Georgian language

Georgian (ქართული)
Spoken in: Georgia, Iran, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Russia
Region: Europe, Asia, North America
Total speakers: 7.5 million
Ranking: Not in top 100
Genetic classification: Caucasian

 South Caucasian
  Georgian

Official status
Official language of: Georgia
Regulated by: -
Language codes
ISO 639-1ka
ISO 639-2geo (B) / kat (T)
SILGEO
See also: LanguageList of languages

Georgian (also Kartvelian; Kartuli in Georgian) is the official language of Georgia, a republic in the Caucasus. For the origin of the name, see the Georgia article.

Georgian is the primary language of about 4,000,000 people in Georgia itself (83% of the population), and of another 3.4 million people abroad (chiefly in Turkey, Russia, USA and Europe with smaller communities in Iran and Azerbaijan). It is the literary language for all ethnographic groups of Georgian people, especially those who speak other South Caucasian languages (Svans, Megrelians, and the Laz).

Contents

The language

Linguistic classification

Note: This page contains IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. See IPA in Unicode.

Georgian is the most important of the South Caucasian languages, a family that also includes Svan and Megrelian (chiefly spoken in Northwest Georgia) and Laz (chiefly spoken along the Black Sea coast of Turkey, from Melyat, Rize to the Georgian frontier).

Dialects

Dialects of Georgian include Imeretian, Racha-Lechkhum, Gurian, Ajarian, Imerkhev (in Turkey), Kartlian, Kakhetian, Ingilo, Tush, Khevsur, Mokhev, Pshav, Mtiul, Ferjeidan (in Iran), Meskhetian.

History of the language

Georgian is believed to have separated from Megrelian and Laz in the third millennium BC. Based on the degree of change, linguists (e.g. G.Klimov, T.Gamkrelidze, G.Machavariani) conjecture that the earliest split occurred in the second millennium BC or earlier, separating Svan from the other languages. Megrelian and Laz separated from Georgian roughly a thousand years later.

Georgian has a very rich literary tradition. The oldest surviving literary text in Georgian is the "Martyrdom of Saint Shushaniki, the Queen" (Tsamebay tsmindisa Shushanikisi, dedoplisa) by Iakob Tsurtaveli, from the 5th century AD.

Linguistic features

Grammar

See Georgian grammar

Alphabet

See Georgian alphabet

Phonology

Consonants

Where there are multiple consonants for a point of articulation, they are given in the following order: voiceless / voiced / voiceless ejective.

  Bilabial Dental Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
Stop p ფ/b ბ/t თ/d დ/  k ქ/g გ/1 
Fricative vs ს/zʃ შ/ʒ  x ხ/ɣh
Affricate   ʦ ც/ʣ ძ/ʦʼʧ ჩ/ʤ ჯ/ʧʼ     
Nasal mn       
Liquid   l ლ, r       

1/qʼ/ has neither non-ejective nor voiced counterparts


It is important to note that some consonants in Georgian are combination of two sounds. These are:

Also compare these similar sounds:

In the ejective sounds, one creates a stronger stress in the sound that follows the consonant.

In Georgian there are two kinds of -h-:

While the first one sounds the same as h in the word hotel, the second one does not have an English equivalent. This sound is formed in the back of the tounge in the larynx. Arabic language also has this sound.

There are many consonant clusters in Georgian, while all the nouns' nominative case end with a vowel. Many nouns in Georgian begin with two consonants (see the examples section).

Vowels

ɪ  ʊ
ɛ  ɔ
  a 

See also: Georgian in Iran

Examples

Word formations

Georgian has a word derivation system, which allows to derive nouns from verb roots both with prefixes and suffixes.

It is also possible to derive verbs from nouns:

Words that begin with multiple consonants

In Georgian many nouns and adjectives begin with two or more contiguous consonants. Because every letter in Georgian is to be pronounced, a non-native speaker may find it especially hard to say the words that begin with more than one consonant. However, since it is physically impossible to pronounce two contiguous consonants which do not have a preceding vowel, a phantom vowel -ı- emerges between the two sounds. In English, the closest sound to this is in the word rhythm, which can be heard in the pronunciation of the letters -th- and -m, in the pronunciation of e in the word butter, and in the pronuncation of train between the letters t and r.

When a consonant follows one of the double-sound consonants (, , ), the phantom -ı- is heard between the first and the second consonant, not in between the two sounds of the first consonant. For example, in the pronunciation of წქ (ts'k), the -ı- is between the s and the k; not in between the t and the s. Therefore, it is pronounced like, "tsık."

When another consonant precedes one of these, again the phantom vowel is heard not in between the two sounds of the consonant, but right after the first consonant. In the example of ვწერ (vts'er), "I write," the phantom vowel emerges between the letters and .

Common phrases

External links and references

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Wiki.png
Wikipedia

Georgian language edition of Wikipedia

See also: Georgian language, Accusative case, Adverbial case, Affricate consonant, Agglutinative languages, Arabic language