Ubykh is an extinct Northwest Caucasian language once spoken by the Ubykh people, a subgroup of Circassians who originally inhabited the eastern coast...
44 KB (4,611 words) - 21:14, 9 October 2024
Ubykh may refer to: Ubykh language Ubykh people Ubykhia, a historical land of Ubykhs This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title...
183 bytes (45 words) - 13:05, 18 September 2018
and Shapsug, the Ubykh formed the Circassian Assembly (Adyghe: Адыгэ Хасэ) in 1860. Historically, they spoke a distinct Ubykh language, which never existed...
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transcription delimiters. Ubykh, an extinct Northwest Caucasian language, has the largest consonant inventory of all documented languages that do not use clicks...
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Tevfik Esenç (category Ubykh language)
Ubykh origin, known for being the last speaker of the Ubykh language. He was fluent in Ubykh, Adyghe and Turkish. After his death in 1992, the Ubykh language...
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relationship to any other language family is uncertain and unproven. One language, Ubykh, became extinct in 1992, while all of the other languages are in some form...
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Die Päkhy-Sprache (category Ubykh language)
Die Päkhy-Sprache (which means The Ubykh Language in German) is the title of a treatise in the Ubykh language, written by Gyula Mészáros and published...
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Hacıosman, Manyas (category Articles containing Ubykh-language text)
the Ubykh language in their daily lives. The last speaker of Ubykh, Tevfik Esenç, was born, and died, in this village. Other villages where Ubykh was...
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in both families: PIE *n-: Germanic un-, Romance in-, Slavic ne-. NWC: Ubykh m-, Abkhaz m-. A case variously named "accusative", "oblique" or "objective"...
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Uvular consonant (category Articles containing Arabic-language text)
The Tlingit language of the Alaska Panhandle has ten uvular consonants, all of which are voiceless obstruents: And the extinct Ubykh language of Turkey...
16 KB (1,361 words) - 04:24, 22 November 2024
Uvular ejective stop (category Articles containing Ubykh-language text)
consonants in Ubykh, due to its presence in the past tense suffix /-qʼɜ/. But in addition to palatalised, labialised and plain uvular ejectives, Ubykh also possesses...
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Grammatical conjugation (category Articles containing Ubykh-language text)
complex texts. Some languages have a richer agreement system in which verbs agree also with some or all of their objects. Ubykh exhibits verbal agreement...
34 KB (2,196 words) - 00:48, 10 November 2024
Principality of Abkhazia (category Articles containing Georgian-language text)
called sazua in Abkhazian, spoke the Ubykh language.] World, Abkhaz (2013-02-22). "Viacheslav Chirikba. "The Ubykh People Were in Practice Consumed in...
24 KB (2,143 words) - 01:35, 25 November 2024
Consonant cluster (category Articles containing Ubykh-language text)
template. A loanword from Adyghe in the extinct Ubykh language, psta ('to well up'), violates Ubykh's limit of two initial consonants. The English words...
19 KB (2,237 words) - 09:05, 20 October 2024
Sochi (category Articles containing Ubykh-language text)
Sochi (Russian: Сочи, IPA: [ˈsotɕɪ] , from Ubykh: Шъуача – seaside) is the largest resort city in Russia. The city is situated on the Sochi River, along...
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Nart saga (category Ubykh language)
characters who feature prominently in the sagas are: Sosruko or Soslan (Ubykh, Abkhaz and Adyghe: sawsərəqʷa (Саусырыкъо); Ossetian: Soslan (Сослан))...
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Ubykh was a polysynthetic language with a high degree of agglutination that had an ergative-absolutive alignment. Ubykh nouns do not mark plurality and...
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Circassian genocide (category Articles containing Ubykh-language text)
and 21 May 1864, the entire Ubykh nation had departed the Caucasus for Turkey, leading to the extinction of the Ubykh language in 1992. By the end of the...
169 KB (19,329 words) - 19:27, 2 November 2024
T–V distinction (category Articles containing Ubykh-language text)
distinction is the contextual use of different pronouns that exists in some languages and serves to convey formality or familiarity. Its name comes from the...
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Caucasian languages (Circassian, Abkhaz and Ubykh); the Northeast Caucasian languages such as Chechen and Avar; and the Kartvelian languages such as Georgian...
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Consonant (category Articles containing Ancient Greek (to 1453)-language text)
number of IPA charts: The recently extinct Ubykh language had only 2 or 3 vowels but 84 consonants; the Taa language has 87 consonants under one analysis,...
19 KB (2,461 words) - 21:05, 6 September 2024
Gerandiqo Berzeg (category Articles containing Ubykh-language text)
Gerandiqo Berzeg (Adyghe: Джэрандыкъо Бэрзэдж, romanized: Dɉərandıqo Bərzədɉ; Ubykh: Гьарандыхъва Барзагь, romanized: Giarandıxua Barzagi; Turkish: Hacı Giranduk...
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Circassians (category CS1 uses Russian-language script (ru))
Northwest Caucasian languages into three branches, namely Circassian (Adyghe and Kabardian), Ubykh (consisting only of the Ubykh language, which is considered...
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respect; the deferential plural form is härqaysiliri. In the extinct Ubykh language, the T–V distinction was most notable between a man and his mother-in-law...
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treated by some as a dialect of Adyghe or of an overarching Circassian language. Ubykh, Abkhaz and Abaza are somewhat more distantly related to Adyghe. Shapsug...
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Pharyngealization (category Articles containing Arabic-language text)
pharyngealization, for the "emphatic" coronal consonants. Ubykh, an extinct Northwest Caucasian language spoken in Russia and Turkey, used pharyngealization...
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Sibilant (category Articles with Portuguese-language sources (pt))
postalveolar and subapical palatal). [citation needed] The now-extinct Ubykh language was particularly complex, with a total of 27 sibilant consonants. Not...
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Speaker types (category Language acquisition)
Esenç was the last speaker of the Ubykh language, and his collaboration with linguists helped document the language before his death in 1992. Ned Maddrell...
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Caucasian, could have divided firstly into proto-Circassian and to proto-Ubykh-Abkhaz; Ubykh then being the closest relative to Abkhaz, with it only later on...
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common ancestor of the Northwest Caucasian languages. In Circassian and Abkhaz, gʷǝ is heart and in Ubykh it's gʲǝ. The most noticeable changes are: The...
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