Circassian languages
| Circassian | |
|---|---|
| Cherkess | |
| Geographic distribution | North Caucasus |
| Ethnicity | Circassians, Cherkesogai |
| Linguistic classification | Northwest Caucasian
|
| Proto-language | Proto-Circassian |
| Subdivisions | |
| Language codes | |
| Glottolog | circ1239 |
Circassian | |
Circassian[a] (Adyghe: Адыгабзэ; Kabardian: Адыгэбзэ), also known as Cherkess (/tʃɜːrˈkɛs/ chur-KESS), is a subdivision of the Northwest Caucasian language family, spoken by the Circassian people. There are two main variants of the Circassian language, defined by their literary standards, Adyghe (кӀахыбзэ; also known as West Circassian) and Kabardian (къэбэрдейбзэ; also known as East Circassian). Despite phonological differences, Circassian languages are reciprocally intelligible,[1] with speakers being able to communicate with varying degrees of efficiency.[2][3] Some reject the distinction between the two languages in favour of both being dialects of a unitary Circassian language, others argue they are closely related but technically distinct languages.[4][5]
Adyghe and Kabardian are generally considered typologically distinct languages.[6][7][8] However, the local terms for these languages refer to them as dialects. The Circassian people call themselves адыгэ (Adyghe) in their native language. While the self-designation for both Adyghe and Kabardian language is Adyghe, in linguistic and administrative terms, "Adyghe" refers specifically to the language of the western tribes of Circassians, while "Kabardian" refers to the language of the two eastern tribes (Kabardians and Besleney).[9]
In the southwestern part of European Russia, there is also a Federal Subject called Adygea (Russian: Адыгея, Adygeya), enclaved within Krasnodar Krai, which is named after the Circassian endonym. In the Russian language, the Circassian subdivision is treated as a group of languages and called адыгские (adygskie, meaning the Adyghe languages), whereas the Adyghe language is called адыгейский (adygeyskiy, "Adygean," meaning the language of those in the Republic of Adygea). The term адыгейский, meaning Adygean, has thus been mistranslated to English as "Adyghe language". The terms Circassian and Cherkess are sometimes used in several languages as synonyms for the Northwest Caucasian languages in general or the Adyghe language in particular.
Circassian languages
| A Circassian dialects family tree. |
- Circassian languages
- Adyghe language
- The Black Sea coast dialects
- Zhaney dialect
- Natukhai dialect (Adyghe: Нэтӏхъуаджэбзэ; Netʼx́uajebze)
- Shapsug dialect (Adyghe: Шапсыгъабзэ; Shapsyǵabze)
- North Shapsugs, Great Shapsugs, Kuban Shapsugs dialect (Adyghe: Шапсыгъэ шху; Shapsyǵ shyxu)
- Kfar Kama dialect (Adyghe: Кфар Камэм ишапсыгъэбзэ; Kfar Kamem ishapsyǵebze): Shapsug dialect spoken by the villagers of Kfar Kama in Israel.
- Temirgoy-Shapsugs, Pseuşko accent (Adyghe: Кӏэмгуе-шапсыгъ; Chʼemgueý-shapsyǵ)
- South Shapsugs, Small Shapsugs, Coastal Shapsugs Black Sea Shapsugs (Adyghe: Шапсыгъэ-цӏыкӏу; Shapsyǵe-tsʼykʼu) dialect.
- Hakuchi dialect (Adyghe: ХьакӀуцубзэ, Къарацхаибзэ; Hakʼutsubze, Qaratsxaibze)
- North Shapsugs, Great Shapsugs, Kuban Shapsugs dialect (Adyghe: Шапсыгъэ шху; Shapsyǵ shyxu)
- The Kuban river dialects
- Bzhedug dialect (Adyghe: Бжъэдыгъубзэ; Bɀedyǵubze): Spoken by the Circassians in Republic of Adygea and Biga.
- Temirgoy (Adyghe: КӀэмыгуябзэ, КӀэмгуибзэ; Chʼemıguıyabze, Chʼemguibze): Literary Adyghe. Also spoken by the Circassians in Republic of Adygea.
- Abzakh dialect (Adyghe: Aбдзэхабзэ; Abźaxabze): Spoken by the Circassians in Rehaniya in Israel and the Circassians in Syria from Golan Heights.
- Mamkhegh dialect
- Yegeruqway dialect
- Hatuqay dialect
- Makhosh dialect
- The Black Sea coast dialects
- Kabardian language[6]
- Kabardian
- West Kabardian
- Kuban
- Kuban-Zelenchuk (Cherkess)
- Central Kabardian
- Baksan (Basis for the literary language)
- Malka
- Eastern Kabardian
- Terek
- Mozdok
- North Kabardian
- Mulka
- Zabardiqa (1925 until 1991 Soviet Zaparika)
- West Kabardian
- Baslaney dialect (Adyghe: Бэслъыныйбзэ; Besłınıýbze)
- Kabardian
- Adyghe language
Alphabets
Adyghe Alphabet
Adyghe language (also known as West Circassian, Adyghe: КӀахыбзэ; Kʼaxıbzə, Russian: Адыгейский язык) — The language of the west Circassian tribes: Shapsug, Abzakh, Natukhai, Bzhedug, Temirgoy. The Alphabet is based on the Temirgoy dialect. The Circassian alphabet was created in 1918 by the Kabardian linguist Naguma Shora.
| А а [aː] |
Б б [b] |
В в [v] |
Г г [ɣ] |
Гу гу [ɡʷ] |
Гъ гъ [ʁ] |
Гъу гъу [ʁʷ] |
Д д [d] |
| Дж дж [d͡ʒ] |
Дз дз [d͡z] |
Дзу дзу [d͡ʐʷ] |
Е е [ja/aj] |
Ё ё [jo] |
Ж ж [ʒ] |
Жъ жъ [ʐ] |
Жъу жъу [ʐʷ] |
| Жь жь [ʑ] |
З з [z] |
И и [jə/əj] |
Й й [j] |
К к [k] |
Ку ку [kʷ] |
Къ къ [q] |
Къу къу [qʷ] |
| Кӏ кӏ [t͡ʃʼ] |
Кӏу кӏу [kʷʼ] |
Л л [ɮ] or [l] |
Лъ лъ [ɬ] |
Лӏ лӏ [ɬʼ] |
М м [m] |
Н н [n] |
О о [aw/wa] |
| П п [p] |
Пӏ пӏ [pʼ] |
Пӏу пӏу [pʷʼ] |
Р р [r] |
С с [s] |
Т т [t] |
Тӏ тӏ [tʼ] |
Тӏу тӏу [tʷʼ] |
| У у [w/əw] |
Ф ф [f] |
Х х [x] |
Ху ху [xʷ] |
Хъ хъ [χ] |
Хъу хъу [χʷ] |
Хь хь [ħ] |
Ц ц [t͡s] |
| Цу цу [t͡ʂʷ] |
Цӏ цӏ [t͡sʼ] |
Ч ч [t͡ʃ] |
Чӏ чӏ [t͡ʂʼ] |
Чъ чъ [t͡ʂ] |
Ш ш [ʃ] |
Шъ шъ [ʂ] |
Шъу шъу [ʂʷ] |
| Шӏ шӏ [ʂʼ] |
Шӏу шӏу [ʂʷʼ] |
Щ щ [ɕ] |
Ъ ъ [ˠ] |
Ы ы [ə] |
Ь ь [ʲ] |
Э э [a] |
Ю ю [ju] |
| Я я [jaː] |
ӏ [ʔ] |
ӏу [ʔʷ] |
The Adyghe alphabet contains some inconsistencies between visual representation and pronunciation which can be a point of confusion for learners. It is tempting to read the Circassian alphabet letters phonologically, but this is not always accurate. For example:
- While the letter Кӏ appears to represent [kʼ], it is actually pronounced as [t͡ʃʼ] (Чӏ).
- Чӏ is pronounced as the retroflex [t͡ʂʼ] (Чӏъ).
- Цу is pronounced as [t͡ʂʷ] (Чъу).
- Шӏ is pronounced as [ʂʼ] (Шӏъ).
- Шӏу is pronounced as [ʂʷʼ] (Шӏъу).
- The letter Г represents the fricative [ɣ] rather than the stop [ɡ].
- The labialized Гу corresponds to the stop [ɡʷ].
| Гь гь [ɡʲ] |
Джь джь [ɡʲ] |
Кь кь [kʲ] |
Кӏь кӏь [kʲʼ] |
Сӏ сӏ [sʼ] |
ӏь [ʔʲ] |
These letters are not part of the official alphabet, but they may appear in books that showcase the different dialects.
Kabardian Alphabet
Kabardian language (also known as East Circassian, Adyghe: Къэбэрдейбзэ; Qeberdeýbze, Russian: Кабардино-черкесский) — The language of the east Circassian tribes : Kabarday and Baslaney. The Alphabet is based on the Kabardian dialect.
| А а [aː] |
Э э [a] |
Б б [b] |
В в [v] |
Г г [ɣ] |
Гу гу [ɡʷ] |
Гъ гъ [ʁ] |
Гъу гъу [ʁʷ] |
| Д д [d] |
Дж дж [d͡ʒ] or [ɡʲ] |
Дз дз [d͡z] |
Е е [ja/aj] |
Ё ё [jo] |
Ж ж [ʒ] |
Жь жь [ʑ] |
З з [z] |
| И и [jə/əj] |
Й й [j] |
К к [k] |
Ку ку [kʷ] |
Къ къ [q] |
Къу къу [qʷ] |
Кхъ кхъ [q͡χ] |
Кхъу кхъу [q͡χʷ] |
| Кӏ кӏ [t͡ʃʼ] or [kʲʼ] |
Кӏу кӏу [kʷʼ] |
Л л [ɮ] or [l] |
Лъ лъ [ɬ] |
Лӏ лӏ [ɬʼ] |
М м [m] |
Н н [n] |
О о [aw/wa] |
| П п [p] |
Пӏ пӏ [pʼ] |
Р р [r] |
С с [s] |
Т т [t] |
Тӏ тӏ [tʼ] |
У у [w/əw] |
Ф ф [f] |
| Фӏ фӏ [fʼ] |
Х х [x] |
Ху ху [xʷ] |
Хъ хъ [χ] |
Хъу хъу [χʷ] |
Хь хь [ħ] |
Ц ц [t͡s] |
Цӏ цӏ [t͡sʼ] |
| Ч ч [t͡ʃ] |
Ш ш [ʃ] |
Щ щ [ɕ] |
Щӏ щӏ [ɕʼ] |
Ъ ъ [ˠ] |
Ы ы [ə] |
Ь ь [ʲ] |
Ю ю [ju] |
| Я я [jaː] |
ӏ [ʔ] |
ӏу [ʔʷ] |
In the Kabardian alphabet, certain letters have dual pronunciations. Кӏ is pronounced either as [kʼ] or as [t͡ʃʼ] (like Чӏ), and Дж is pronounced either as [ɡʲ] (Гь) or as [d͡ʒ]. This variation is due to a historical sound shift: in Proto-Kabardian, these letters were originally [ɡʲ] and [kʼ], but they shifted to [d͡ʒ] and [t͡ʃʼ] in the majority of modern Kabardian dialects.
Sound changes

Sound changes between Adyghe (Temirgoy) and Kabardian:[13]
| Sound Change | Examples (Adyghe ↔ Kabardian) | |
|---|---|---|
| Adyghe | Kabardian | |
| a | э |
|
| ы | э |
|
| э | ы |
|
| а | ы |
|
| и | ы |
|
| ы | и |
|
| ы | е |
|
| ц | дз |
|
| цу | в |
|
| ч | ж |
|
| ч | дж |
|
| ч | щ |
|
| дз | з |
|
| дж | ж |
|
| жь | з |
|
| жъ | жь |
|
| ж | жь |
|
| жъу | в |
|
| ш | щ |
|
| щ | ш |
|
| шъ | щ |
|
| шӀ | щӀ |
|
| кӀ | щӀ |
|
| шъу | ф |
|
| шӀу | фӀ |
|
| ф | ху |
|
| хь | хъ |
|
| къ | кхъ |
|
| къу | кхъу |
|
| т | д |
|
| п | б |
|
| м | н |
|
| н | Ø |
|
| -Ø | -р |
|
| -Ø | -щ |
|
| Ø- | и- |
|
Ergative–absolutive
The following example shows an ergative–absolutive case marking system while using the same verb "break" in both intransitive and transitive forms:
| Ergative language | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sentence: | ӏанэр мэкъутэ. | Лӏым ӏанэр екъутэ. | ||||
| Word: | ӏанэ-р | мэкъутэ | Лӏы-м | ӏанэ-р | екъутэ | |
| Gloss: | The table-ABS | breaks | The man-ERG | the table-ABS | breaks | |
| Function: | S | VERBintrans | A | O | VERBtrans | |
| Translation: | "The table breaks." | "The man breaks the table." | ||||
Here, "table" has the absolutive case mark -р /-r/ while "man" has the ergative case mark -м /-m/. The verb "break" is in the intransitive form "мэкъутэ" and the transitive form "екъутэ". The example above specifically shows SOV order, but Circassian allows any order.
Loanwords
Circassian languages contain "many loan-words from Arabic, Turkish, Persian (particularly in the area of religion) and Russian".[14]
See also
References
- ^ Kāzemzāde, Hāmed (2018). The Circassian Question: The Formation of Linguistic and Cultural Identity in the Caucasus from the Mind-nineteenth Century to Modern Times (PhD Thesis thesis).
- ^ Абазов, Алексей Хасанович (2022). Адыги: адыгейцы, кабардинцы, черкесы, шапсуги (in Russian). Nauka. ISBN 978-5-02-040924-8.
- ^ Кумахов, Мухадин Абубекирович (2006). Адыгская (черкесская) энциклопедия (in Russian). Фонд Им. Б.Х. Акбашева. ISBN 978-5-9900337-1-9.
- ^ Colarusso, John (2014-01-21). The Northwest Caucasian Languages: A Phonological Survey. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-91816-5.
- ^ Kāzemzāde, Hāmed (2018). The Circassian Question: The Formation of Linguistic and Cultural Identity in the Caucasus from the Mind-nineteenth Century to Modern Times (PhD Thesis thesis).
- ^ a b Kuipers, Aert H. (1960). Phoneme and morpheme in Kabardian (eastern Adyghe). The Hague: Mouton & Co. p. 7.
- ^ Smeets, Henricus Joannes (1984). Studies in West Circassian phonology and morphology. Leiden: The Hakuchi Press. p. 41. ISBN 90-71176-01-0.
- ^ Hewitt, George (2005). "North West Caucasian". Lingua. 115 (1–2): 17. doi:10.1016/j.lingua.2003.06.003. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
- ^ Абазов, Алексей Хасанович (2022). Адыги: адыгейцы, кабардинцы, черкесы, шапсуги (in Russian). Nauka. ISBN 978-5-02-040924-8.
- ^ Arkadiev, Peter; Lander, Yury (2020). "The Northwest Caucasian Languages". In Polinsky, Maria (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Languages of the Caucasus. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 4.
- ^ Kerasheva, Z. I. (1957). Особенности шапсугского диалекта адыгейского языка [Features of the Shapsug Dialect of the Adyghe Language] (in Russian). Maykop: Adyghe Book Publishing House.
- ^ Arkadiev, Peter; Lander, Yury (2020). "The Northwest Caucasian Languages". In Polinsky, Maria (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of the Languages of the Caucasus. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 5.
- ^ Aydın, Şamil Emre (2015), Çerkes Diyalektleri, ISBN 9786056569111
- ^ Reza, Hirtenstein & Gholami 2021.
Sources
- Reza, Enayotallah; Hirtenstein, Stephen; Gholami, Rahim (2021). "Cherkess (Circassian)". In Madelung, Wilferd; Daftary, Farhad (eds.). Encyclopaedia Islamica Online. Brill Online. ISSN 1875-9831.
Literature
- A Dictionary of the Circassian Language, in Two Parts. By Dr. L. Loewe.
- Кумахов М. А. Адыгские языки // Языки мира. Кавказские языки. М., 1999. (in Russian)
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