Abaza Language (abq)

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Also Known As: Tapanta,Abazintsy,Ashuwa,Ahuwa,Abazin,Abaza


Description:

The Abaza language (Абаза Бызшва, Abaza Byzšwa) is a language of the Caucasus mountains in the Russian Karachay-Cherkess Republic by the Abazins. It consists of two dialects, the Ashkherewa dialect and the T'ap'anta dialect, which is the literary standard. Abaza is spoken by approximately 35,000 people in Russia, where it is written using a modified Cyrillic alphabet, as well as another 10,000 in Turkey, where the Roman alphabet is used.

Abaza, like its relatives in the family of Northwest Caucasian languages, is highly agglutinative and has a large consonantal inventory (63 phonemes) coupled with a minimal vowel inventory (two vowels). It is very closely related to Abkhaz, but it preserves a few phonemes which Abkhaz lacks, such as a pharyngeal voiced fricative. Work on Abaza has been carried out by W. S. Allen, Brian O'Herin, and John Colarusso...... full article at Wikipedia

Location of Abaza Language Speakers

http://llmap.org/languages/abq/static_map.png?width=400&height=300&kilroywashere=.png

Rosetta Document Collection

Bibliography:
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Detailed Description:
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Grammar:
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Phonology:
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Table Of Contents:
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Overview

Main Country: Russia
Spoken In:

Regions: Europe

ISO 639-3 Code: abq

Classification Taxonomy

All Languages

  North Caucasian Group

    Northwest North Caucasian Group

      Abkhaz-Abazin Group

        Abaza Language