Andi language

Andi
къIaваннаб мицци qwavannab micci[1]
Region Southern Dagestan
Ethnicity Andi
Native speakers
5,800 - 23,729 (2010 census)[2]
Language codes
ISO 639-3 ani
Glottolog andi1255[3]

Andi is a Northeast Caucasian language belonging to the Avar–Andic branch spoken by about 5,800 ethnic Andi (2010) in the Botlikh region of Dagestan. The language is spoken in the villages Andi (along the river Andi-Koisu)[4], Gunkha, Gagatl, Ashali, Rikvani, Chanko, Zilo, and Kvanxidatl.[5]

There are four main dialects, Munin, Rikvani, Kvanxidatl, and Gagatl, which appear quite divergent. However, the dialects can be said to vary between villages: the "upper-group" contains Andi, Gagatl, Rikvani, and Zilo (where Andi and Zilo are considered their own dialects), whereas the "lower-group" contains Munin and Kvanxidatl. The upper-group lacks the affricate sound кьI.[5]

Although Andi is usually non written, there are attempts to write the language using Russian Cyrillic script. Speakers generally use Avar or Russian as their literary language(s).[2]

Andi has 7 different series of localization: the meaning "inside" changes by number (singular -ла/-а, plural -хъи: гьакъу-ла 'in a home', гьакъоба-хъи 'in houses'). Number categories are expressed through ablaut (имуво воцци в-усон 'The father found the brother', but имуво воццул в-осон 'The father found the brothers'). In the village Andi, there is a difference between the speech of men and women; a man will say, for example, дин meaning 'I', "мин" meaning 'you', гьекIа 'person', but a woman will say ден 'I', мен 'you', гьекIва 'person'.[5]

Phonology

Andi has 43 consonants:

There are 5 vowels: a - e (é) - i - o - u (ou).

References

  1. Margus Kolga; Igor Tõnurist; Lembit Vaba; Jüri Viikberg (1993). "The Andis". The Red Book of the Peoples of the Russian Empire.
  2. 1 2 Andi at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
  3. Nordhoff, Sebastian; Hammarström, Harald; Forkel, Robert; Haspelmath, Martin, eds. (2013). "Andi". Glottolog. Leipzig: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology.
  4. The peoples of the Red Book: Akhvakhs
  5. 1 2 3 "Andijskij Yazyk".
  6. Christopher Moseley, ed. (2010). “Atlas of the World’s Languages in Danger”. UNESCO Publishing.

Further reading


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