Phonology
Consonants
As withVowels
Akhvakh has a standard five-vowel system /i e a o u/ with distinctive vowel length.Magomedbekova (1967)Grammar
Agreement classes
Akhvakh has three agreement classes. In the singular, these are human masculine, human feminine, and non-human. In the plural, there are only two—human plural and non-human plural. Akhvakh verbs agree with the absolutive argument (subject of an intransitive or object of a transitive.) Consider the following examples, which show the general principles. In the first example, the intransitive verb 'run' shows feminine agreement because its subject, 'girl', is feminine. In the second example, the transitive verb 'cook' shows neuter agreement because its object, 'meat', is neuter. (Creissels 2010:114) Note that in the second example, 'wife' is in the ergative case and appears to be the subject of both the verbs 'cook' and 'eat', but neither verb shows feminine agreement.Cases
Akhvakh has an ergative-absolutive case-marking system. As the following examples (repeated from above) show, the transitive subject has the ergative case, while an intransitive subject has absolutive case. Absolutive case is not overtly marked by a suffix, but the noun phrase with absolutive case controls agreement on the verb: In addition to the ergative and absolutive cases, Akhvakh has eighteen other cases, for a total of twenty cases (Creissels 2010:108-9). The additional cases are *dative *genitive *comitative *purposive *fifteen spatial cases, arrayed in five series of three.Notes
References
* Creissels, Denis. 2009. Participles and Finiteness: The Case of Akhvakh. Linguistic Discovery, vol 7:1. http://journals.dartmouth.edu/cgi-bin/WebObjects/Journals.woa/2/xmlpage/1/article/334. *Creissels, Denis. 2010. Specialized converbs and adverbial subordination in Axaxdərə Akhvakh. In ''Clause linking and clause hierarchy: Syntax and pragmatics'', ed. by Isabelle Bril. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. pp. 105–142. *Magomedova, Patimat and Abdulaeva, Indira. 2007. Axkaxsko-russkij slovar'. Maxačkala: Dagestanskij Naučnyj Centr Rossiskoj Akademii Nauk.Further reading
* Wixman, Ronald. ''The Peoples of the USSR: An Ethnographic Handbook''. (Armonk, New York: M. E. Sharpe, Inc, 1984), p. 8 * Olson, James S., ''An Ethnohistorical Dictionary of the Russian and Soviet Empires''. (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1994), pp. 25–26 * Магомедбекова З. М. Ахвахский язык: Грамматический анализ, тексты, словарь. Тб., 1967 * Богуславская О. Ю. Ахвахский язык // Языки Российской федерации и соседних государств. Т. 1. М., 1997External links
* {{DEFAULTSORT:Akhvakh Language Northeast Caucasian languages Andic languages Languages of Russia Endangered Caucasian languages