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  1. 5 de ene. de 2023 · Georgian is the official language of the Republic of Georgia. There are approximately 6 million native speakers of Georgian worldwide. The vast majority of Georgian speakers are located in Georgia but significant size communities can also be found in Iran, Azerbaijan, Turkey and Russia. Georgian belongs to the Southern branch of the Caucasian ...

  2. Media in category "Georgian language". The following 40 files are in this category, out of 40 total. Act of Georgian independence of 1919.jpg 748 × 1,024; 173 KB. Act of the Independence of Georgia (1919).jpg 920 × 1,280; 567 KB. Alphabetum Ibericum sive Georgianium2.jpg 1,295 × 1,821; 1.31 MB.

  3. This table lists all two-letter codes (set 1), one per language for ISO 639 macrolanguage , and some of the three-letter codes of the other sets, formerly parts 2 and 3. Language formed from English and Vanuatuan languages, with some French influence. Modern Hebrew. Code changed in 1989 from original ISO 639:1988, iw. [3]

  4. Abkhaz is a Northwest Caucasian language [8] [9] and is thus related to Adyghe. The language of Abkhaz is especially close to Abaza, and they are sometimes considered dialects of the same language, [10] [11] Abazgi, of which the literary dialects of Abkhaz and Abaza are simply two ends of a dialect continuum.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › GeorgiansGeorgians - Wikipedia

    The language known today as Georgian is a traditional language of the eastern part of the country which has spread to most of the present-day Georgia after the post-Christianization centralization in the first millennium CE. Today, Georgians regardless of their ancestral region use Georgian as their official language.

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › ScreeveScreeve - Wikipedia

    Screeve. Screeve is a term of grammatical description in traditional Georgian grammars that roughly corresponds to tense–aspect–mood marking in the Western grammatical tradition. It derives from the Georgian word მწკრივი mts’k’rivi 'row'. Formally, it refers to a set of six verb forms inflected for person and number ...

  7. Proto-Georgian–Zan (also referred to as Proto-Karto-Zan) is a reconstructed language which is the common ancestor of Karto-Zan languages. It is hypothesized to have diverged from Proto-Kartvelian during the 19th century BC and to have split into the ancestor of the Zan languages and the Georgic languages (ancestor of Judaeo-Georgian and Georgian and dialects) around the 8th century BC or 7th ...