To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
Languages
Recent
Show all languages
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

Armenian dialects

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Armenian language has two standardized forms: Western Armenian and Eastern Armenian. Before the Armenian genocide and other significant demographic changes that affected the Armenians, several dozen Armenian dialects existed in the areas historically populated by them.

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/5
    Views:
    640
    79 476
    32 269
    6 744
    5 604
  • Armenian Dialects + Motion Graphics at TUMO Dilijan
  • Sanskrit and Armenian: Mothers of ALL Indo-European Languages?
  • What makes the ARMENIAN language so UNIQUE? (EN/SP/RUS subs)
  • Zulal Trio & Ara Dinkjian Oral History
  • Common Confusion in Armenian

Transcription

Classification by Hrachia Acharian

The title page of the 1909 French edition.

Classification des dialectes arméniens (Classification of Armenian dialects) is a 1909 book by the Armenian linguist Hrachia Acharian, published in Paris. It is Acharian's translation into French of his original work Hay Barbaṙagitutʿiwn ("Armenian Dialectology") that was later published as a book in 1911 in Moscow and New Nakhichevan. The French translation lacks dialectal examples.

Acharian surveyed the Armenian dialects in what is now Turkey, Armenia, Georgia, Iran, Azerbaijan and other countries settled by Armenians.

Unlike the traditional division of Armenian into two dialect groups (Western Armenian and Eastern Armenian), he divided Armenian into three main dialect groups based on the present and imperfect indicative particles that were used. He called as the -owm (-ում) dialects, -gë (-կը) dialects, and -el (-ել) dialects.

After the Armenian genocide, linguists Gevorg Jahukyan, Jos Weitenberg, Bert Vaux and Hrach Martirosyan have extended the understanding of Armenian dialects.

Map

Map of Armenian dialects in the early 20th century:
  -owm dialects, roughly corresponding to Eastern Armenian.
  -el dialects.
  -gë dialects, roughly corresponding to Western Armenian.

List

-owm dialects

Dialect
Areas spoken (country and city names as of 1909)
1 Yerevan  Russian Empire: Erivan, Novo-Bayazet, Ordubad, Shamshadin, Shulaver, Havlabar quarter (Tbilisi)
 Ottoman Empire: Bayazid, Kulp
2 Tbilisi  Russian Empire: Tbilisi (except Havlabar quarter)
3 Artsakh  Russian Empire: Shusha, Elisabethpol, Nukha, Baku, Derbent, Ağstafa, Dilijan, Karakilis, Kazak, Lori, Jebrayil, Goris
Qajar Persia
: Karadagh, Mujumbar; Lilava quarter of Tabriz
 Ottoman Empire: Burdur, Ödemiş villages near Izmir
4 Shamakha  Russian Empire: Shamakhi, Kuba and nearby villages
5 Astrakhan  Russian Empire: Astrakhan, North Caucasus
Qajar Persia
: Tabriz
6 Julfa  Russian Empire: Julfa
Qajar Persia
: Isfahan (New Julfa quarter), Shiraz, Hamadan, Bushehr, Tehran, Qazvin, Rasht, Bandar-e Anzali
7 Agulis  Russian Empire: Agulis, Tsghna, Handamej, Tanakert, Ramis, Dasht, Kaghaki

-el dialects

-el dialects
Dialect
Areas spoken (country and city names as of 1909)
1 Maragha
Qajar Persia
: Maragha and surrounding villages
2 Khoy
Qajar Persia
: Khoy, Salmas, Maku, Urmia
 Russian Empire: Igdir, Nakhichevan;
Zangezur settlements: Kori, Alighuli, Mughanjugh, Karashen, Alilu, Angeghakot, Ghushchi-Tazakend, Tazakend, Uz, Mazra, Balak, Shaghat, Ltsen, Sisian, Nerkin Kilisa
3 Artvin  Russian Empire: Artvin, Ardahan, Artanuj, Olti

-gë dialects

Dialect
Areas spoken (country and city names as of 1909)
1 Erzurum  Ottoman Empire: Erzurum, Ispir, Kaghzvan
 Russian Empire: Kars, Alexandropol, Akhalkalak, Akhaltskha
2 Mush  Ottoman Empire: Mush, Sasun, Bitlis, Khizan, Khlat, Arjesh, Bulanikh, Manazkert, Khnus, Alashkert
 Russian Empire: Aparan; Mets Kznut and surrounding villages;
4 villages in Javakhk: Eshtia, Ujmana, Toria, Martuni
3 Van  Ottoman Empire: Van, Diadin, Moks, Bashkale, Shatakh
 Russian Empire: Basargechar and surrounding villages
4 Diarbekir  Ottoman Empire: Diarbekir, Lice, Hazro, Hazzo, Khizan, Severek, Urfa (Edesia)
5 Kharberd-Yerznka  Ottoman Empire: Kharpert, Yerznka, Balu, Tchapaghjur, Chmshkatsag, Charsanjak, Kghi, Dersim, Kamakh
6 Shabin-Karahisar  Ottoman Empire: Shabin-Karahisar, Akıncılar
7 Trebizond  Ottoman Empire: Trebizond, Bayburt, Gyumushkhane, Kirasun
8 Hamshen  Ottoman Empire: Hamshen, Ünye, Fatsa, Terme, Çarşamba
 Russian Empire: Sukhumi, Sochi, Poti,
9 Malatia  Ottoman Empire: Malatia, Adıyaman
10 Cilicia  Ottoman Empire: Hadjin, Zeytun, Marash, Kilis, Alexandretta, Payas, Svedia
11 Syria  Ottoman Empire: Aramo
12 Arabkir  Ottoman Empire: Arabkir, Divrig, Gürün, Darende, villages of Kesaria
13 Akn  Ottoman Empire: Akn and surrounding villages
14 Sivas  Ottoman Empire: Sivas and 45 surrounding villages
15 Tokat  Ottoman Empire: Tokat, Amasia, Marsivan, Ordu, Samsun, Sinop
16 Smyrna  Ottoman Empire: Smyrna, Manisa, Menemen and surrounding villages
17 Izmit  Ottoman Empire: Nicomedia, Adapazar and the following villages: Yalova, Partizak, Geyve, Ortaköy, Sölöz, Benli, İznik, etc.,
18 Constantinople  Ottoman Empire: Constantinople
19 Rodosto  Ottoman Empire: Rodosto, Malgara
20 Nakhichevan-on-Don  Russian Empire: Nakhichevan-on-Don, Rostov-on-Don, Stavropol, Yekaterinodar, Yekaterinoslav, Anapa, Maykop, Taganrog, Dneprovskaya, Nogaysk, Novocherkassk, Theodosia, Simferopol, Karasubazar, Bakhchysarai, Eupatoria
21 Austria-Hungary Russian Empire Poland
Austria-Hungary Bukovina, Transylvania, Hungary

Sources

  • Adjarian, Hrachia (1909). Classification des dialectes arméniens [Classification of Armenian dialects] (PDF) (in French). Paris: Librairie Honore Champion. Retrieved July 8, 2012.
This page was last edited on 19 February 2024, at 14:46
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.