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  1. Linguistic classification: Kartvelian. Karto-Zan. Subdivisions: Georgian. Zan. The Karto-Zan languages, also known as Georgian-Zan languages, are a branch of Kartvelian languages. They are spoken mainly in Georgia. There are two branches of the branch: Georgian and the Zan languages.

  2. Borean languages. Borean (also Boreal or Boralean) [1] is a hypothetical (i.e. proposed) linguistic macrofamily that encompasses almost all language families worldwide except those native to the Americas, Africa, Oceania, and the Andaman Islands. Its supporters propose that the various languages spoken in Eurasia and adjacent regions have a ...

  3. Media in category "Kartvelian languages". The following 4 files are in this category, out of 4 total. Javakhian Dialect of Georgian Language, Gr. Beridze, Tbilisi, 1988.jpg 1,678 × 2,295; 4.01 MB. Kartvelian languages genesis.PNG 785 × 381; 23 KB. Kartvelian languages tree.png 726 × 436; 24 KB. СМОМПК 1910 41.pdf 989 × 1,489, 759 ...

  4. Du står fritt: til å dele – til å kopiere, distribuere og overføre verket; til å blande – til å endre verket; Under de følgende betingelsene: navngivelse – Du må kreditere verket på passende vis, lenke til lisensen og indikere hvorvidt det har blitt gjort endringer.

  5. The Kartvelian languages ( / kɑːrtˈviːliːən /; Georgian: ქართველური ენები, translit.: kartveluri enebi; also known as Iberian [2] and formerly [3] South Caucasian [4]) are a language family indigenous to the South Caucasus and spoken primarily in Georgia, with large groups of native speakers in Russia, Iran ...

  6. Mingrelian grammar. Mingrelian is a Kartvelian language that is mainly spoken in the Western Georgian regions Samegrelo and Abkhazia. In Abkhazia the number of Mingrelian speakers declined dramatically in the 1990s as a result of heavy ethnic cleansing of ethnic Georgians, the overwhelming majority of which were Mingrelians .