Ossetian language
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Ossetian | |
---|---|
ирон ӕвзаг (iron ævzag) дигорон ӕвзаг (digoron ævzag) | |
Pronunciation | [iˈron ɐvˈzäɡ] [digoˈron ɐvˈzäɡ] |
Native to | Ossetia |
Region | Caucasus |
Ethnicity | 700,000 Ossetians |
Native speakers | 490,000 (2020 census)[1] |
Standard forms |
|
Dialects | |
Official status | |
Official language in |
Partially recognized states: South Ossetia |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-1 | os |
ISO 639-2 | oss |
ISO 639-3 | oss |
Glottolog | osse1243 |
Linguasphere | 58-ABB-a |
Ossetian is classified as Definitely Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger[2] | |
Ossetian (/ɒˈsɛti.ən/ oss-ET-ee-ən, /ɒˈsiːʃən/ oss-EE-shən, /oʊˈsiːʃən/ oh-SEE-shən),[3][4] commonly referred to as Ossetic and rarely as Ossete[5] (Ossetian: ирон ӕвзаг, romanized: iron ӕvzag pronounced [iˈron ɐvˈzäɡ] southern; [iˈron ɐvˈʒäɡ] northern), is an Eastern Iranian language that is spoken predominantly in Ossetia, a region situated on both sides of the Greater Caucasus. It is the native language of the Ossetian people, and a relative and possibly a descendant of the extinct Scythian, Sarmatian, and Alanic languages.[6]
The northern half of the Ossetia region is part of
Despite Ossetian being the official languages of both North and South Ossetia, since 2009
History and classification
Ossetian is the spoken and literary language of the
From the 7th–8th centuries BCE, the languages of the Iranian group were distributed across a vast territory spanning present-day Iran (Persia), Central Asia, Eastern Europe, and the Caucasus. Ossetian is the sole survivor of the branch of Iranian languages known as Scythian. The Scythian group included numerous tribes, known in ancient sources as the Scythians, the Massagetae, the Saka, the Sarmatians, the Alans, and the Roxolani. The more easterly Khwarazm and Sogdians were also closely affiliated in linguistic terms.
Ossetian, together with
Evidence for Medieval Ossetian
The earliest known written sample of Ossetian is an inscription (the Zelenchuk Inscription ) which dates back to the 10th–12th centuries and named after the river near which it was found: the Bolshoy Zelenchuk River in Arkhyz, Russia. The text is written in the Greek alphabet, with special digraphs.
ΣΑΧΗΡΗ
Saxiri
ΦΟΥΡΤ
Furt
ΧΟΒΣ
Xovs
ΗΣΤΟΡΗ
Istori
ΦΟΥΡΤ
Furt
ΠΑΚΑΘΑΡ
Bӕqӕtar
ΠΑΚΑΘΑΡΗ
Bӕqӕtari
ΦΟΥΡΤ
Furt
ΑΝΠΑΛΑΝ
Æmbalan
ΑΝΠΑΛΑΝΗ
Æmbalani
ΦΟΥΡΤ
Furt
ΛΑΚ
Lak
ΑΝΗ
Ani
ΤΖΗΡΘΕ
čirtī
"K., son of S., son of I., son of B., son of A.; [this is] their monument."[11]: 55–56
- (The original, following Zgusta, translates only initials; presumably this is because although the uninflected forms may be inferred, no written records of them have been found to date.)
The only other extant record of Proto-Ossetic are the two lines of "Alanic" phrases appearing in the Theogony of
Τοῖς ἀλανοῖς προσφθέγγομαι κατὰ τὴν τούτων γλῶσσαν
Καλὴ ἡμέρα σου αὐθέντα μου ἀρχόντισσα πόθεν εἶσαι
Ταπαγχὰς μέσφιλι χσινὰ κορθὶ κάντα καὶ τ’ ἄλλα
ἂν ὃ ἔχῃ ἀλάνισσα παπᾶν φίλον ἀκούσαις ταῦτα
οὐκ αἰσχύνεσαι αὐθέντρια μου νά μου γαμῇ τὸ μουνί σου παπᾶς
τὸ φάρνετζ κίντζι μέσφιλι καίτζ φουὰ σαοῦγγε[11]: 54 [12]
The portions in bold face above are Ossetian. Going beyond a direct transliteration of the Greek text, scholars have attempted a phonological reconstruction using the Greek as clues, thus, while τ (tau) would usually be given the value "t", it instead is "d", which is thought to be the way the early Ossetes would have pronounced it. The scholarly transliteration of the Alanic phrases is: "dӕ ban xʷӕrz, mӕ sfili, (ӕ)xsinjӕ kurθi kӕndӕ" and "du farnitz, kintzӕ mӕ sfili, kajci fӕ wa sawgin?"; equivalents in modern Ossetian would be "Dӕ bon xwarz, me’fšini ‘xšinӕ, kurdigӕj dӕ?" and "(De’) f(s)arm neč(ij), kinźi ӕfšini xӕcc(ӕ) (ku) fӕwwa sawgin".[13] The passage translates as:
The Alans I greet in their language:
"Good day to you my lord's lady, where are you from?"
"Good day to you my lord's lady, where are you from?" and other things:
When an Alan woman takes a priest as a lover, you might hear this:
"Aren't you ashamed, my lordly lady, that you are having sex with a priest?"[note 1]
"Aren't you ashamed, my lady, to have a love affair with the priest?"[12][13]
Marginalia of Greek religious books, with some parts (such as headlines) of the book translated into Old Ossetic, have recently been found.[14]
It is theorized that during the Proto-Ossetic phase, Ossetian underwent a process of phonological change conditioned by a
Dialects
There are two important dialects:
Phonology
Vowels
The Iron dialect of Ossetic has 7 vowels:
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | и /i/ | у /u/ | |
Close-mid | ы /ɘ/ | ||
Mid | е /e/ | о /o/ | |
Near-open | ӕ /ɐ/ | ||
Open | а /a/ |
The Digor dialect of Ossetic has 6 vowels:
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | и /i/ | у /u/ | |
Mid | е /e/ | о /o/ | |
Near-open | ӕ /ɐ/ | ||
Open | а /a/ |
Old Iranian | Iron dialect | Digor dialect |
---|---|---|
*a | ɐ, a[note 2] | |
*ā | a, ɐ [note 3], o[note 4] | |
*i | ɘ[note 5] | i |
*ī | ||
*u | u | |
*ū | ||
*ai | i | e |
*au | u | o |
*ṛ | ɐr, ar[note 6] |
Consonants
The Ossetian researcher
Labial | Dental/ alveolar |
Postalveolar /palatal |
Velar[18] | Uvular[18] | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
plain | sibilant
|
plain | labialized | plain | labialized | ||||
Affricates
|
voiced | б /b/ | д / d /
|
дз /d͡z/ | дж /d͡ʒ/ | г /ɡ/ | гу /ɡʷ/ | ||
voiceless | п /pʰ/ ~ /p/ | т / t /
|
ц /t͡s/ | ч /t͡ʃ/ | к /kʰ/ ~ /k/ | ку /kʷʰ/ ~ /kʷ/ | хъ /q/ | хъу /qʷ/ | |
ejective | пъ /pʼ/ | тъ / tʼ /
|
цъ /t͡sʼ/ | чъ /t͡ʃʼ/ | къ /kʼ/ | къу /kʼʷ/ | |||
Fricatives
|
voiced | в /v/ | з /z/ ~ /ʒ/ | гъ /ʁ/ | гъу /ʁʷ/ | ||||
voiceless | ф /f/ | с /s/ ~ /ʃ/ | х /χ/ | ху /χʷ/ | |||||
Nasals
|
м /m/ | н / n /
|
|||||||
Approximants | л / l /
|
й /j/ | у /w/ | ||||||
Rhotic | р / r /
|
Voiceless consonants become voiced word-medially (this is reflected in the orthography as well). //; this alternation is still retained to a large extent.
Phrasal stress
Stress normally falls on the first syllable, unless it contains a central vowel (/ɘ/ or /ɐ/), in which case stress falls on the second syllable. Thus, су́дзаг|súdzag /ˈsud͡zag/ 'burning', but cӕнӕ́фсир/sænǽfsir /sɐˈnɐfsir/ 'grapes'. In addition, proper names are usually stressed on the second syllable regardless of their vowels, and recent Russian loanwords retain the stress they have in the source language.[19]
In the Iron dialect, definiteness is expressed in words with stress on second syllable by shifting the stress to the initial syllable. This reflects the fact that historically they received a
Morphophonemic alternations
- In derivation or compounding, stems containing vowels /a o / <а o> change to the central vowel /ɐ/ <ӕ>, whereas those containing /i u/ < и/I у/u> may be replaced with /ɘ/:
- авд/avd /avd/ 'seven' — ӕвдӕм/ævdæm /ɐvˈdɐm/ 'seventh'.
- Sequences /ɐ/ + /i/ (ӕ + и/i), /ɐ/ + /ə/ (ӕ + ы/y), and /ɐ/ + /ɐ/ (ӕ + ӕ) assimilate, yielding the vowel /е/ <e>.[20]
- the palatalisation of the velars к (k) to ч (č), г (g) to дж (dž) and къ (kh) to чъ (čh) before the (currently or historically) front vowels, namely е (e), и (i) and ы (y), for instance карк (kark) 'hen' — карчы (karčy) 'hen (genitive)'.
- the voicing of voiceless consonants in voiced environments: тых (tyx) 'strength' — ӕмдых (æmdyx) 'of equal strength'.
- consonant gemination in certain grammatical forms, such as after the prefix ны (ny-) and before the suffixes -ag and -on.[21]
Grammar
According to V. I. Abaev,[9]
In the course of centuries-long propinquity to and intercourse with Caucasian languages, Ossetian became similar to them in some features, particularly in phonetics and lexicon. However, it retained its grammatical structure and basic lexical stock; its relationship with the Iranian family, despite considerable individual traits, does not arouse any doubt.
Nouns
Ossetic has lost the grammatical category of gender which many Indo-European languages have preserved until today.[9]
According to the Encyclopӕdia Britannica 2006
Definiteness
Definiteness in the Iron dialect is, according to Abaev, only expressed by shift of word accent from the second to the first syllable (which is not possible in all nouns):
- færǽt "an axe"
- fǽræt "the axe"
Erschler reported in 2021 that he has been unable to replicate Abaev's observations of a distinction between definite and indefinite nouns in Iron.[24]
Number
There is only one plural suffix for the nominal parts of speech, -т(ӕ) -t(ӕ), with the vowel ӕ ӕ occurring in the nominative case (see Cases below): e.g. сӕр sӕr 'head' – сӕртӕ sӕrtӕ 'heads'. Nevertheless, the complexity of the system is increased to some extent by the fact that this suffixation may be accompanied by a number of morphophonemic alternations. A
Cases
Nouns and adjectives share the same morphology and distinguish two numbers (singular and plural) and nine cases:
Singular | romanization | Plural | romanization | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nominative | сӕр | sӕr | сӕртӕ | sӕrtӕ |
Genitive | сӕры | sӕry | сӕрты | sӕrty |
Dative | сӕрӕн | sӕrӕn | сӕртӕн | sӕrtӕn |
Allative | сӕрмӕ | sӕrmӕ | сӕртӕм | sӕrtӕm |
Ablative | сӕрӕй | sӕrӕj | сӕртӕй | sӕrtӕj |
Inessive | сӕры | sӕry | сӕрты | sӕrty |
Adessive | сӕрыл | sӕryl | сӕртыл | sӕrtyl |
Equative | сӕрау | sӕraw | сӕртау | sӕrtaw |
Comitative | сӕримӕ | sӕrimӕ | сӕртимӕ | sӕrtimӕ |
Since inessive and genitive show the same forms in both numbers, it is sometimes debated whether Ossetian might possess eight case forms for each number instead of nine. If the addition of the case suffix would result in
Adjectives
There is no morphological distinction between adjectives and nouns in Ossetian.[26] The suffix -дӕр -dær can express the meaning of a comparative degree: рӕсугъддӕр ræsuhddær 'more beautiful'. It, too, can be added to typical nouns: лӕг læg 'man' – лӕгдӕр lægdær 'more of a man, more manly'.[27]
Pronouns
nominative | oblique stem | enclitic genitive | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1st person | singular | ӕз ӕz |
мӕн- mӕn- |
мӕ mӕ |
plural | мах max |
нӕ nӕ | ||
2nd person | singular | ды dy |
дӕу- dӕw- |
дӕ dӕ |
plural | сымах symax / / смах smax |
уӕ wӕ | ||
3rd person | singular | уый wyj |
уый- wyj- |
йӕ, jӕ, ӕй ӕj |
plural | уыдон wydon |
сӕ sӕ |
The personal pronouns mostly take the same endings as the nouns. The 1st and 2nd person singular exhibit suppletion between the stem used in the nominative case and the stem used in the other (oblique) cases; the oblique stem without other endings is the genitive case form. The 1st and 2nd persons plural have only one stem each, functioning as both nominative and genitive. The third person pronoun coincides with the demonstrative 'that'. In addition, there are enclitic non-nominative forms of the pronouns of all three persons, which are somewhat deviant. Their genitive ends in -ӕ -ӕ; not only the inessive, but also the ablative coincides with the genitive; the allative ends in -м -m and the dative has the vowel -у- -y- before the ending (e.g. мын myn); and the comitative has the vowel -е- -e- (e.g. мемӕ memӕ). The 3rd singular stem has the doublet forms йV- jV- and ∅V- everywhere outside of the ablative and inessive, which appears as дзы dzy, and the comitative, which can only have йV- jV-.[28]
Reflexive forms are constructed from the enclitic forms of the personal pronouns and the reflexive pronoun хӕдӕг xӕdӕg 'self' (with the oblique forms хиц- xic- in the dative and ablative, хиу- xiw- in the adessive and хи xi in the other cases).
There are two demonstratives – ай aj (stem а- a-, pl. адон adon) 'this' and wyj (stem уы- wy-, pl. уыдон wydon) 'that'. The interrogative pronouns are чи či (oblique stem кӕ- kӕ-) 'who' and сы cy (oblique stem сӕ- cӕ-). Indefinite pronouns meaning any- and some- are formed from the interrogatives by means of the prefix ис- is- and the suffix -дӕр -dӕr, respectively. Negatives are formed similarly, but with the prefix ни- ni-; the totality prefix ('every-') is ал- al-, and ӕлы ӕly is used adjectivally. Other pronouns meaning 'all' are ӕгас ӕgas and ӕппӕт ӕppӕt. There are two pronouns meaning 'other': иннӕ innӕ for 'another of two, a definite other one' and ӕндӕр ӕndӕr for 'some other, an indefinite other one'.[29]
Verbs
Verbs distinguish six persons (1st, 2nd and 3rd, singular and plural), three tenses (present, past and future, all expressed
Stems
Each verb has a present stem and a past stem (similar in practice to Persian), the latter normally being identical to the past participle. The past stem commonly differs from the present stem by adding т t or д d (e.g. дар- dar- : дард- dard- 'to hold'; уарз- warz : уарзт warzt 'to love'), or, more rarely, -ст -st (e.g. бар- bar : барст- barst 'weigh') or -ыд yd (зар- zar- : зарыд- zaryd- 'sing'; nonetheless, the past participle of this type is still formed with -д/т t/d: зард- zard-). However, there are usually various other vowel and consonant changes as well. Some of the most common vowel alternations are ӕ ӕ : а a (e.g. кӕс- kӕs : каст- kast- 'look'), и i : ы y (e.g. риз- riz- : рызт- ryzt- 'tremble'), and у u : ы y (e.g. дзур- dzur- : дзырд- dzyrd- 'speak'); some other alternations are a a : ӕ ӕ (mostly in bisyllabic stems, e.g. араз- araz- : арӕз- arӕz- 'make'), ау aw : ы y, ӕу ӕw : ы y, and о o : ы y. Frequent consonant changes are -д d, -т t, -тт tt, -нд nd, -нт nt > -ст st (e.g. кӕрд- kӕrd- : карст karst 'cut'), -дз dz, -ц -c, -ндз -ndz, -нц -nc > -гъд hd (лидз- lidz- : лыгъд- lyhd- 'run away'), elision of a final н n or м m (e.g. нӕм nӕm : над nad). Suppletion is found in the stem pair дӕттын dӕttyn : лӕвӕрд lӕvӕrd 'give'.[30] It is also seen in the copula, whose past stem is уыд- wyd-, whereas the present forms are highly irregular and begin in д- d-, ст- st- оr in a vowel (see below).
There are also many related transitive-intransitive verb pairs, which also differ by means of a vowel alternation (commonly а a : ӕ ӕ, e.g. сафын safyn 'lose' : сӕфын sӕfyn 'be lost', and у u : уы wy, e.g. хъусын qusyn 'hear' : хъуысын qwysyn 'be heard') and sometimes by the addition of the consonant -с s (тавын tavyn 'to warm' : тафсын tӕfsyn 'to be warm').[31]
Tense and mood conjugation
The present and future tense forms use the present stem.
The indicative present endings are as follows:
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
1st person | -ын -yn | -ӕм -ӕm |
2nd person | -ыс -ys | -ут -ut |
3rd person | -ы -y | -ынц -ync |
Only the copula wyn 'be' is conjugated differently:
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
1st person | дӕн dӕn | стӕм stӕm |
2nd person | дӕ dӕ | стут stut |
3rd person | -и(с) i(s), -у u | сты sty |
The copula also has a special iterative stem вӕйй- vӕjj-, which is conjugated regularly.
The future tense forms consist of the present stem, the element -дзы(н)- ~ -дзӕн- -dzy(n)- ~ -dzӕn- (originally a separate root meaning 'wish' according to Fredrik Thordarson) and endings which appear to derive from encliticised copula уын uyn 'be' (see above table) used as an auxiliary. Thus, the resulting composite endings are:[32]
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
1st person | -дзын-ӕн -dzyn-ӕn | -дзы-стӕм -dzy-stӕm |
2nd person | -дзын-ӕ -dzyn-ӕ | -дзы-стут -dzy-stut |
3rd person | -дзӕн-(ис) -dzӕn-(is) | -дзы-сты -dzy-sty |
The past tense uses the past stem. The endings, however, are different for intransitive and transitive verbs. The intransitive endings are:
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
1st person | -(т)ӕн -(t)ӕn | -ыстӕм -ystӕm |
2nd person | -(т)ӕ -(t)ӕ | -ыстут -ystut |
3rd person | -(и(с)) -(i(s)) | -ысты -ysty |
The construction appears to be, in origin, a periphrastic combination of the past passive participle and the copula; that is why the endings are similar to the ones added to -дзы(н)- -dzy(n)- in the future tense.
The transitive endings, on the other hand, are:
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
1st person | -(т)он -(t)on | -(т)ам -(t)am |
2nd person | -(т)ай -(t)aj | -(т)ат -(t)at |
3rd person | -а -a | -(т)ой -(t)oj |
Remarkably, these forms actually derive from the old past subjunctive rather than the indicative (which is why the endings still almost entirely coincide with those of the future subjunctive, apart from the initial consonant т t).[33] The variable -т- -t of the transitive as well as the intransitive past endings appear in verbs whose present stem ends in vowels and sonorants (й j, у u, р r, л l, м m, н n), since only these consonants are phonotactically compatible with a following sequence -дт- dt, which would normally arise from the combinations of the dentals of the stem and the ending: e.g. кал-д-т-он kal-d-t-on 'I poured', but саф-т-он saf-t-on 'I lost'.[32]
The subjunctive mood has its own forms for each tense. The endings are as follows:
present-future | past | future | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
singular | plural | singular | plural | singular | plural | |
1st person | -ин -in | -иккам -ikkam | -аин -ain | -аиккам -aikkam | -он -on | -ӕм -ӕm |
2nd person | -ис -is | -иккат -ikkat | -аис -ais | -аиккат -aikkat | -ай -aj | -ат -at |
3rd person | -ид -id | -иккой -ikkoj | -аид -aid | аиккой -aikkoj | -а -a | -ой -oj |
In addition, a т t is added before the ending in transitive verbs. The future forms derive from the historical subjunctive and the others from the historical optative. In spite of some nuances and tendencies reflecting from their historical functions, there is a lot of overlap between the uses of the 'present-future' and the 'future' subjunctive (desire, possibility etc.), but a clear contrast between the two is found in conditional clauses, where the former expresses unreal conditions and the latter – real ones.
The imperative consists of the present stem and the following endings:[34]
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
2nd person | -∅ | -ут -ut |
3rd person | -ӕд -ӕd | -ӕнт -ӕnt |
A special future imperative form can be formed by the addition of the independent particle иу iw.
Voice
Aspect
Somewhat similarly to the Slavic languages, verbs belong to one of two
'out' | 'in' | 'down' | 'up' | neutral | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
away from the speaker | а- a- | ба- ba- 'in' | ны- ny- | с- s- | фӕ- fӕ- |
towards the speaker | ра- ra- | ӕрба- ӕrba- | ӕр- ӕr- | NA |
In addition, these prefixes may express small aspectual nuances: а- a- is used for rapid, brief and superficial motion, арба- arba- also for rapid and sudden action, ба- ba- for more substantial action, ны- ny- for especially intensive action, while фӕ- fӕ- can express habituality in the present and either repetition or rapidity and brevity in the past.[36] A morphophonological peculiarity of the prefixes is that when they are added to roots beginning in the vowel а a, as well as to the copula's form ис is, the consonant ц c is epenthesised: фӕ-ц-ис fӕ-c-is 'became (3rd person)'.[37] The prefix ны ny also causes gemination of the following consonant: кӕлын kӕlyn 'pour' – ныккӕлын nykkӕlyn 'spill'.[38]
Iterativity or habituality may be expressed with the separate particle иу iw. To make a prefixed form receive imperfective meaning, the article цӕй cӕj is inserted: рацӕйцыди racӕjcydi 'he was going out'.[39]
Non-finite verb forms
There is an infinitive, four participles (present and past active, past passive, and future), and a gerund.
past | present | future | |
---|---|---|---|
active | -ӕг -ӕg | -инаг -inag | |
passive | -т t / -д d | (-ӕн -ӕn) | |
gerund | -гӕ -gӕ | ||
infinitive | -ын -yn |
The infinitive is formed from the present stem with the ending -ын -yn, which phonologically coincides with the 1st person singular: цӕуын cӕwyn 'to go' (and 'I go').
The past passive participle in -т t or -д d coincides with the past stem (фыссын fyssyn 'write' – фыст fyst 'written'); it is often nominalised to a verbal noun. All the other participles, as well as the gerund, are formed from the present stem. The future participle in -инаг -inag may have either active or passive meaning: фыссинаг fyssinag 'who will write / will be written'. Together with the copula used as an auxiliary, it forms a periphrastic immediate future tense. The dedicated active participles in -ӕг -ӕg and receive 'present' or 'past', or more accurately, imperfective or perfective meaning depending on the aspect of the stem: фыссӕг fyssӕg 'writing' – ныффыссӕг nyffyssӕg 'having written'. The participle-gerund form ending in -гӕ -gӕ (бадгӕ badgӕ '(while) sitting'), can be used adverbially, as a gerund, but also attributively like a participle with absolutive voice: кӕрдгӕ kӕrdgӕ may mean '(which has been) cut', судзгӕ sudzgӕ may mean '(which is) burning', etc. To receive an unambiguously adverbial, i.e. gerundial interpretation, it needs to be declined in the ablative case, as does an adjective: бадгӕйӕ badgӕjӕ '(while) sitting'.[40] There are also verbal nouns: one derived from the present stem with the suffix -ӕн -ӕn with the meaning 'fit to be X-ed' – e.g. зын ссарӕн zyn ssarӕn 'hard to find' – and one in -аг -ag denoting permanent quality – e.g. нуазаг nwazag 'drunkard'.[41]
Syntax
Ossetic uses mostly
Numerals
For numerals above 20, two systems are in use – a
- 1 иу iw
- 2 дыууӕ dywwæ
- 3 ӕртӕ ærtæ
- 4 цыппар cyppar
- 5 фондз fondz
- 6 ӕхсӕз æxsæz
- 7 авд avd
- 8 аст ast
- 9 фараст farast
- 10 дӕс dæs
- 11 иуæндæс iwændæs
- 12 дыууадæс dywwadæs
- 13 æртындæс ærtyndæs
- 14 цыппæрдæс cyppærdæs
- 15 фынддӕс fynddæs
- 16 æхсæрдæс æxsærdæs
- 17 æвддæс ævddæs
- 18 æстдæс æstdæs
- 19 нудæс nudæs
- 20 ссӕдз ssædz
number | new (decimal) system | old (vigesimal) system | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cyrillic | Romanisation | Logic | Cyrillic | Romanisation | Logic | |
21 | ссӕдз иу | ssædz iw | 20 + 1 | иу ӕмӕ ссӕдз | iw æmæ ssædz | 1 + 20 |
30 | ӕртын | ærtyn | 3 × 10 | дӕс ӕмӕ ссӕдз | dæs æmæ ssædz | 10 + 20 |
35 | ӕртын фондз | ærtyn fondz | 30 + 5 | фынддӕс ӕмӕ сӕндз | fynddæs æmæ ssædz | 15 + 20 |
40 | цыппор | cyppor | 4 × 10 | дыууиссӕдзы | dywwissædzy | 2 × 20 |
50 | фæндзай | fændzaj | 5 × 10 | дӕс ӕмӕ дыууиссӕдзы | dæs æmæ dywwissædzy | 10 + 2 × 20 |
60 | ӕхсӕй | æxsaj | 6 × 10 | ӕртиссӕдзы | ærtissædzy | 3 × 20 |
70 | æвдай | ævdaj | 7 × 10 | дӕс ӕмӕ ӕртиссӕдзы | dæs æmæ ærtissædzy | 10 + 2 × 30 |
80 | æстай | æstaj | 8 × 10 | цыппарыссæдзы | cypparyssædzy | 4 × 20 |
90 | нæуæдз | næwædz | 9 × 10 | дӕс ӕмӕ ӕртиссӕдзы | dæs æmæ ærtissædzy | 10 + 4 × 20 |
100 | сӕдӕ | sædæ | – | фондзыссӕдзы | fondzyssædzy | 5 × 20 |
120 | сӕдӕ ссӕдз | sædæ ssædz | 100 + 20 | ӕхсӕзыссӕдзы | æxsæzyssædzy | 6 × 20 |
140 | сӕдӕ цыппор | sædæ cyppor | 100 + 40 | авдыссӕдзы | avdyssædzy | 7 × 20 |
160 | сӕдӕ ӕхсӕй | sædæ æxsaj | 100 + 60 | астыссӕдзы | æstyssædzy | 8 × 20 |
180 | сӕдӕ æстай | sædæ æstaj | 100 + 80 | фарастыссӕдзы | farastyssӕdzy | 9 × 20 |
200 | дыууӕ сӕдӕ | dywwæ sædæ | 2 × 100 | дыууӕ фондзыссӕдзы | dywwӕ fondzyssædzy | 2 × 5 × 20 |
дӕсыссӕдзы | dæsyssædzy | 10 × 20 | ||||
220 | дыууӕ сӕдӕ ссӕдз | dywwæ sædæ ssædz | 2 × 100 + 20 | дыууӕ фондзыссӕдзы ӕмӕ ссӕдз | dywwӕ fondzyssædzy ӕmӕ ssӕdz | 2 × 5 × 20 + 20 |
иуæндæсыссӕдзы | iwændæsyssædzy | 11 × 20 |
- 1000 мин min, ӕрзӕ ærzæ
- 1100 мин сӕдӕ min sædæ ('1000 + 100'), иуæндæс фондзыссӕдзы iwændæs fondzyssædzy ('11 X 100')
- 2000 дыууӕ мины dywwæ miny ('2 X 1000')
- 1 000 000 милуан milwan
Writing system
An Old Ossetic
Written Ossetian may be immediately recognized by its use of the
An Iron literary language was established in the 18th century, written using the Cyrillic script in Russia and the Georgian script in Georgia. The first Ossetian book was published in Cyrillic in 1798, and in 1844 the alphabet was revised by a Russian scientist of Finland-Swedish origin, Andreas Sjögren. A new alphabet based on the Latin script was made official in the 1920s, but in 1937 a revised Cyrillic alphabet was introduced, with digraphs replacing most diacritics of the 1844 alphabet.
In 1820, I. Yalguzidze published a Georgian-script alphabetic primer, adding three letters to the Georgian alphabet.[44] The Georgian orthography receded in the 19th century, but was made official with Georgian autonomy in 1937. The "one nation – two alphabets" issue caused discontent in South Ossetia in the year 1951 demanding reunification of the script, and in 1954 Georgian was replaced with the 1937 Cyrillic alphabet.
The table below shows the modern Cyrillic alphabet, used since 1937, with phonetic values for the Iron dialect in the IPA. Di- and tri-graphs in parentheses are not officially letters of the alphabet, but are listed here to represent phonemically distinctive sounds:
Letter | А | Ӕ | Б | В | Г | (Гу) | Гъ | ( Гъу ) |
Д | Дж | Дз | Е | З | И | Й | К | (Ку) | Къ | (Къу) | Л |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
а | ӕ | б | в | г | (гу) | гъ | (гъу) | д | дж | дз | е | з | и | й | к | (ку) | къ | (къу) | л | |
IPA | ä | ɐ | b | v | ɡ | ɡʷ | ʁ | ʁʷ | d | d͡ʒ | z~d͡z | e | ʒ~z | i | j | k | kʷ | kʼ | kʼʷ | ɫ |
Letter | М | Н | О | П | Пъ |
Р | С | Т | Тъ |
У | Ф | Х | ( Ху ) |
Хъ |
( Хъу ) |
Ц | Цъ |
Ч | Чъ |
Ы |
м | н | о | п | пъ | р | с | т | тъ | у | ф | х | (ху) | хъ | (хъу) | ц | цъ | ч | чъ | ы | |
IPA | m | n | o | p | pʼ | r | ʃ~s | t | tʼ | u, w | f | χ | χʷ | q | qʷ | s~t͡s | t͡sʼ | t͡ʃ | t͡ʃʼ | ɘ |
In addition, the letters ⟨ё⟩, ⟨ж⟩, ⟨ш⟩, ⟨щ⟩, ⟨ъ⟩, ⟨ь⟩, ⟨э⟩, ⟨ю⟩, and ⟨я⟩ are used to transcribe Russian loans. The Ossetian Wikipedia uses the Latin 'æ' instead of the Cyrillic 'ӕ'.
Letter | A | Æ | B | C | Ch | Č | Čh | D | Dz | Dž | E | F | G | (Gu) | H | (Hu) | I | J | K | (Ku) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a | ӕ | b | c | ch | č | čh | d | dz | dž | e | f | g | (gu) | h | (hu) | i | j | k | (ku) | |
IPA | ä | ɐ | b | s~t͡s | t͡sʼ | t͡ʃ | t͡ʃʼ | d | z~d͡z | d͡ʒ | e | f | ɡ | ɡʷ | ʁ | ʁʷ | i | j | k | kʷ |
Letter | Kh | (Khu) | L | M | N | O | P | Ph |
Q | ( Qu ) |
R | S | T | Th | U | V | X | ( Xu ) |
Y | Z |
kh | (khu) | l | m | n | o | p | ph | q | (qu) | r | s | t | th | u | v | x | (xu) | y | z | |
IPA | kʼ | kʷʼ | ɫ | m | n | o | p | pʼ | q | qʷ | r | ʃ~s | t | tʼ | u, w | v | χ | χʷ | ɘ | ʒ~z |
In addition, the letters ⟨š⟩ and ⟨ž⟩ were used to transcribe Russian words. The "weak" vowels ⟨ӕ⟩ [ɐ] and ⟨ы⟩ [ɘ] are among the most common vowels in the language.
Language usage
The first printed book in Ossetian was a short catechism published in Moscow in 1798.[45] The first newspaper, Iron Gazet, appeared on July 23, 1906, in Vladikavkaz.
While Ossetian is the official language in both South and North Ossetia (along with Russian), its official use is limited to publishing new laws in Ossetian newspapers. There are two daily newspapers in Ossetian: Ræstdzinad (Рӕстдзинад / Рӕстꚉінад, "Truth") in the North and Xurzærin (Хурзӕрин, "The Sun") in the South. Some smaller newspapers, such as district newspapers, use Ossetian for some articles. There is a monthly magazine Max dug (Мах дуг, "Our era"), mostly devoted to contemporary Ossetian fiction and poetry.
Ossetian is taught in secondary schools for all pupils.[citation needed] Native Ossetian speakers also take courses in Ossetian literature.
The first modern translation of the Qur’an into Ossetic took place in 2007, initiated by an Ossetian Robert Bolloev, who at that time resided in St. Petersburg.[46] The first Ossetian language Bible was published in 2010.[7][failed verification] It is currently the only full version of the Bible in the Ossetian language.[47] In May, 2021, the Russian Bible Society announced the completion of a Bible translation into Ossetian; fundraising continues in order to have it printed.[48][49]
Sample text
Cyrillic text[50] | Cyrillic text (Sjögren alphabet 1844) | Romanisation | Translation |
---|---|---|---|
Нартӕн уӕд сӕ хистӕр Уӕрхӕг уыдис. | Нартӕн ўӕд сӕ хістӕр Ўӕрхӕг ўѵдіс. | Nartæn wæd sæ xistær Wærxæg wydis. | At that time, the most senior of the Narts was Warkhag. |
Уӕрхӕгӕн райгуырдис дыууӕ лӕппуйы, фаззӕттӕ. | Ўӕрхӕгӕн рајгўѵрдіс дѵўўӕ лӕппујѵ, фаззӕттӕ. | Wærxægæn rajgwyrdis dywwæ læppujy, fazzættæ. | Two boys were born to Warkhag, twins. |
Иу дзы райгуырдис фыццаг кӕркуасӕны, иннӕ та райгуырдис дыккаг кӕркуасӕны, Бонвӕрноны скастмӕ. | Іў ꚉѵ рајгўѵрдіс фѵццаг кӕркўасӕнѵ, іннӕ та рајгўѵрдіс дѵккаг кӕркўасӕнѵ, Бонвӕрнонѵ скастмӕ. | Iw dzy rajgwyrdis fyccag kærkwasæny, innæ ta rajgwyrdis dykkag kærkwasæny, Bonværnony skastmæ. | One of them was born at the first crowing of the rooster, and the other was born at the second crowing of the rooster, before the rising of Bonvarnon (the Morning Star). |
Рухс хуры тынтӕ ныккастис Уӕрхӕгмӕ, базыдта, хъӕбул куыд адджын у, уый. | Рухс хурѵ тѵнтӕ нѵккастіс Ўӕрхӕгмӕ, базѵдта, ԛӕбул кўѵд адԫѵн у, ўѵј. | Ruxs xury tyntæ nykkastis Wærxægmæ, bazydta, qæbul kwyd addžyn u, wyj. | The bright rays of the sun glanced down at Warkhag – he knew how dear the child was to him. |
Уӕрхӕг йӕ лӕппуты райгуырды боны фарнӕн скодта нӕртон куывд сырды фыдӕй. | Ўӕрхӕг јӕ лӕппутѵ рајгўѵрдѵ бонѵ фарнӕн скодта нӕртон кўѵвд сѵрдѵ фѵдӕј. | Wærxæg jæ læpputy rajgwyrdy bony farnæn skodta nærton kwyvd syrdy fydæj. | To (bring) good fortune for the day of his boys' birth, Warkhag made a Nartic feast of game meat. |
Ӕрхуыдта уӕларвӕй Куырдалӕгоны, фурдӕй — Донбеттыры, Нартӕй та — Борӕйы ӕмӕ ӕндӕрты. | Ӕрхўѵдта ўӕларвӕј Кўѵрдалӕгонѵ, фурдӕј — Донбеттѵрѵ, Нартӕј та — Борӕјѵ ӕмӕ ӕндӕртѵ. | Ærxwydta wælarvæj Kwyrdalægony, furdæj — Donbettyry, Nartæj ta — Boræjy æmæ ændærty. | From the sky he invited Kurdalagon (the smith god), from the sea – Donbettyr (the sea god), and of the Narts – Bora and others.
|
Уӕрхӕджы уарзон лӕппутыл буц нӕмттӕ сӕвӕрдта уӕларв Куырдалӕгон: хистӕрыл — Æхсар, кӕстӕрыл — Æхсæртæг. | Ўӕрхӕԫѵ ўарзон лӕппутѵл буц нӕмттӕ сӕвӕрдта ўӕларв Кўѵрдалӕгон: хістӕрѵл — Æхсар, кӕстӕрѵл — Æхсæртæг. | Wærxædžy warzon læpputyl buc næmttæ sæværdta wælarv Kwyrdalægon: xistæryl — Æxsar, kæstæryl — Æxsærtæg. | Celestial Kurdalagon bestowed special names on Warkhag's beloved boys: on the elder one – Akhsar, and on the younger one – Akhsartag. |
Номӕвӕрӕджы лӕварӕн Куырдалӕгон радта Уӕрхӕгӕн удӕвдз йӕ куырдадзы фӕтыгӕй, болат ӕндонӕй арӕзт. | Номӕвӕрӕԫѵ лӕварӕн Кўѵрдалӕгон радта Ўӕрхӕгӕн удӕвꚉ јӕ кўѵрдаꚉѵ фӕтѵгӕј, болат ӕндонӕј арӕзт. | Nomæværædžy lævaræn Kwyrdalægon radta Wærxægæn udævdz jæ kwyrdadzy fætygæj, bolat ændonæj aræzt. | As a godfather's ('name-giver's') present, Kurdalagon gave Warkhag a magic flute (udævdz) made of fætyg, the bulat steel of his forge. |
Удӕвдзы Нарт сӕвӕрдтой сӕ фынгыл, ӕмӕ сын кодта диссаджы зарӕг уадындз хъӕлӕсӕй: | Удӕвꚉѵ Нарт сӕвӕрдтој сӕ фѵнгѵл, ӕмӕ сѵн кодта діссаԫѵ зарӕг ўадѵнꚉ qӕлӕсӕј: | Udævdzy Nart sæværdtoj sæ fyngyl, æmæ syn kodta dissadžy zaræg wadyndz qælæsæj: | The Narts put the magic flute on their table, and it sang to them a marvellous song with the voice of a flute: |
«Айс ӕй, аназ ӕй Хуыцауы хӕларӕй,
Айс ӕй, аназ ӕй — ронджы нуазӕн!» |
«Ајс ӕј, аназ ӕј Хўѵцаўѵ хӕларӕј,
Ајс ӕј, аназ ӕј — ронԫѵ нўазӕн!» |
«Ajs æj, anaz æj Xwycawy xælaræj,
Ajs æj, anaz æj — rondžy nwazæn!» |
'Take it, drink it to Khutsaw 's (the supreme deity's) health,
take it, drink it – the cup of rong (magical drink)!' |
See also
- Jász people
Notes
- ^ The original Ossetian expression is profane and thus has been paraphrased.
- ^ Before a word-final consonant cluster.
- ^ Sometimes before j.
- ^ Before a nasal, word-finally or within a word-final nasal-obstruent cluster.
- ^ Note that ɘ < *i and ɘ < *u caused palatalization and labialization on preceding velar consonant.
- ^ Before a word-final consonant.
References
- ^ Ossetian at Ethnologue (26th ed., 2023)
- ^ "World Atlas of Languages: Ossetian". www.unesco.org. Archived from the original on August 2, 2018. Retrieved Mar 3, 2021.
- ^ AHD:Ossetian
- ^ OED:Ossetian.
- ^ Dalby 1998.
- ^ ISBN 978-9089641793.
- ^ a b "Ossetic". Ethnologue. Retrieved 2019-01-08.
- ^ Fuller, Liz (28 May 2015). "One Nation, Two Polities, Two Endangered Ossetian Languages?". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Retrieved 23 February 2024.
- ^ a b c d e f g Abaev, V. I. A Grammatical Sketch of Ossetian. Translated by Stephen P. Hill and edited by Herbert H. Paper, 1964 [1]
- ^ Thordarson, Fridrik. 1989. Ossetic. Compendium Linguarum Iranicarum, ed. by Rudiger Schmitt, 456-479. Wiesbaden: Reichert. [2]
- ^ JSTOR 3217844.
- ^ a b Zgusta 1987.
- ^ a b Kambolov, Tamerlan (10 May 2007). Some New Observations on the Zelenchuk Inscription and Tzetzes' Alanic Phrases (PDF). Scythians, Sarmatians, Alans – Iranian-Speaking Nomads of the Eurasian Steppes. Barcelona. pp. 21–22. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 October 2017. Retrieved 2 February 2015.
- ^ Ivanov 2010.
- ^ Zgusta 1987, p. 51.
- ^ Zgusta 1987, p. 55.
- ^ "OSSETIC LANGUAGE". iranicaonline.org. Retrieved 2023-12-07.
- ^ uvular.
- ^ a b Thordarson, p. 466
- ^ Abaev, p. 5
- ^ Abaev, p. 8–10
- ^ Ossetic language. (2006). In Encyclopӕdia Britannica. Retrieved August 26, 2006, from Encyclopӕdia Britannica Premium Service: https://www.britannica.com/topic/Ossetic-language
- ^ Т. Т. Камболов. 2006 Очерк истории осетинского языка. p. 330–339
- ISBN 978-0-19-069069-4
- ^ Abaev, p. 12–16
- ^ Abaev 1964, p. 12.
- ^ Thordarson, p. 471
- ^ Abaev 1964, p. 22–26
- ^ Abaev 1964, p. 26–31
- ^ Abaev 1964, p. 35–42.
- ^ Abaev 1964, p. 42–43.
- ^ a b Abaev 1964, p. 51.
- ^ Abaev 1964, p. 59.
- ^ Abaev 1964, p. 52–53.
- ^ Abaev 1964, p. 44.
- ^ Abaev 1964, p. 76–79
- ^ Abaev 1964, p. 10.
- ^ Abaev 1964, p. 11
- ^ Abaev 1964, p. 45–47
- ^ Abaev 1964, p. 47–50
- ^ Thordarson, p. 474
- ^ Багаев, Н. К. 1963. Современный осетинский язык, ч. 1. Орджоникидзе, Северо-Осетинское книжное издательство, стр. 211–212
- ^ Abaev, p. 20–21
- ^ Correspondence table between the Georgian-based and the modern script with examples of use (in Russian)
- ISBN 9780755618453.
- ^ "Коран стал дигорским".
- ^ "Russian Censorship: Ossetian & Russian Bibles, Bible Literature". JW.ORG. Retrieved 2017-01-08.
- ^ "ПЕРЕВОД БИБЛИИ НА ОСЕТИНСКИЙ ЯЗЫК ЗАВЕРШЕН: ОБЪЯВЛЕН СБОР СРЕДСТВ НА ИЗДАНИЕ". blagos.ru. Russian orthodox Church, Moscow Patriarchate. May 29, 2021.
Translatio of the Bible into Ossetian is Completed: Fundraising for Publication Announced (Russian)
- ^ "Holy Scripture Fully Translated into Ossetian Language, Completing 19-Year Project". orthochristian.ru. May 31, 2021.
- Nart sagasin Dzhanayev's 1946 collection
Bibliography
- Abaev, V. I. 1964. A grammatical sketch of Ossetic (Russian version)
- Abaev, V. I. Ossetian Language and Folklore, USSR Academy of Sciences, Moscow-Leningrad, 1949
- Arys-Djanaieva, Lora. Parlons Ossète. Paris: L'Harmattan, 2004, ISBN 2-7475-6235-2.
- ISBN 978-0-231-11568-1.
- Erschler, David (2018). Ossetic. Geoffrey Haig and Geoffrey Khan (eds.), The Languages and Linguistics of Western Asia: Berlin: DeGruyter Mouton. pp. 851–881.
- ISBN 9780755618453.
- "Ossetian". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. Retrieved 2 December 2017. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
- Ivanov, Sergey A.; Lubotsky, Alexandr (2010). "An Alanic Marginal Note and the Exact Date of John II's Battle with the Pechenegs". Byzantinische Zeitschrift. 103 (2): 595–603. S2CID 162785119.
- Nasidze, Ivan; Quinque, Dominique; Dupanloup, Isabelle; Rychkov, Sergey; Naumova, Oksana; Zhukova, Olga; Stoneking, Mark (2004). "Genetic Evidence Concerning the Origins of South and North Ossetians". Annals of Human Genetics. 68 (6): 588–599. S2CID 1717933.
- Testen, David (1997). Ossetic Phonology. Alan S. Kaye and Peter T. Daniels (eds.), Phonologies of Asia and Africa: Winona Lake: Winona Lake, Indiana: Eisenbrauns. pp. 707–732.
- Thordarson, Fridrik. Ossetic. In Rüdiger Schmitt (ed.), Compendium Linguarum Iranicarum, 456-479. Wiesbaden: Dr. Ludwig Reichert.
- Windfuhr, Gernot (2013). The Iranian Languages. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-79703-4.
- ISBN 978-3-7001-0994-5.
External links
- Web portal on documentation and grammatical studies of Ossetic (in English)
- Ossetic National Corpus(in English)
- Genetic Evidence Concerning the Origins of South and North Ossetians
- An article on Ossetic grammar(in English) by Fridrik Thordarson
- Ossetic language page at the Minority languages of Russia on the Net Archived 2009-04-20 at the Wayback Machine project (in Russian)
- History of the Ossetian writing system and a comprehensive table of characters (in Russian)
- Ossetic language materials in English and partly French
- Laboratory of Field Linguistics: Ossetic (studies on Ossetic grammar, modern spoken texts in Ossetic) Archived 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine (in English)
- Omniglot – Ossetian (Ирон ӕвзаг / Дигорон ӕвзаг)
- Ossetic (Iron and Digor) basic lexicon at the Global Lexicostatistical Database
- Russian-Ossetic On-Line Dictionary