History
Chamalal is spoken in southwesternGeographic distribution
The approximately 500 ethnic speakers live in eight villages in theOfficial status
There are no countries with Chamalal as an official language.Dialects/Varieties
Chamalal has three distinct dialects: Gadyri (Gachitl-Kvankhi), Gakvari (Agvali-Richaganik-Tsumada-Urukh), and Gigatl (Hihatl). There are also two more dialects: Kwenkhi, Tsumada.Derived languages
Gigatl (Hihatl) and Chamalal proper (with Gadyri, Gakvari, Tsumada and Kwenkhi dialects) are considered to be sublanguages.Writing System
Chamalal is an unwritten language. Avar and Russian are used in school, and Avar is also used for literary purposes.Bibliography
* Anderson, S. (2005). ''Language,'' ''81''(4), 993-996. * Back Matter. (1996). ''Historische Sprachforschung / Historical Linguistics,'' ''109''(2). * Blažek, V. (2002). The ‘beech’-argument — State-of-the-Art. ''Historische Sprachforschung / Historical Linguistics,'' ''115''(2), 190-217. * Friedman, V. (2005). ''The Slavic and East European Journal,'' ''49''(3), 537-539. * Greppin, J. (1996). New Data on the Hurro-Urartian Substratum in Armenian. ''Historische Sprachforschung / Historical Linguistics,'' ''109''(1), 40-44. * Harris, A. (2009). Exuberant Exponence in Batsbi. ''Natural Language & Linguistic Theory,'' ''27''(2), 267-303. * Haspelmath, M. (1996). ''Language,'' ''72''(1), 126-129. * Kolga, M., Tõnurist, I., Vaba, L., & Viikberg, J. (1993). ''The Red book of the Peoples of the Russian Empire''. * Magomedova, P. T. (2004). Chamalal. ''The Indigenous Languages of the Caucasus Vol. 3, The North East Caucasian Languages, Vol. 1,'' 3-65. * Schulze, W. (2005). Grammars for East Caucasian. ''Anthropological Linguistics,'' ''47''(3), 321-352. * Szczśniak, A. (1963). A Brief Index of Indigenous Peoples and Languages of Asiatic Russia. ''Anthropological Linguistics,'' ''5''(6), 1-29. * Tuite, K., & Schulze, W. (1998). A Case of Taboo-Motivated Lexical Replacement in the Indigenous Languages of the Caucasus. ''Anthropological Linguistics,'' ''40''(3), 363-383. * Voegelin, C., & Voegelin, F. (1966). Index of Languages of the World. ''Anthropological Linguistics,8''(6), I-222.References
Further reading
* Northeast Caucasian languages Andic languages Languages of Russia Endangered Caucasian languages {{NEC-lang-stub