Georgian language

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Template:Short description Template:Use American English {{#invoke:Infobox|infobox}}Template:Template otherTemplate:Main other{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check |unknown=Template:Main other |preview=Page using Template:Infobox language with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| acceptance | agency | aiatsis | aiatsis2 | aiatsis3 | aiatsis4 | aiatsis5 | aiatsis6 | aiatsisname | aiatsisname2 | aiatsisname3 | aiatsisname4 | aiatsisname5 | aiatsisname6 | altname | ancestor | ancestor2 | ancestor3 | ancestor4 | ancestor5 | ancestor6 | ancestor7 | ancestor8 | ancestor9 | ancestor10 | ancestor11 | ancestor12 | ancestor13 | ancestor14 | ancestor15 | boxsize | coordinates | coords | created | creator | date | dateprefix | development_body | dia1 | dia2 | dia3 | dia4 | dia5 | dia6 | dia7 | dia8 | dia9 | dia10 | dia11 | dia12 | dia13 | dia14 | dia15 | dia16 | dia17 | dia18 | dia19 | dia20 | dia21 | dia22 | dia23 | dia24 | dia25 | dia26 | dia27 | dia28 | dia29 | dia30 | dia31 | dia32 | dia33 | dia34 | dia35 | dia36 | dia37 | dia38 | dia39 | dia40 | dialect_label | dialects | ELP | ELP2 | ELP3 | ELP4 | ELP5 | ELP6 | ELPname | ELPname2 | ELPname3 | ELPname4 | ELPname5 | ELPname6 | era | ethnicity | extinct | fam1 | fam2 | fam3 | fam4 | fam5 | fam6 | fam7 | fam8 | fam9 | fam10 | fam11 | fam12 | fam13 | fam14 | fam15 | family | familycolor | fontcolor | glotto | glotto2 | glotto3 | glotto4 | glotto5 | glottoname | glottoname2 | glottoname3 | glottoname4 | glottoname5 | glottopedia | glottorefname | glottorefname2 | glottorefname3 | glottorefname4 | glottorefname5 | guthrie | ietf | image | imagealt | imagecaption | imagescale | iso1 | iso1comment | iso2 | iso2b | iso2comment | iso2t | iso3 | iso3comment | iso6 | isoexception | lc1 | lc2 | lc3 | lc4 | lc5 | lc6 | lc7 | lc8 | lc9 | lc10 | lc11 | lc12 | lc13 | lc14 | lc15 | lc16 | lc17 | lc18 | lc19 | lc20 | lc21 | lc22 | lc23 | lc24 | lc25 | lc26 | lc27 | lc28 | lc29 | lc30 | lc31 | lc32 | lc33 | lc34 | lc35 | lc36 | lc37 | lc38 | lc39 | lc40 | ld1 | ld2 | ld3 | ld4 | ld5 | ld6 | ld7 | ld8 | ld9 | ld10 | ld11 | ld12 | ld13 | ld14 | ld15 | ld16 | ld17 | ld18 | ld19 | ld20 | ld21 | ld22 | ld23 | ld24 | ld25 | ld26 | ld27 | ld28 | ld29 | ld30 | ld31 | ld32 | ld33 | ld34 | ld35 | ld36 | ld37 | ld38 | ld39 | ld40 | linglist | linglist2 | linglist3 | linglist4 | linglist5 | linglist6 | lingname | lingname2 | lingname3 | lingname4 | lingname5 | lingname6 | lingua | lingua2 | lingua3 | lingua4 | lingua5 | lingua6 | lingua7 | lingua8 | lingua9 | lingua10 | linguaname | linguaname2 | linguaname3 | linguaname4 | linguaname5 | linguaname6 | linguaname7 | linguaname8 | linguaname9 | linguaname10 | listclass | liststyle | map | map2 | mapalt | mapalt2 | mapcaption | mapcaption2 | mapscale | minority | module | name | nation | nativename | notice | notice2 | official | posteriori | pronunciation | protoname | pushpin_image | pushpin_label | pushpin_label_position | pushpin_map | pushpin_map_alt | pushpin_map_caption | pushpin_mapsize | qid | ref | refname | region | revived | revived-cat | revived-category | script | setting | sign | signers | speakers | speakers_label | speakers2 | stand1 | stand2 | stand3 | stand4 | stand5 | stand6 | standards | state | states }}<templatestyles src="Template:Infobox/styles-images.css" /> Template:Contains special characters

Georgian (Template:Langx, Template:IPA) is the most widely spoken Kartvelian language. It is the official language of Georgia and the native or primary language of 88% of its population.<ref>Central Intelligence Agency. (2016). "Georgia". In The World Factbook. Template:Webarchive.</ref> It also serves as the literary language or lingua franca for speakers of related languages.<ref>Template:Harvcoltxt</ref> Its speakers today amount to approximately 3.8 million. Georgian is written with its own unique Georgian scripts, alphabetical systems of unclear origin.<ref name=e27/>

Georgian is most closely related to the Zan languages (Megrelian and Laz) and more distantly to Svan. Georgian has various dialects, with standard Georgian based on the Kartlian dialect, and all dialects are mutually intelligible. The history of Georgian spans from Early Old Georgian in the 5th century, to Modern Georgian today. Its development as a written language began with the Christianization of Georgia in the 4th century.

Georgian phonology features a rich consonant system, including aspirated, voiced, and ejective stops, affricates, and fricatives. Its vowel system consists of five vowels with varying realizations. Georgian prosody involves weak stress, with disagreements among linguists on its placement. The language's phonotactics include complex consonant clusters and harmonic clusters. The Mkhedruli script, dominant in modern usage, corresponds closely to Georgian phonemes and has no case distinction, though it employs a capital-like effect called Mtavruli for titles and inscriptions. Georgian is an agglutinative language with a complex verb structure that can include up to eight morphemes, exhibiting polypersonalism. The language has seven noun cases and employs a left-branching structure with adjectives preceding nouns and postpositions instead of prepositions. Georgian lacks grammatical gender and articles, with definite meanings established through context. Georgian's rich derivation system allows for extensive noun and verb formation from roots, with many words featuring initial consonant clusters.

The Georgian writing system has evolved from ancient scripts to the current Mkhedruli, used for most purposes. The language has a robust grammatical framework with unique features such as syncope in morphophonology and a left-branching syntax. Georgian's vocabulary is highly derivational, allowing for diverse word formations, while its numeric system is vigesimal, based on 20, as opposed to a Base 10 (decimal) system.

Classification

No claimed genetic links between the Kartvelian languages and any other language family in the world are accepted in mainstream linguistics. Among the Kartvelian languages, Georgian is most closely related to the so-called Zan languages (Megrelian and Laz); glottochronological studies indicate that it split from the latter approximately 2700 years ago. Svan is a more distant relative that split off much earlier, perhaps 4000 years ago.<ref name=":4">Template:Harvcoltxt</ref>

Dialects

Template:Main The Georgian language has at least 18 dialects, with Standard Georgian being largely based on the Kartlian dialect.<ref name="ARMAZI">Georgian DialectsTemplate:Webarchive, The ARMAZI project. Retrieved on March 28, 2007</ref> Over the centuries, it has exerted a strong influence on the other dialects. As a result, they are all, generally, mutually intelligible with standard Georgian, and with one another.<ref>Manana Kock Kobaidze (2004-02-11) From the history of Standard Georgian Template:Webarchive</ref>

History

Template:FurtherTemplate:Georgians The history of the Georgian language is conventionally divided into the following phases:<ref name="woodard"/>

  • Early Old Georgian: 5th–8th centuries
  • Classical Old Georgian: 9th–11th centuries
  • Middle Georgian: 11th/12th–17th/18th centuries
  • Modern Georgian: 17th/18th century–present

The earliest extant references to Georgian are found in the writings of Marcus Cornelius Fronto, a Roman grammarian from the 2nd century AD.<ref>Braund, David (1994), Georgia in Antiquity; a History of Colchis and Transcaucasian Iberia, 550 B.C. – A.D. 562, p. 216. Oxford University Press, Template:ISBN</ref> The first direct attestations of the language are inscriptions and palimpsests dating to the 5th century, and the oldest surviving literary work is the 5th century Martyrdom of the Holy Queen Shushanik by Iakob Tsurtaveli.

The emergence of Georgian as a written language appears to have been the result of the Christianization of Georgia in the mid-4th century, which led to the replacement of Aramaic as the literary language.<ref name="woodard">Tuite, Kevin, "Early Georgian", pp. 145–6, in: Woodard, Roger D. (2008), The Ancient Languages of Asia Minor. Cambridge University Press, Template:ISBN</ref>

By the 11th century, Old Georgian had developed into Middle Georgian. The most famous work of this period is the epic poem The Knight in the Panther's Skin, written by Shota Rustaveli in the 12th century.

In 1629, a certain Nikoloz Cholokashvili authored the first printed books written (partially) in Georgian, the Alphabetum Ibericum sive Georgianum cum Oratione and the Dittionario giorgiano e italiano. These were meant to help western Catholic missionaries learn Georgian for evangelical purposes.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Phonology

Template:WikiIPA

Consonants

On the left are IPA symbols, and on the right are the corresponding letters of the modern Georgian alphabet, which is essentially phonemic.

Consonants<ref name="ipashosted">Template:Harvcoltxt</ref><ref name="GMU">Template:Cite web</ref>
  Labial Dental/
Alveolar
Post-alveolar Velar Uvular Glottal
Nasal Template:IPA link   Template:Lang Template:IPA link   Template:Lang
Stop aspirated Template:IPA link   Template:Lang Template:IPA link   Template:Lang Template:IPA link   Template:Lang
voiced Template:IPA link   Template:Lang7, 8, 10 Template:IPA link   Template:Lang7, 8, 10 Template:IPA link   Template:Lang7, 8, 10
ejective Template:IPA link   Template:Lang Template:IPA link   Template:Lang Template:IPA link   Template:Lang Template:IPA link3   Template:Lang
Affricate (aspirated) Template:IPA link1   Template:Lang Template:IPA link1   Template:Lang
voiced Template:IPA link   Template:Lang Template:IPA link   Template:Lang
ejective Template:IPA link   Template:Lang Template:IPA link   Template:Lang
Fricative voiceless Template:IPA link   Template:Lang Template:IPA link   Template:Lang Template:IPA link 2   Template:Lang Template:IPA link   Template:Lang
voiced Template:IPA link   Template:Lang6 Template:IPA link   Template:Lang Template:IPA link   Template:Lang Template:IPA link 2   Template:Lang
Vibrant Template:IPA link   Template:Lang4,9
Lateral Template:IPA link   Template:Lang5
  1. Opinions differ on the aspiration of Template:IPA, as it is non-contrastive.<ref>Vicenik, Chad (2010). "An Acoustic Study of Georgian Stop Consonants". Journal of the International Phonetic Association 40 (1): 59–92.</ref>
  2. Opinions differ on how to classify Template:IPAslink and Template:IPAslink; Template:Harvcoltxt classifies them as post-velar, Template:Harvcoltxt argues that they range from velar to uvular according to context.
  3. The uvular ejective stop is commonly realized as a uvular ejective fricative Template:IPAblink but it can also be Template:IPAblink, Template:IPAblink, or Template:IPAblink, they are in free variation.<ref>Template:Harvcoltxt</ref>
  4. Template:IPAslink is realized as an alveolar tap Template:IPAblink <ref name=":0">Template:Harvcoltxt</ref> though Template:IPAblink occurs in free variation.
  5. Template:IPAslink is pronounced as a velarized Template:IPAblink before back vowels; it is pronounced as Template:IPAblink in the environment of front vowels.<ref>Template:Harvcoltxt</ref>
  6. Template:IPAslink is realized in most contexts as a bilabial fricative Template:IPAblink or Template:IPAblink,<ref name=":1">Template:Harvcoltxt</ref><ref name=":0" /> but has the following allophones.<ref name=":0" />
    1. before voiceless consonants, it is realized as Template:IPAblink or Template:IPAblink.
    2. after voiceless consonants it is also voiceless and has been interpreted either as labialization of the preceding consonant Template:IPAblink or simply as Template:IPAblink.
    3. whether it is realized as labialization after voiced consonants is debated.
    4. word-initially before the vowel /u/ and sometimes before other consonants it may be deleted entirely.
  7. In initial positions, Template:IPA are pronounced as a weakly voiced Template:IPA.<ref name=":2">Template:Harvcoltxt</ref>
  8. In word-final positions, Template:IPA may be devoiced and aspirated to Template:IPA.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":1" />
  9. /r/ may be dropped in CrC contexts in colloquial speech.<ref>/r/ drop in Colloquial Georgian</ref>
  10. Word-final /b, d, ɡ/ may be realized as unreleased stops [b̚, d̚, ɡ̚] before another obstruent at word boundaries.<ref name=":8" />

Former Template:IPA (Template:Lang) has merged with Template:IPA (Template:Lang), leaving only the latter.

The glottalization of the ejectives is rather light, and in fact Georgian transliterates the tenuis stops in foreign words and names with the ejectives.<ref>Shosted, Ryan K.; Chikovani, Vakhtang (2006). "Standard Georgian: Illustrations of the IPA". Journal of the International Phonetic Association 36 (2): 255–264.</ref>

The coronal occlusives (Template:IPA, not necessarily affricates) are variously described as apical dental, laminal alveolar, and "dental".<ref name="ipashosted"/>

Vowels

Vowel phonemes<ref name=":5">Template:Harvcoltxt</ref><ref name=":6">Template:Harvcoltxt</ref><ref name=":7">Template:Harvcoltxt</ref><ref name=":3" />
Front Central Back
Close Template:IPA link   Template:Lang Template:IPA link   Template:Lang
Mid Template:IPA link   Template:Lang Template:IPA link   Template:Lang
Open Template:IPA link   Template:Lang

Per Canepari, the main realizations of the vowels are [[[:Template:IPA link]]], [[[:Template:IPA link]]], [[[:Template:IPA link]]], [[[:Template:IPA link]]], [[[:Template:IPA link]]].<ref>Template:Harvcoltxt</ref>

Aronson describes their realizations as [[[:Template:IPA link]]], [[[:Template:IPA link]]], [[[:Template:IPA link]]] (but "slightly fronted"), [[[:Template:IPA link]]], [[[:Template:IPA link]]].<ref name=":3">Template:Harvcoltxt</ref>

Shosted transcribed one speaker's pronunciation more-or-less consistently with [[[:Template:IPA link]]], [[[:Template:IPA link]]], [[[:Template:IPA link]]], [[[:Template:IPA link]]], [[[:Template:IPA link]]].<ref>Template:Harvcoltxt</ref>

Allophonically, [[[:Template:IPA link]]] may be inserted to break up consonant clusters, as in Template:IPA Template:IPA.<ref>Template:Cite conference</ref>

In casual speech, /i/ preceded or followed by a vowel may be realized as [[[:Template:IPA link]]]~[[[:Template:IPA link]]].<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=":10">Template:Harvcoltxt</ref> similarly, /u/ and /o/ before a vowel may be realized as [w].<ref name=":10" />

Phrase-final unstressed vowels are sometimes partially reduced.<ref name=":8">Template:Cite book</ref>

Sequences /aa ii ee oo uu/ occurring at word and morpheme boundaries may be realized as single long vowels [äː iː e̞ː o̞ː uː],<ref name=":8" /><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> as in /kʼibeebi/ [ˈkʼibe̞ːbi] ("stairs").<ref>Template:Harvcoltxt</ref>

Prosody

Prosody in Georgian involves stress, intonation, and rhythm. Stress is very weak, and linguists disagree as to where stress occurs in words.<ref name=":3"/> Jun, Vicenik, and Lofstedt have proposed that Georgian stress and intonation are the result of pitch accents on the first syllable of a word and near the end of a phrase.<ref>Template:Harvcoltxt</ref>

According to Borise,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Georgian has fixed initial word-level stress cued primarily by greater syllable duration and intensity of the initial syllable of a word.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Georgian vowels in non-initial syllables are pronounced with a shorter duration compared to vowels in initial syllables.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> long polysyllabic words may have a secondary stress on their third or fourth syllable.<ref>Template:Cite thesis</ref><ref name=":9">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

According to Gamq'relidze et al, quadrisyllabic words may be exceptionally stressed on their second syllable.<ref name=":9" /> Stressed vowels in Georgian have slightly longer duration, more intensity, and higher pitch compared to unstressed vowels.<ref name=":9" />

Some Georgian dialects have distinctive stress.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Phonotactics

Georgian contains many "harmonic clusters" involving two consonants of a similar type (voiced, aspirated, or ejective) that are pronounced with only a single release; e.g. Template:Wikt-lang bgera 'sound', Template:Wikt-lang tskhovreba 'life', and Template:Wikt-lang ts’q’ali 'water'.<ref>Template:Harvcoltxt</ref> There are also frequent consonant clusters, sometimes involving more than six consonants in a row, as may be seen in words like Template:Wikt-lang gvprtskvni 'you peel us' and Template:Wikt-lang mts’vrtneli 'trainer'.

Vicenik has observed that Georgian vowels following ejective stops have creaky voice and suggests this may be one cue distinguishing ejectives from their aspirated and voiced counterparts.<ref>Template:Harvcoltxt</ref>

Writing system

Template:Calligraphy Template:Main

Georgian alphabet from The American Cyclopædia, 1879
Road sign in Mtavruli and Latin scripts
A music school sign using a sans-serif Mtavruli script in the upper part, a serif Mkhedruli script in the middle and a serif Mtavruli script in the lower part

Template:CSS image crop Georgian has been written in a variety of scripts over its history. Currently the Mkhedruli script is almost completely dominant; the others are used mostly in religious documents and architecture.

Mkhedruli has 33 letters in common use; a half dozen more are obsolete in Georgian, though still used in other alphabets, like Mingrelian, Laz, and Svan. The letters of Mkhedruli correspond closely to the phonemes of the Georgian language.

According to the traditional account written down by Leonti Mroveli in the 11th century, the first Georgian script was created by the first ruler of the Kingdom of Iberia, Pharnavaz, in the 3rd century BC. The first examples of a Georgian script date from the 5th century AD. There are now three Georgian scripts, called Asomtavruli 'capitals', Nuskhuri 'small letters', and Mkhedruli. The first two are used together as upper and lower case in the writings of the Georgian Orthodox Church and together are called Khutsuri 'priest alphabet'.

In Mkhedruli, there is no case. Sometimes, however, a capital-like effect, called Mtavruli ('title' or 'heading'), is achieved by modifying the letters so that their vertical sizes are identical and they rest on the baseline with no descenders. These capital-like letters are often used in page headings, chapter titles, monumental inscriptions, and the like.

Modern Georgian alphabet
Letter Template:Nowrap Template:Nowrap
Template:Lang a Template:IPA
Template:Lang b Template:IPA
Template:Lang g Template:IPA
Template:Lang d Template:IPA
Template:Lang e Template:IPA
Template:Lang v Template:IPA
Template:Lang z Template:IPA
Template:Lang t Template:IPA
Template:Lang i Template:IPA
Template:Lang k’ Template:IPA
Template:Lang l Template:IPA
Template:Lang m Template:IPA
Template:Lang n Template:IPA
Template:Lang o Template:IPA
Template:Lang p’ Template:IPA
Template:Lang zh Template:IPA
Template:Lang r Template:IPA
Template:Lang s Template:IPA
Template:Lang t’ Template:IPA
Template:Lang u Template:IPA
Template:Lang p Template:IPA
Template:Lang k Template:IPA
Template:Lang gh Template:IPA
Template:Lang q’ Template:IPA
Template:Lang sh Template:IPA
Template:Lang ch Template:IPA
Template:Lang ts Template:IPA
Template:Lang dz Template:IPA
Template:Lang ts’ Template:IPA
Template:Lang ch’ Template:IPA
Template:Lang kh Template:IPA
Template:Lang j Template:IPA
Template:Lang h Template:IPA

Keyboard layout

Template:Main This is the Georgian standard<ref>Georgian Keyboard Layout Microsoft</ref> keyboard layout. The standard Windows keyboard is essentially that of manual typewriters.

Template:Georgian standard keyboard

Grammar

Template:Main

Morphology

Georgian is an agglutinative language. Certain prefixes and suffixes can be joined in order to build a verb. In some cases, one verb can have up to eight different morphemes in it at the same time. An example is ageshenebinat ('you [all] should've built [it]'). The verb can be broken down to parts: a-g-e-shen-eb-in-a-t. Each morpheme here contributes to the meaning of the verb tense or the person who has performed the verb. The verb conjugation also exhibits polypersonalism; a verb may potentially include morphemes representing both the subject and the object.

Morphophonology

In Georgian morphophonology, syncope is a common phenomenon. When a suffix (especially the plural suffix -eb-) is attached to a word that has either of the vowels a or e in the last syllable, this vowel is, in most words, lost. For example, megobari means 'friend'; megobrebi (megobØrebi) means 'friends', with the loss of a in the last syllable of the word stem.

Inflection

Georgian has seven noun cases: nominative, ergative, dative, genitive, instrumental, adverbial and vocative. An interesting feature of Georgian is that, while the subject of a sentence is generally in the nominative case and the object is in the accusative case (or dative), one can find this reversed in many situations (this depends mainly on the character of the verb). This is called the dative construction. In the past tense of the transitive verbs, and in the present tense of the verb "to know", the subject is in the ergative case.

Syntax

Vocabulary

The last verse of Shota Rustaveli's romance The Knight in the Panther's Skin illustrating the appearance of the Georgian script

Georgian has a rich word-derivation system. By using a root, and adding some definite prefixes and suffixes, one can derive many nouns and adjectives from the root. For example, from the root -kart-, the following words can be derived: Kartveli ('a Georgian person'), Kartuli ('the Georgian language') and Sakartvelo ('the country of Georgia').

Most Georgian surnames end in -dze 'son' (Western Georgia), -shvili 'child' (Eastern Georgia), -ia (Western Georgia, Samegrelo), -ani (Western Georgia, Svaneti), -uri (Eastern Georgia), etc. The ending -eli is a particle of nobility, comparable to French Template:Lang, German Template:Lang or Polish Template:Lang.

Georgian has a vigesimal numeric system like Basque and (partially) French. Numbers greater than 20 and less than 100 are described as the sum of the greatest possible multiple of 20 plus the remainder. For example, "93" literally translates as 'four times twenty plus thirteen' (Template:Lang, Template:Lang).

One of the most important Georgian dictionaries is the Explanatory dictionary of the Georgian language (Template:Lang). It consists of eight volumes and about 115,000 words. It was produced between 1950 and 1964, by a team of linguists under the direction of Arnold Chikobava.

Examples

Word formations

Georgian has a word derivation system, which allows the derivation of nouns from verb roots both with prefixes and suffixes, for example:

It is also possible to derive verbs from nouns:

Likewise, verbs can be derived from adjectives, for example:

Words that begin with multiple consonants

In Georgian many nouns and adjectives begin with two or more contiguous consonants. This is because syllables in the language often begin with two consonants. Recordings are available on the relevant Wiktionary entries, linked to below.

Sample text

File:Ka-UDHR-Nicodene-dad.ogg Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights:<ref name="About Georgia: Georgian Alphabet">Template:Cite web</ref>

Georgian alphabet Latin alphabet International Phonetic Alphabet English translation
Template:Lang Template:Lang Template:Lang All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.

See also

References

Template:Reflist

Bibliography

Template:Sister project links Template:InterWiki Template:AmCyc Poster

Grammars

Dictionaries

Software

  • Learn Georgian Alphabet Now app Gives the name, pronunciation of each letter, and example words. Shows the stroke order of each letter. Permits drawing practice and has a quiz to learn the letters.

Literature and culture

Template:Georgian language Template:Languages of Georgia (country) Template:Languages of the Caucasus Template:Georgia (country) topics

Template:Authority control