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Tabasaran language

Tabasaran is a Northeast Caucasian language of the Lezgic branch. It is spoken by the Tabasaran people in the southern part of the Russian Republic of Dagestan. There are two main dialects: North (Khanag) and South Tabasaran. It has a literary language based on the Southern dialect, one of the official languages of Dagestan.

Geographical distribution
It is spoken in the basin of Upper Rubas-nir and Upper Chirakh-nir. == Phonology ==
Phonology
Consonants The post-alveolar sibilants may be whistled. Vowels Vowels of Tabasaran are /i, y, ɛ, æ, ɑ, u/. ==Writing system==
Writing system
Cyrillic (19th century) Peter von Uslar devised Cyrillic-based orthographies for many Caucasian languages, including Tabasaran. Latin (1931–1938) From 1931 to 1938, the Latin alphabet was used as a base for the Tabasaran writing system. The first book was published in 1932. Initially, the alphabet took the following form: a, b, c, cc, cь, ç, çь, d, e, ə, f, g, ƣ, h, i, j, k, kk, , l, m, n, u, p, pp, , q, , r, s, , ꟍꟍ, ş, şь, t, tt, t̨, y, v, x, ҳ, ӿ, z, , zz, ƶ, ƶƶ, ƶь, ' Soon after, capital letters and the letters O o and were introduced. The alphabet then took the following form: Cyrillic (1938–present) Tabasaran has been written using Cyrillic since 1938. Note: /ё/ and /o/ are encountered only in loanwords from Russian. ==Grammar==
Grammar
Tabasaran is and agglutinating and primarily suffixing language with ergative-absolutive alignment. It is highly probable that Tabasaran is an active language of the fluid-S type. Nouns Tabasaran nouns inflect for number and case, and they control gender agreement. Tabasaran is unusual for northeast Caucasian languages in that it does not differentiate between masculine and feminine nouns. It does distinguish between human and non-human nouns, but only in the singular. Cases Tabasaran has 4 grammatical, or core, cases (absolutive, ergative, genitive, and dative), but the number of locative cases is debated. Tabasaran was listed in the 1997 Guinness Book of World Records as having the largest case system in the world, with 48. Hjelmslev (1935) claimed that Tabasaran had the 'empirical maximum' number of cases, with 52 (though 2 occur only on adjectives). However, such claims are contested, and other languages such as Tsez would have even larger counts under such definitions. Babaliyeva (2023) identifies 46 cases The grammatical cases are formed as follows: • The absolutive case is unmarked. E.g., , "grandchild" • There are multiple suffixes that can form the ergative: -i, -yi, -di, -ri, -li-, -ni, -u (-ü), -nu, -ru, -lu. -i and -di are the most productive forms. Tabasaran has an oblique stem, which is identical to the ergative case. E.g., , "sword" • The genitive is formed by the suffix -n attached to the oblique stem. E.g., , "glass jug" • The dative is formed by the suffix -z attached to the oblique stem. E.g., , "village" Example sentence using the absolutive, genitive, and dative cases: The analysis of cases from Babaliyeva (2023) identifies 7 locative cases: in 'in'; ad 'near to'; cont 'in vertical contact' or 'inside a mass'; post 'behind'; sub 'under'; inter 'between' or 'among'; and super 'on'. The locative cases can be suffixed to the noun alone, or the elative, lative, and comitative cases are suffixed onto the locative forms of the noun, creating 28 cases: The additional 14 cases are formed by adding the directive suffix -di to the elative and lative series (with some changes in the lative series). By contrast, the analysis from Comrie and Polinksy (1998) count each suffix as a case, rather than considering each combination of suffixes as a case. In addition to the 4 grammatical cases (identical to the ones described in Babaliyeva's analysis), there are 8 local cases in the northern dialect, and 7 in the southern dialect. These morphemes describe spatial orientation, or the reference point. The local cases alone have an essive meaning, or a lack of motion. In order to express motion away or motion from an object, the allative suffix -na or ablative suffix -an (respectively) is added. The local cases and the dative can also take the translative suffix -di to mark the location as less specific. Pronouns First- and second-person pronouns distinguish between inclusive and exclusive first person plural, and have irregular declensions, with the absolutive and ergative forms being identical. The third-person pronouns are (singular) and (plural). Demonstrative pronouns show a proximal and distal distinction, as well as a distinction in elevation (higher or lower than the speaker). The emphatic particle ha- can be prefixed to each demonstrative. There are three reflexive (anaphoric) pronouns: Adjectives When adjectives are used in an attributive role, adjectives do not decline. E.g., 'great love', and 'great splendour-'. Substantive adjectives require a gender and number suffix, and then decline as if they were nouns. Predicative adjectives can be uninflected, inflected for gender/number, or followed by the adverbial suffix -di. == Samples ==
Samples
Uwu aldakurawu. "" — "You are falling." Uzuz uwu kkunduzuz. "" — "I love you." Uwu fudžuwa? "" — "Who are you?" Fici wuna? "" — "How are you?" Zakur ʕürza. "" — "I'll come tomorrow." Uzu kana qheza. "" — "I'll be back." == References ==
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