma(ni) masuma mesame meseme
4th maotxa(ni) maotxa/mantxa meotxe meuštxwe
5th maxuta(ni) maxuta mexute meuxušde
6th maanşa(ni) maamšva meekvse meusgwe
7th maşkvita(ni) maškvita mešvide meyšgwide
8th maovra(ni) maruo merve meare
9th maçxora(ni) mačxora mecxre meyčxre
10th mavita(ni) mavita meate meyšde
11th mavitoarta(ni) mavitaarta metertmeṭe meyšdešxue
12th mavitojura(ni) mavitožira metormeṭe meyšdore
13th mavitosuma(ni) mavitosuma mecameṭe meyšdseme
14th mavitotxa(ni) mavitaantxa metotxmeṭe meyšdoštxe
15th mavitoxuta(ni) mavitoxuta metxutmeṭe meyšdoxušde
20th maeça(ni) maeča meoce meyerwešde
21st eçidomaarta(ni) ečdomaarta ocdameerte
30th ečidomavita(ni) ečdomavita ocdameate mesemešde
40th majurneça(ni) mažaarneča meormoce meuštxuešde
50th jurneçidomavita(ni) žaarnečdomavita ormocdameate meuxušdešde
60th masumeneça(ni) masumoneča mesamoce meusgwešde
70th sumeneçidomavita(ni) sumonečdomavita samocdameate meyšgwidešde
80th maotxoneça(ni) maotxoneča meotxmoce mearašde
90th otxoneçidomavita(ni) otxonečdomavita otxmocdameate mečxarašde
100th maoşa(ni) maoša mease meašire
101st oşmaarta(ni) ošmaarta asmeerte
102nd oşmajura(ni) ošmažira asmeore
110th oşmavita(ni) ošmavita asmeate
200th majuroşa(ni) mažiroša meorase meyorašire
500th maxutoşa(ni) maxutoša mexutase meuxušdašire
1000th maşilya(ni)/mavitoşa(ni) maantasa meatase meatase

Fractional numbers edit

The fractional numbers' derivation rule in Laz and Megrelian is akin to Old Georgian and Svan.

Fractional numbers' derivation rule edit

Laz Megrelian Georgian Svan
Old New
na-NUMBER-al/or na-NUMBER-al/or na-NUMBER-al me-NUMBER-ed na-NUMBER-al/ul

Laz fractional numbers compared to Megrelian, Georgian and Svan edit

  Laz Megrelian Georgian Svan
Old New
whole mteli teli mrteli mteli tel
half gverdi gverdi naxevari naxevari xənsga
1/3 nasumori nasumori nasamali mesamedi nasemal
1/4 naotxali naotxali/naantxali naotxali meotxedi naoštxul
1/5 naxutali naxutali naxutali mexutedi naxušdal
1/6 naanşali naamšvali naekvsali meekvsedi nausgwul
1/7 naşkvitali naškvitali našvidali mešvidedi nayšgwidal
1/8 naovrali naruali narvali mervedi naaral
1/9 naçxorali načxorali nacxrali mecxredi načxaral
1/10 navitali navitali naatali meatedi naešdal
1/11 navitoartali navitaartali natertmeṭali metertmeṭedi naešdešxul
1/12 navitojurali navitožirali natormeṭali metormeṭedi naešdoral
1/20 naeçali naečali naocali meocedi nayerwešdal
1/100 naoşali naošali naasali measedi naaširal
1/1000 naşilyali/navitoşali naantasali naatasali meatasedi naatasal

Pronouns edit

Personal pronouns edit

Laz Megrelian Georgian
Khopa-Chkhala Vitze-Arkabe Atina-Artasheni
I ma(n) ma ma ma me
You (sing.) si(n) si si si šen
That (close to speaker) aya haya ham ena esa
This ia heya him ina isa
We çki çku şǩu čki/čkə čven
You (pl.) tkvan tkvan t̆ǩva tkva tkven
Those antepe hamtepe hani enepi eseni
These entepe hemtepe hini inepi isini

Possessive pronouns edit

Laz Megrelian Georgian
Khopa-Chkhala Vitze-Arkabe Atina-Artasheni
My çkimi çkimi şǩimi čkimi/čkəmi čemi
Your (sing.) skani skani sǩani skani šeni
His/her/its muşi muşi himuşi muši misi
Our çkini çkuni şǩuni čkini/čkəni čveni
Your (pl.) tkvani tkvani t̆ǩvani tkvani tkveni
Their mutepeşi hemtepeşi nişi inepiš mati

Verbs edit

Laz verbs are inflected for seven categories: person, number, version, tense, mood, aspect and voice.

Person and Number edit

In Laz, like Megrelian, Georgian and Svan, verbs can be unipersonal, bipersonal and tripersonal

  • Monovalent verbs have only subjective person and are intransitive.
  • Bivalent verbs have one subject and one object (direct or indirect). They are:
    • transitive if the object is direct
    • intransitive if the object is indirect
  • Trivalent verbs have one subject and two objects (one direct and the other indirect) and are ditransitive.
Verb personality table
Unipersonal Bipersonal Tripersonal
intransitive transitive intransitive ditransitive
Subject + + + +
Direct Object + +
Indirect Object + +

The person may be singular or plural.

Subject and object markers in Laz are the same as in Megrelian

Subject markers edit

  Singular Plural
S1 v- v-...-t
S2 ∅- ∅-...-t
S3 ∅-...-n/-s/-u ∅-...-an/-es

Object markers edit

  Singular Plural
O1 m- m-...-an/-es/-t
O2 g- g-...-an/-es/-t
O3 ∅- ∅-...-an/-es

In pre-consonant position, the markers v- and g- change phonetically:

  • Before voiced consonants: v- → b-
  • Before voiceless (nonglottalized) consonants:
    • v- → b- → p-
    • g- → k-
  • Before glottalized consonants:
    • v- → b- → p̌-
    • g- → ǩ-

Version edit

Like Megrelian, Georgian and Svan, Laz has four types of version marking:

  • subjective – shows that the action is intended for oneself,
  • objective – action is intended for another person,
  • objective-passive – the action is intended for another person and at the same time indicating the passiveness of subject,
  • neutral – neutral with respect to intention.

Laz version markers compared to Megrelian, Georgian and Svan edit

Version Laz Megrelian Georgian Svan
Subjective -i- -i- -i- -i-
Objective -u- -u- -u- -o-
Objective-passive -a- -a- -e- -e-
Neutral -o- -o-/-a- -a- -a-

Tenses edit

The maximum number of screeves in Laz is 22. They are grouped in three series. Two screeves (future I and past of future I) exist only for the verb r-, which serves as a 1st series root for oqopumu/ovapu/oyapu (to be).

Paradigm of verb conjugation edit

stems: ç̌ar- (to write) and r- (to be: just for future I and past of future I)

I Series
Khopa-Chkhala Vitze-Arkabe Atina-Artasheni
present ç̌arups ç̌arums
imperfect ç̌arupt̆u ç̌arumt̆u
imperfective optative ç̌arupt̆as ç̌arumt̆as
imperfective inferential ç̌arupt̆-eren ç̌arumt̆u-doren ç̌arumt̆u-donu
present conditional ç̌arupt̆u-ǩon ç̌arumt̆u-ǩo(n)
future I (r)t̆as-unon (r)t̆asen ort̆as-en
past of future I (r)t̆as-unt̆u t̆ast̆u ort̆as-eret̆u
II Series
Khopa-Chkhala Vitze-Arkabe Atina-Artasheni
aorist ç̌aru
aoristic optative ç̌aras
aoristic inferential I ç̌ar-eleren

/ç̌ar-een /ç̌ar-elen

ç̌aru-doren ç̌aru-donu
aoristic inferential II ç̌ar-eleret̆u

/ç̌ar-eet̆u /ç̌ar-elet̆u

ç̌aru-dort̆u
aoristic inferential optative ç̌ar-eleret̆as

/ç̌ar-eet̆as /ç̌ar-elet̆as

n/a
aoristic conditional ç̌aru-ǩon
future II ç̌aras-unon ç̌aras-en
past of future II ç̌aras-unt̆u

/ç̌ara-t̆u

ç̌ara-t̆u ç̌aras-ert̆u
conditional of aoristic inferential II ç̌ar-eleret̆u-ǩon

/ç̌ar-eet̆u-ǩon

n/a
inferential of the past of future II ç̌aras-unt̆-eren ç̌ara-t̆u-doren n/a
conditional of the past of future II ç̌ara-t̆u-ǩon n/a
III Series
Khopa-Chkhala Vitze-Arkabe Atina-Artasheni
inversive inferential I uç̌arun
inversive inferential II uç̌arut̆u
inferential optative uç̌arut̆as
inferential conditional uç̌arut̆u-ǩo(n)

According to oldness these screeves can be grouped in two sets:

  • old (primary) (common with Megrelian).
  • new (secondary) derived from the basic screeves (specific Laz).

Classification of screeves according to oldness

Old (common with Megrelian) New (specific Laz)
present imperfective inferential
imperfect future I
imperfective optative past of future I
present conditional aoristic inferential I
aorist aoristic inferential II
aoristic optative aoristic inferential optative
aoristic conditional future II
inversive inferential I past of future II
inversive inferential II Conditional of aoristic inferential II
inferential optative inferential of the past of future II
inferential conditional conditional of the past of future II

Mood edit

Indicative edit

Indicative statement claims that the proposition should be taken as an apparent fact.

Interrogative edit

There are two ways to transform an indicative statement into a question:

  • by means of interrogative words. E.g. mi? (who?), mu? (what?), so? (where?), mundes? (when?), muç̌o? (how?) etc. This rule is valid for Megrelian, Georgian and Svan as well.
  • by adding an interrogative particle -i to the end of a verb. It has the same function as Megrelian -o, Old Georgian -a and Svan -ma/-mo/-mu.

Imperative edit

Indicates a command or request. The aorist form is used when addressing 2nd person (singular/plural) and aoristic optative in all other cases.

Subjunctive edit

Expresses possibility, wish, desire.

Conditional edit

Indicates condition in contrary to a fact. For this reason a verbal suffix -ǩo (At.-Arsh, Vtz.-Ark.) / -ǩon/-ǩoni (Khop.-Chkh.) is used.

Aspect edit

Voice edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Extension consonant for the Altaic (Turkish) version of the Latin alphabet, often represented with the digit three (3) (currently missing from Unicode ?) ; the Cyrillic letter ze (З/з) has been borrowed in newspapers published in the Socialist Republic of Georgia (within USSR) to write the missing Latin letter ; modern orthographies used today also use the Latin digraphs Ts/ts for З/з and Ts’/ts’ for(З’/з’

References edit

  • Chikobava, Arn. (1936). Grammatical analysis of Laz with texts (in Georgian). Tiflis.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Chikobava, Arn. (1938). Chan-Megrel-Georgian Comparative Dictionary (in Georgian). Tbilisi.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Fähnrich, H. & Sardzhveladze, Z. (2000). Etymological Dictionary of the Kartvelian Languages (in Georgian). Tbilisi.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Kajaia, O. (2001–2002). Megrelian-Georgian dictionary. 3 Vols. (in Georgian). Tbilisi.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Kartozia, G. (2005). The Laz language and its place in the system of Kartvelian languages (in Georgian). Tbilisi.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Klimov, G. (1964). Etymological Dictionary of the Kartvelian Languages (in Russian). Moscow.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Klimov, G. (1998). Etymological Dictionary of the Kartvelian Languages. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter.
  • Klimov, G. (1998). Languages of the World: Caucasian languages (in Russian). Moscow: Academia.
  • Marr, N. (1910). Grammar of Chan (Laz) with reader and wordlist (in Russian). St. Petersburg.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link).
  • Qipshidze, I. (1911). Additional information about Chan (in Russian). St. Petersburg.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Qipshidze, I. (1914). The Grammar of Mingrelian (Iver) Language with reader and dictionary (in Russian). St. Petersburg.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link).
  • Shanidze, A. (1973). Essentials of Georgian Grammar (in Georgian). Tbilisi.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Topuria, V. & Kaldani, M. (2000). Svan Dictionary (in Georgian). Tbilisi.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links edit

  • Laz Georgian-Latin and Latin-Georgian converter

grammar, south, caucasian, language, sometimes, considered, southern, dialect, languages, northern, dialect, being, mingrelian, language, today, area, where, spoken, stretches, from, village, sarpi, khelvachauri, district, georgia, village, kemer, rize, provin. Laz is a South Caucasian language It is sometimes considered as a southern dialect of Zan languages the northern dialect being the Mingrelian language Today the area where Laz is spoken stretches from the village Sarpi of Khelvachauri district in Georgia to the village Kemer of Rize province in Turkey Laz is spoken also in Western Turkey in the villages created by Laz muhajirs in 1877 1878 In Georgia out of Sarpi the Laz language islets were also in Abkhazia but the fate of them is obscure at present Laz is divided into three dialects Khopa Chkhala Vitze Arkabe and Atina Artasheni Dialectical classification is mainly conditioned by phonetic characteristics More specifically the crucial point is the reflexes of the Kartvelian phoneme qʼ which is maintained only in the Khopa Chkhala dialect but has different reflections in Vitze Arkabe and Atina Artasheni dialects see below Contents 1 Phonology and writing system 1 1 Vowels 1 2 Consonants 1 3 Phonological processes 1 3 1 Uvular q sound change 1 3 2 Regressive assimilation 1 3 3 Dissimilative deletion of consonant 1 3 4 Intervocalic reduction of r 1 3 5 Palatalization of velars 1 4 Alphabet 2 Grammatical cases 2 1 Example of adjective declension 2 2 Example of noun declension 3 Nouns 3 1 Noun classification scheme 4 Numerals 4 1 Cardinal numbers 4 1 1 Laz cardinal numbers compared to Megrelian Georgian and Svan 4 2 Ordinal numbers 4 2 1 Ordinal numbers derivation rule 4 2 2 Laz ordinal numbers compared to Megrelian Georgian and Svan 4 3 Fractional numbers 4 3 1 Fractional numbers derivation rule 4 3 2 Laz fractional numbers compared to Megrelian Georgian and Svan 5 Pronouns 5 1 Personal pronouns 5 2 Possessive pronouns 6 Verbs 6 1 Person and Number 6 1 1 Subject markers 6 1 2 Object markers 6 2 Version 6 2 1 Laz version markers compared to Megrelian Georgian and Svan 6 3 Tenses 6 3 1 Paradigm of verb conjugation 6 4 Mood 6 4 1 Indicative 6 4 2 Interrogative 6 4 3 Imperative 6 4 4 Subjunctive 6 4 5 Conditional 6 5 Aspect 6 6 Voice 7 See also 7 1 Notes 7 2 References 8 External linksPhonology and writing system editVowels edit Laz vowel inventory consists of five sounds a e i o u Laz vowel scheme front back nonlabial labial high i i u u mid e ɛ o ɔ low a ɑ Consonants edit The consonant inventory of Laz varies among the dialects A full set of sounds is present in the Khopa Chkhala dialect while the Vitze Arkabe and Atina Artasheni dialects lost glottalized uvular q Consolidated table of Laz consonants labial dental alveolar velar uvular laryngeal nasals m m n n stops voiced b b d d ɡ g voiceless aspirated p p t t k k glottalized pʼ p tʼ t kʼ ǩ qʼ q affricates voiced d z z d ʒ c voiceless aspirated t s ʒ t ʃ c glottalized t sʼ ǯ t ʃʼ c fricatives voiced v v z z ʒ j ɣ g voiceless f f s s ʃ s x x h h liquids l l r r glides j y Phonological processes edit Uvular q sound change edit Glottalized uvular q is preserved only in the Khopa Chkhala dialect before the vowels and the consonants v and l This sound is also evidenced after glottalized stops and affricates in several words such as p qorop I love smb sth ǩqorop I love you t qubi twins ǯqv ǯqvin to reconcile c qint i fresh soft and unripe But in the most of cases t q t ǩ ǯq ǯǩ c q c ǩ In the Vitze Arkabe dialect in the neighborhood of consonants q ǩ exception is the verb ovapu oqvapu to be In the word initial prevocalic and in the intervocalic positions q In Atina Artasheni dialect in word initial prevocalic position q E g qoropa oropa love qona ona cornfield etc in intervocalic position q y E g loqa loʔa loya loa sweet luqu luʔu luu cabbage etc word initial qv ǩv v E g qvali ǩvali vali cheese qvaci ǩvaci vaci testicle etc intervocalic qv y E g oqvapu oyapu to be become iqven iyen s he will be become etc in all other cases q Regressive assimilation edit The most common types are regressive voicing s z t d k g s j c c p b regressive devoicing b p g k regressive glottalization b p p p g ǩ Dissimilative deletion of consonant edit In some morphological contexts featuring two consonants n split only with a vowel the former can be deleted miqonun miqoun I have an animate object iqvasinon iqvasion s he will be mulunan muluan mulvan they are coming Another dissimilation presumably sporadic occurs in deǩiǩe deiǩe minute note also that the Arabic source of this word دقيقة daqiqa contains a uvular q and as above uvulars are unstable in Laz Intervocalic reduction of r edit This process is evidenced in the Khopa Chkhala and Vitze Arkabe dialects where in intervocalic position facultatively r y Palatalization of velars edit In the Atina Artasheni dialect the velars followed by the front vowels e and i and the glide y transform to alveolar affricates g c ǩ c k c Alphabet edit nbsp A Laz newspaper in 1928 Laz is written in a Georgian script or in the Latin script as used in Turkish but with specific Laz extensions Georgian Mkhedruli Latin Turkey Latin rare IPA Orthographic alphabets Transcriptions ა a a ɑ ბ b b b გ g g ɡ დ d d d ე e e ɛ ვ v v v ზ z z z თ t t t ი i i i კ ǩ or kʼ ḳ kʼ ლ l l l მ m m m ნ n n n ჲ y y j ო o o ɔ პ p or pʼ ṗ pʼ ჟ j z ʒ რ r r r ს s s s ტ t or tʼ ṭ tʼ უ u u u ფ p p p ქ k k k ღ g ɣ ɣ ყ q qʼ qʼ შ s s ʃ ჩ c c t ʃ ც ʒ or z 1 c t s ძ z or zʼ ʒ d z წ ǯ or zʼ 1 ċ t sʼ ჭ c or cʼ c t ʃʼ ხ x x x ჯ c ǯ d ʒ ჰ h h h ჶ f f fGrammatical cases editLaz has eight grammatical cases nominative ergative dative genitive lative ablative instrumental and almost extinct adverbial Marker Nominative i e Ergative k Dative s Genitive is Lative isa Ablative ise Instrumental ite Adverbial ot Example of adjective declension edit Marker Stem mcves old Nominative i mcves i Ergative k mcves i k Dative s mcves i s Genitive is mcves is Lative isa mcves isa Ablative ise mcves ise Instrumental ite mcves ite Adverbial ot mcves ot Example of noun declension edit Marker Stem ǩoc man Nominative i ǩoc i Ergative k ǩoc i k Dative s ǩoc i s Genitive is ǩoc is Lative isa ǩoc isa Ablative ise ǩoc ise Instrumental ite ǩoc ite Adverbial ot n aNouns editAs in other South Caucasian languages Laz distinguishes two classes of nouns and classifies objects as Intelligent entities Respective interrogative is mi who Non intelligent entities Respective interrogative is mu what Noun classification scheme edit Concrete Abstract Animate Inanimate Human and sentient beings e g God deities angels Animals Inanimate physical entities Abstract objects Intelligent Non Intelligent mi who mu what Numerals editThe Laz numerals are near identical to their Megrelian equivalents with minor phonetic differences The number system is vigesimal like in Georgian Cardinal numbers edit Almost all basic Laz cardinal numbers stem from the Proto Kartvelian language except ar t one and eci twenty which are reconstructed only for the Karto Zan chronological level having regular phonetical reflexes in Zan Megrelo Laz and Georgian The numeral silya thousand is a Pontic Greek loanword and is more commonly used than original Laz vitosi Laz cardinal numbers compared to Megrelian Georgian and Svan edit Laz Megrelian Georgian Svan 1 ar t arti erti esxu 2 jur cur ziri zeri ori yori 3 sum sumi sami semi 4 otxo otxi otxi ostxw 5 xut xuti xuti woxusd 6 ansi amsvi ekvsi usgwa 7 skvit skviti svidi isgwid 8 ovro ruo rva ara 9 cxoro cxoro cxra cxara 10 vit viti ati esd 11 vitoar vitaarti tertmeṭi esdesxu 12 vitojur vitoziri tormeṭi esdori 13 vitosum vitosumi cameṭi esdsemi 14 vitotxo vitaantxi totxmeṭi esdostx 15 vitoxut vitoxuti txutmeṭi esdoxusd 20 eci eci oci yerwesd 21 ecidoar ecdoarti ocdaerti yerwesdiesxu 30 ecidovit ecdoviti ocdaati semesd 40 jurneci zaarneci ormoci wostxuesd 50 jurnecidovit zaarnecdoviti ormocdaati woxusdesd 60 sumeneci sumoneci samoci usgwasd 70 sumenecidovit sumonecdoviti samocdaati isgvidasd 80 otxoneci otxoneci otxmoci arasd 90 otxonecidovit otxonecdoviti otxmocdaati chxarasd 100 osi osi asi asir 101 osi do ar osarti aserti asir i esxu 102 osi do jur osziri asori asir i yori 110 osi do vit osviti asati asir i esd 200 jurosi zirosi orasi yori asir 500 xutosi xutosi xutasi woxusd arsir 1000 silya vitosi antasi atasi atas 1999 silya cxoros otxonecdovit ocxoro antas cxoros otxonecdovitocxoro atas cxraas otxmocdacxrameṭi atas cxara asir chxarasd chxara 2000 jursilya ziri antasi ori atasi yori atas 10000 vit silya viti antasi ati atasi esd atas Ordinal numbers edit Ordinal numbers in Laz are produced with the circumfix ma a which in contrast with Megrelian may be extended with suffix n The circumfix ma a originates from Proto Kartvelian and has regular phonetical equivalents in Georgian me e and Svan me e Ordinal numbers derivation rule edit Laz Megrelian Georgian Svan ma NUMBER a ni ma NUMBER a me NUMBER e me NUMBER e Laz ordinal numbers compared to Megrelian Georgian and Svan edit Laz Megrelian Georgian Svan 1st maartani ṗirveli ṗirveli manḳwi 2nd majura ni mazira meore merme 3rd masuma ni masuma mesame meseme 4th maotxa ni maotxa mantxa meotxe meustxwe 5th maxuta ni maxuta mexute meuxusde 6th maansa ni maamsva meekvse meusgwe 7th maskvita ni maskvita mesvide meysgwide 8th maovra ni maruo merve meare 9th macxora ni macxora mecxre meycxre 10th mavita ni mavita meate meysde 11th mavitoarta ni mavitaarta metertmeṭe meysdesxue 12th mavitojura ni mavitozira metormeṭe meysdore 13th mavitosuma ni mavitosuma mecameṭe meysdseme 14th mavitotxa ni mavitaantxa metotxmeṭe meysdostxe 15th mavitoxuta ni mavitoxuta metxutmeṭe meysdoxusde 20th maeca ni maeca meoce meyerwesde 21st ecidomaarta ni ecdomaarta ocdameerte 30th ecidomavita ni ecdomavita ocdameate mesemesde 40th majurneca ni mazaarneca meormoce meustxuesde 50th jurnecidomavita ni zaarnecdomavita ormocdameate meuxusdesde 60th masumeneca ni masumoneca mesamoce meusgwesde 70th sumenecidomavita ni sumonecdomavita samocdameate meysgwidesde 80th maotxoneca ni maotxoneca meotxmoce mearasde 90th otxonecidomavita ni otxonecdomavita otxmocdameate mecxarasde 100th maosa ni maosa mease measire 101st osmaarta ni osmaarta asmeerte 102nd osmajura ni osmazira asmeore 110th osmavita ni osmavita asmeate 200th majurosa ni mazirosa meorase meyorasire 500th maxutosa ni maxutosa mexutase meuxusdasire 1000th masilya ni mavitosa ni maantasa meatase meatase Fractional numbers edit The fractional numbers derivation rule in Laz and Megrelian is akin to Old Georgian and Svan Fractional numbers derivation rule edit Laz Megrelian Georgian Svan Old New na NUMBER al or na NUMBER al or na NUMBER al me NUMBER ed na NUMBER al ul Laz fractional numbers compared to Megrelian Georgian and Svan edit Laz Megrelian Georgian Svan Old New whole mteli teli mrteli mteli tel half gverdi gverdi naxevari naxevari xensga 1 3 nasumori nasumori nasamali mesamedi nasemal 1 4 naotxali naotxali naantxali naotxali meotxedi naostxul 1 5 naxutali naxutali naxutali mexutedi naxusdal 1 6 naansali naamsvali naekvsali meekvsedi nausgwul 1 7 naskvitali naskvitali nasvidali mesvidedi naysgwidal 1 8 naovrali naruali narvali mervedi naaral 1 9 nacxorali nacxorali nacxrali mecxredi nacxaral 1 10 navitali navitali naatali meatedi naesdal 1 11 navitoartali navitaartali natertmeṭali metertmeṭedi naesdesxul 1 12 navitojurali navitozirali natormeṭali metormeṭedi naesdoral 1 20 naecali naecali naocali meocedi nayerwesdal 1 100 naosali naosali naasali measedi naasiral 1 1000 nasilyali navitosali naantasali naatasali meatasedi naatasalPronouns editPersonal pronouns edit Laz Megrelian Georgian Khopa Chkhala Vitze Arkabe Atina Artasheni I ma n ma ma ma me You sing si n si si si sen That close to speaker aya haya ham ena esa This ia heya him ina isa We cki cku sǩu cki cke cven You pl tkvan tkvan t ǩva tkva tkven Those antepe hamtepe hani enepi eseni These entepe hemtepe hini inepi isini Possessive pronouns edit Laz Megrelian Georgian Khopa Chkhala Vitze Arkabe Atina Artasheni My ckimi ckimi sǩimi ckimi ckemi cemi Your sing skani skani sǩani skani seni His her its musi musi himusi musi misi Our ckini ckuni sǩuni ckini ckeni cveni Your pl tkvani tkvani t ǩvani tkvani tkveni Their mutepesi hemtepesi nisi inepis matiVerbs editLaz verbs are inflected for seven categories person number version tense mood aspect and voice Person and Number edit In Laz like Megrelian Georgian and Svan verbs can be unipersonal bipersonal and tripersonal Monovalent verbs have only subjective person and are intransitive Bivalent verbs have one subject and one object direct or indirect They are transitive if the object is direct intransitive if the object is indirect Trivalent verbs have one subject and two objects one direct and the other indirect and are ditransitive Verb personality table Unipersonal Bipersonal Tripersonal intransitive transitive intransitive ditransitive Subject Direct Object Indirect Object The person may be singular or plural Subject and object markers in Laz are the same as in Megrelian Subject markers edit Singular Plural S1 v v t S2 t S3 n s u an es Object markers edit Singular Plural O1 m m an es t O2 g g an es t O3 an es In pre consonant position the markers v and g change phonetically Before voiced consonants v b Before voiceless nonglottalized consonants v b p g k Before glottalized consonants v b p g ǩ Version edit Like Megrelian Georgian and Svan Laz has four types of version marking subjective shows that the action is intended for oneself objective action is intended for another person objective passive the action is intended for another person and at the same time indicating the passiveness of subject neutral neutral with respect to intention Laz version markers compared to Megrelian Georgian and Svan edit Version Laz Megrelian Georgian Svan Subjective i i i i Objective u u u o Objective passive a a e e Neutral o o a a a Tenses edit The maximum number of screeves in Laz is 22 They are grouped in three series Two screeves future I and past of future I exist only for the verb r which serves as a 1st series root for oqopumu ovapu oyapu to be Paradigm of verb conjugation edit stems c ar to write and r to be just for future I and past of future I I Series Khopa Chkhala Vitze Arkabe Atina Artasheni present c arups c arums imperfect c arupt u c arumt u imperfective optative c arupt as c arumt as imperfective inferential c arupt eren c arumt u doren c arumt u donu present conditional c arupt u ǩon c arumt u ǩo n future I r t as unon r t asen ort as en past of future I r t as unt u t ast u ort as eret u II Series Khopa Chkhala Vitze Arkabe Atina Artasheni aorist c aru aoristic optative c aras aoristic inferential I c ar eleren c ar een c ar elen c aru doren c aru donu aoristic inferential II c ar eleret u c ar eet u c ar elet u c aru dort u aoristic inferential optative c ar eleret as c ar eet as c ar elet as n a aoristic conditional c aru ǩon future II c aras unon c aras en past of future II c aras unt u c ara t u c ara t u c aras ert u conditional of aoristic inferential II c ar eleret u ǩon c ar eet u ǩon n a inferential of the past of future II c aras unt eren c ara t u doren n a conditional of the past of future II c ara t u ǩon n a III Series Khopa Chkhala Vitze Arkabe Atina Artasheni inversive inferential I uc arun inversive inferential II uc arut u inferential optative uc arut as inferential conditional uc arut u ǩo n According to oldness these screeves can be grouped in two sets old primary common with Megrelian new secondary derived from the basic screeves specific Laz Classification of screeves according to oldness Old common with Megrelian New specific Laz present imperfective inferential imperfect future I imperfective optative past of future I present conditional aoristic inferential I aorist aoristic inferential II aoristic optative aoristic inferential optative aoristic conditional future II inversive inferential I past of future II inversive inferential II Conditional of aoristic inferential II inferential optative inferential of the past of future II inferential conditional conditional of the past of future II Mood edit Indicative edit Indicative statement claims that the proposition should be taken as an apparent fact Interrogative edit There are two ways to transform an indicative statement into a question by means of interrogative words E g mi who mu what so where mundes when muc o how etc This rule is valid for Megrelian Georgian and Svan as well by adding an interrogative particle i to the end of a verb It has the same function as Megrelian o Old Georgian a and Svan ma mo mu Imperative edit Indicates a command or request The aorist form is used when addressing 2nd person singular plural and aoristic optative in all other cases Subjunctive edit Expresses possibility wish desire Conditional edit Indicates condition in contrary to a fact For this reason a verbal suffix ǩo At Arsh Vtz Ark ǩon ǩoni Khop Chkh is used Aspect edit This section is empty You can help by adding to it January 2011 Voice edit This section is empty You can help by adding to it January 2011 See also editNotes edit a b Extension consonant for the Altaic Turkish version of the Latin alphabet often represented with the digit three 3 currently missing from Unicode the Cyrillic letter ze Z z has been borrowed in newspapers published in the Socialist Republic of Georgia within USSR to write the missing Latin letter modern orthographies used today also use the Latin digraphs Ts ts for Z z and Ts ts for Z z References edit Chikobava Arn 1936 Grammatical analysis of Laz with texts in Georgian Tiflis a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Chikobava Arn 1938 Chan Megrel Georgian Comparative Dictionary in Georgian Tbilisi a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Fahnrich H amp Sardzhveladze Z 2000 Etymological Dictionary of the Kartvelian Languages in Georgian Tbilisi a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Kajaia O 2001 2002 Megrelian Georgian dictionary 3 Vols in Georgian Tbilisi a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Kartozia G 2005 The Laz language and its place in the system of Kartvelian languages in Georgian Tbilisi a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Klimov G 1964 Etymological Dictionary of the Kartvelian Languages in Russian Moscow a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Klimov G 1998 Etymological Dictionary of the Kartvelian Languages Berlin Mouton de Gruyter Klimov G 1998 Languages of the World Caucasian languages in Russian Moscow Academia Marr N 1910 Grammar of Chan Laz with reader and wordlist in Russian St Petersburg a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Qipshidze I 1911 Additional information about Chan in Russian St Petersburg a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Qipshidze I 1914 The Grammar of Mingrelian Iver Language with reader and dictionary in Russian St Petersburg a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Shanidze A 1973 Essentials of Georgian Grammar in Georgian Tbilisi a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Topuria V amp Kaldani M 2000 Svan Dictionary in Georgian Tbilisi a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint multiple names authors list link External links editLaz Georgian Latin and Latin Georgian converter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Laz grammar amp oldid 1182486579, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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