Abkhaz
Abkhaz (аҧсуа бызшәа)
Abkhaz is a North West Caucasian language with about 105,000 speakers in Georgia, Turkey and Ukraine. There are two main dialects of Abkhaz: the northern Bzâp dialect and the southern Abz'âwa dialect, upon which literary Abkhaz is based. Both dialects are spoken in Abkhazia, an autonomous republic within Georgia.
相關條目
Abkhaz first appeared in writing in 1862/3 in the Cyrillic alphabet using a spelling system based on the Bzâp dialect and devised by the Russian soldier-linguistBaronPeter von Uslar. Other spelling systems using the Georgian, Latin, and Cyrillic alphabets appeared during the 20th century. The current Cyrillic-based system, which has been in use since 1954, is considered somewhat cumbersome withits 14 extra consonant letters and its inconsistencies. Recently there have been suggestions that a new Latin-based spelling system should be created.
The first ever novel in Abkhaz was written by Dârmit' Gulia (1874-1960), who is regarded as the Father of Abkhaz Literature. He also founded the first Abkhaz newspaper, wrote poety, plays, translations, historical and ethnographical writings and lectured on Abkhaz at Tbilisi University.