Dargwa (, dargan mez) is a Northeast Caucasian language spoken by the Dargin people in the Russian republic Dagestan. This article discusses the literary dialect of the dialect continuum constituting the Dargin languages. It is based on the Aqusha and Urakhi dialects of Northern Dargin.
Dargwa is part of a Northeast Caucasian dialect continuum, the Dargin languages. The other languages in this dialect continuum (such as Kajtak, Kubachi, Itsari, and Chirag) are often considered variants of Dargwa, but also sometimes considered separate languages by certain scholars. Korjakov (2012) concludes that Southwestern Dargwa is closer to Kajtak than it is to North-Central Dargwa.
According to the 2002 Census, there are 429,347 speakers of Dargwa proper in Dagestan, 7,188 in neighbouring Kalmykia, 1,620 in KhantyâÂÂMansi AO, 680 in Chechnya, and hundreds more in other parts of Russia. Figures for the Lakh dialect spoken in central Dagestan are 142,523 in Dagestan, 1,504 in Kabardino-Balkaria, 708 in KhantyâÂÂMansi.
Like other languages of the Caucasus, Dargwa is noted for its large consonant inventory, which includes over 40 phonemes (distinct sounds), though the exact number varies by dialect. Voicing, glottalization (as ejectives), fortition (which surfaces as gemination), and frication are some of the distinct features of consonants in Dargwa. The following chart is of the literary dialect of Dargwa.
The Dargwa language features five vowel sounds /i, e, ÃÂ, a, u/. Vowels /i, u, a/ can be pharyngealized as /iä, uä, aä/. There is also a pharyngealized mid-back vowel [oä] as a realization of /uä/, occurring in the Mehweb variety.
The current Dargwa alphabet is based on Cyrillic as follows:
The first Dargin alphabet was created by Peter von Uslar in the late 19th century, published in the grammar ' for the Urakhi dialect of Dargwa.
The Latin alphabet of the 1920s is not entirely supported by Unicode, but is approximately:
a àc ç ê d e àf g ÃÂ¥ ã h ç ⱨ i j k ⱪ l m n o p á¶ q ê r s êÂ à  t à £ u v w x ó ÿ z ö ⱬ öç
(The letters transcribed here ⱨ ⱪ ᶠó ⱬ might have cedillas instead of hooks; the printing in sources is not clear.)
Compiled from: