Tat-gú (Caucasus)
Guā-māu
Tat-gú (Caucasus) | |
---|---|
zuhun tati, зугьун тати | |
Goân-chū kok-ka | Azerbaijan, Dagestan (Gôlôsu) |
Sú-iōng tē-khu | North Caucasus, Transcaucasia |
Bîn-cho̍k | Tats, Armeno-Tats |
bú-gí sú-iōng-chiá | (28,000 excluding Judeo-Tat cited 1989 –no date)[1] |
Gí-hē | |
Bûn-jī hē-thóng |
|
Koaⁿ-hong tē-ūi | |
Koaⁿ-hong gí-giân | |
Gí-giân tāi-bé | |
ISO 639-3 |
ttt |
Glottolog |
musl1236 |
Linguasphere |
58-AAC-g |
![]() |
Tat-gú (Caucasus) (ing-gú: Tat-gú (Caucasus)), mā kiò-tsò Tat-phosu gú / Tati phosu gú (ing-gú: Tat/Tati Persian),[4][5] sī Iran se-lâm-pōo ê tsi̍t-tsióng gú-gên , kah phosu-gú bi̍t-tshet kuan-lên,[6] m̄-ku mā bô-huat-tōo uat-suân hô-siong liáu-kái[7], iû Azerbaijan hām Gôlôsu ê Tat jîn sóo sú-iōng. Caucasus (/ˈkɔːkəsəs/) tē-khu ê yehudim mā sú-iōng tsi̍t-tsióng kiò-tsò Judeo-Tat gú ê Iran gú-gên
Tsù-kái
[siu-kái | kái goân-sí-bé]- ↑ Tat-gú (Caucasus) at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015)
- ↑ Windfuhr, Gernot. The Iranian Languages. Routledge. 2009. p. 417.
- ↑ Constitution of the Republic of Dagestan: Chapter I, Article 11: "The state languages of the Republic of Dagestan are Russian and the languages of the peoples of Dagestan."
- ↑ Gernot Windfuhr, "Persian Grammar: history and state of its study", Walter de Gruyter, 1979. pg 4:""Tat- Persian spoken in the East Caucasus""
- ↑ Windfuhr, Genot (2013). Iranian Languages. Routledge. p. 417. ISBN 978-1135797041.
The Northwestern outpost of Persian is Caucasian Tat Persian (...)
- ↑ Gruenberg, Alexander. (1966). Tatskij jazyk [The Tat language]. In Vinogradov, V. V. (ed.), Jazyki narodov SSSR. Volume 1: Indoevropejskie jazyki, 281-301
- ↑ Authier, Gilles (2012). Grammaire juhuri, ou judéo-tat, langue iranienne des Juifs du Caucase de l'est. Wiesbaden: Reichert
Ên-sin ua̍t-to̍k
[siu-kái | kái goân-sí-bé]- Donald W. Stilo, “The Tati Language Group in the Sociolinguistic Context of Northwestern Iran an Transcaucasia,” Iranian Studies: Journal of the Society for Iranian Studies (IranS) 14 (1981).
- Gernot L. Windfuhr, “Typological Notes on Pronominal Cases in Iranian Tati,” Bulletin of the Asia Institute 4 (1990).
- Giles Authier, “New Strategies for Relative Clauses in Azeri an Apsheron Tat,” In Clause Linkage in Cross-Linguistic Perspective: Data-Drive Approaches to Cross-Clausal Syntax (Berlin: de Gruyter Mouton 2012).
- John M. Clifton, “Colonialism, Nationalism and Language Vitality in Azerbaijan,” in Responses to Language Endangerment: In honor of Mickey Noonan. New Directions in Language Documentation and Language Revitalization, ed. Elena Mihas, Bernard Perley, Gabriel Rei-Doval, Kathleen Wheatley (Amsterdam: John Benjamins Publishing Company, 2013): 201–205.
- John M. Clifton, “Do the Talysh and Tat Languages Have a Future in Azerbaijan?” SIL International & University of North Dakota.
- A.A. Saegehi, “New Words from the Old Language of Arran, Shirvan an Azerbaijan,” Iranian Journal of Linguistics 17.1 (2002) 21–40.
- Abbas Taheri, “Tati Dialect of Takistan,” Iranian Journal of Linguistics 9.2 (1992) 25–39.
Tsham-ua̍t
[siu-kái | kái goân-sí-bé]- Okhrana
- Zaporizhzhia he̍k-tiān-chhióng (Zaporizhzhia hi̍k-tiān-tshióng/Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant)
Guā-pōo liân-kiat
[siu-kái | kái goân-sí-bé]![]() |
Tat-gú (Caucasus) test of Wikipedia at Wikimedia Incubator |
- Language Map of Azerbaijan. (Eng-gí)
- Endangered Languages Project, Muslim Tat (Eng-gí)
- Tat Numeral System Archived 2014-05-02 at the Wayback Machine. (Eng-gí)
- 100-word Swadesh list collected 2013 in Lahıc village (Eng-gí)