Laz is a Kartvelian language. It is sometimes considered as a southern dialect of Zan languages, the northern dialect being the Mingrelian language.
Today, the area where Laz is spoken stretches from the village Sarpi of Khelvachauri district in Georgia to the village Kemer of Rize province in Turkey. Laz is spoken also in Western Turkey in the villages created by Laz muhajirs in 1877âÂÂ1878. In Georgia, out of Sarpi, the Laz language islets were also in Abkhazia, but the fate of them is obscure at present.
Laz is divided into three dialects: Khopa-Chkhala, Vitze-Arkabe and Atina-Artasheni. Dialectical classification is mainly conditioned by phonetic characteristics. More specifically, the crucial point is the reflexes of the Kartvelian phoneme , which is maintained only in the Khopa-Chkhala dialect but has different reflections in Vitze-Arkabe and Atina-Artasheni dialects (see below).
Laz vowel inventory consists of five sounds: a, e, i, o, u.
The consonant inventory of Laz varies among the dialects. A full set of sounds is present in the Khopa-Chkhala dialect, while the Vitze-Arkabe and Atina-Artasheni dialects lost glottalized uvular q.
Glottalized uvular q is preserved only in the Khopa-Chkhala dialect before the vowels and the consonants v and l. This sound is also evidenced after glottalized stops and affricates in several words, such as pÃÂqorop (I love smb./sth.); éqorop (I love you); tÃÂqubi (twins), ïqv-/ïqvin- (to reconcile); çÃÂqintÃÂi (fresh-soft and unripe). But in the most of cases *tÃÂq â tÃÂé; *ïq â ïé; *çÃÂq â çÃÂé.
In the Vitze-Arkabe dialect, in the neighborhood of consonants *q â é (exception is the verb ovapu â *oqvapu "to be"). In the word-initial prevocalic and in the intervocalic positions *q â â .
In Atina-Artasheni dialect:
The most common types are:
In some morphological contexts featuring two consonants n split only with a vowel, the former can be deleted. miqonun â miqoun (I have {an animate object}), iqvasinon â iqvasion (s/he will be), mulunan â *muluan â mulvan (they are coming).
Another dissimilation, presumably sporadic, occurs in deéiée â deiée (minute); note also that the Arabic source of this word daqëqa contains a uvular , and as above uvulars are unstable in Laz.
This process is evidenced in the Khopa-Chkhala and Vitze-Arkabe dialects, where in intervocalic position facultatively r â y â â .
In the Atina-Artasheni dialect, the velars followed by the front vowels e and i and the glide y transform to alveolar affricates:
Laz is written in a Georgian script or in the Latin script (as used in Turkish, but with specific Laz extensions).
Laz has eight grammatical cases: nominative, ergative, dative, genitive, lative, ablative, instrumental and almost extinct adverbial.
As in other South Caucasian languages, Laz distinguishes two classes of nouns and classifies objects as:
The Laz numerals are near identical to their Megrelian equivalents with minor phonetic differences. The number system is vigesimal like in Georgian.
Almost all basic Laz cardinal numbers stem from the Proto-Kartvelian language, except ar(t) (one) and eÃÂi (twenty), which are reconstructed only for the Karto-Zan chronological level, having regular phonetical reflexes in Zan (Megrelo-Laz) and Georgian. The numeral à ¡ilya (thousand) is a Pontic Greek loanword and is more commonly used than original Laz vitoà ¡i.
Ordinal numbers in Laz are produced with the circumfix ma-...-a, which, in contrast with Megrelian, may be extended with suffix -n. The circumfix ma-...-a originates from Proto-Kartvelian and has regular phonetical equivalents in Georgian (me-...-e) and Svan (me-...-e)
The fractional numbers' derivation rule in Laz and Megrelian is akin to Old Georgian and Svan.
Laz verbs are inflected for seven categories: person, number, version, tense, mood, aspect and voice.
In Laz, like Mingrelian, Georgian, and Svan, verbs can be unipersonal, bipersonal, and tripersonal.
The person may be singular or plural.
Subject and object markers in Laz are the same as in Mingrelian.
In pre-consonant position, the markers v- and g- change phonetically:
Like Megrelian, Georgian and Svan, Laz has four types of version marking:
The maximum number of screeves in Laz is 22. They are grouped in three series. Two screeves (future I and past of future I) exist only for the verb r-, which serves as a 1st series root for oqopumu/ovapu/oyapu (to be).
stems: çÃÂar- (to write) and r- (to be: just for future I and past of future I)
According to oldness these screeves can be grouped in two sets:
Classification of screeves according to oldness
Indicative statement claims that the proposition should be taken as an apparent fact.
There are two ways to transform an indicative statement into a question:
Indicates a command or request. The aorist form is used when addressing 2nd person (singular/plural) and aoristic optative in all other cases.
Expresses possibility, wish, desire.
Indicates condition in contrary to a fact. For this reason a verbal suffix -éo (At.-Arsh, Vtz.-Ark.) / -éon/-éoni (Khop.-Chkh.) is used.