Hunzib | |
Nativename: | гьонкьос мыц / honƛʼos mɨc |
Pronunciation: | pronounced as /[ˈhont͡ɬʼos mɨt͡s]/ |
States: | North Caucasus |
Region: | Southern Dagestan |
Date: | 2006–2010 |
Ref: | e18 |
Familycolor: | Caucasian |
Fam1: | Northeast Caucasian |
Fam2: | Tsezic |
Fam3: | Bezhta–Hunzib–Khwarshi |
Iso3: | huz |
Glotto: | hunz1247 |
Glottorefname: | Hunzib |
Script: | Cyrillic |
Notice: | IPA |
Hunzib is a Northeast Caucasian language spoken by the Hunzib people in southern Dagestan,[1] near the Russian border with Georgia.
Hunzib belongs to the Tsezic group of the Northeast Caucasian languages. It is most closely related to Bezhta and Khwarshi, according to the latest research.[2] Other Tsezic languages include Tsez and Hinukh. Khwarshi was previously grouped together with Tsez and Hinukh instead of with Hunzib.
Hunzib is not an official language, and it is rarely written.[3] It is spoken in the Tsunta and Kizilyurt districts of Dagestan and in two villages across the Russian border in Georgia.[4]
Vowels in Hunzib may be short, long, or nasalized.
Front | Central | Back | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Close | pronounced as /i/ | pronounced as /ɨ/ | pronounced as /u/ | |
Mid | pronounced as /e/ | pronounced as /ə/ | pronounced as /o/ | |
Open | pronounced as /a/ | pronounced as /ɑ/ |
Hunzib has 35 consonants. Three consonants, pronounced as //x//, pronounced as //ħ//, and pronounced as //ʕ//, are only found in loanwords.
Bilabial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Pharyngeal | Glottal | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
central | lateral | |||||||||
Nasal | pronounced as /m/ | pronounced as /n/ | ||||||||
Plosive | voiceless | pronounced as /p/ | pronounced as /t/ | pronounced as /k/ | pronounced as /q/ | pronounced as /ʔ/ | ||||
voiced | pronounced as /b/ | pronounced as /d/ | pronounced as /ɡ/ | |||||||
ejective | pronounced as /pʼ/ | pronounced as /tʼ/ | pronounced as /kʼ/ | pronounced as /qʼ/ | ||||||
Affricate | voiceless | pronounced as /t͡s/ | pronounced as /t͡ɬ/ | pronounced as /t͡ʃ/ | ||||||
ejective | pronounced as /t͡sʼ/ | pronounced as /t͡ɬʼ/ | pronounced as /t͡ʃʼ/ | |||||||
Fricative | voiceless | pronounced as /s/ | pronounced as /ɬ/ | pronounced as /ʃ/ | pronounced as /x/ | pronounced as /χ/ | pronounced as /ħ/ | pronounced as /h/ | ||
voiced | pronounced as /z/ | pronounced as /ʒ/ | pronounced as /ʁ/ | pronounced as /ʕ/ | ||||||
Trill | pronounced as /r/ | |||||||||
Approximant | pronounced as /l/ | pronounced as /j/ | pronounced as /w/ |
Like a number of other Northeast Caucasian languages, Hunzib has a grammatical gender system with five classes. The first classes, I and II mark male and female rationals, respectively, while the remaining classes mark non-humans. Gender marking is covert on nouns, but appears in agreement on verbs, adjectives, pronouns, and adverbial constructions.
Class | Sg. | Pl. |
---|---|---|
I | ∅- | b-1 |
II | j- | |
III | j- | r-1 |
IV | b-1 | |
V | r-1 |
Nouns in Hunzib come in five noun classes: male, female, and three classes for inanimate objects. There are a number of cases in Hunzib, including the absolutive, ergative, genitive, instrumental. A number of other case-like markers indicate direction and include dative, adessive, superessive, contactive, comitative and allative declensions. The following are taken from Helma van den Berg's A Grammar of Hunzib.[5]
Hunzib has four basic grammatical cases, the absolutive, ergative, genitive, and instrumental. The absolutive case is formed from the base stem, and the other cases are formed from the oblique stem.
Case | Marker | |
---|---|---|
Absolutive | -∅ | |
Ergative | -l1 / -lo2, -y | |
Genitive | -s | |
Instrumental | -d1 / -do2 |
Hunzib also has a series of local cases, where localizations are combined with directional suffixes. The dative and adessive cases have syntactic functions as well, but are morphologically local.
Localization | Marker | Translative | |
---|---|---|---|
Dative | -V1 | -V1-sə | -V1-ƛʼ(i) |
-g(o) | -go-s | ||
-ƛʼ(o) | -ƛo-s | -ƛʼo-ƛʼ | |
-ƛ | (-ƛ-sə) | ||
Contacting | -λ | -λ-sə | -λ-ƛʼi |
-ǧur | -ǧur-sə | -ǧur-ƛʼi | |
-dər | -dər-sə | -dər-ƛʼi | |
Approximative | -do | -do-V |
Cases other than the absolutive are formed by attaching the relevant case marker to an oblique stem, which is often the base stem plus some lexically determined extension.
Extension | Notes | Extension | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
-li | Productive; found more with nouns ending in a consonant | -ba | Rare | |
-a | Common; with nouns ending in a consonant or vowel (but esp. -u) | -y | Rare | |
-lo | Common; mostly with nouns ending in -i | -ɑ/e/o/u | Rare | |
-yo | Common; mostly with nouns ending in -i | -la | Rare | |
-i | Common; mostly with nouns ending in a vowel | -mo | Rare | |
-bo | Common; with nouns ending in a consonant or vowel | -di/u/o | Rare | |
-ra/o/u | Rare | |||
-tʼu | Rare |
Some nouns (around 7%) do not use any extension and the oblique and base stems are identical. These words generally end in a vowel, like "father" ABS ['''ɑbu], GEN ['''ɑbu-s]. A small number of Hunzib nouns exhibit stem alternation, like "moon" ABS ['''bo{{IPA|t͡s}}o], GEN ['''bɨ{{IPA|t͡s}}ə].
Most verbs agree in class and number with the noun in the phrase that is in the absolutive case. As Hunzib has ergative alignment, that equals the subject of intransitive sentences and the direct object of transitive sentences.
Hunzib usually follows a subject–object–verb word order.