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Ossetian language

Ossetian (/ɒˈsɛti.ən/ oss-ET-ee-ən, /ɒˈsʃən/ oss-EE-shən, /ˈsʃən/ 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]

Not to be confused with Occitan language.

Ossetian

700,000 Ossetians

490,000 (2020 census)[1]

  • Ossetian
  • Standard Ossetian

58-ABB-a

The northern half of the Ossetia region is part of Russia and is known as North Ossetia–Alania, while the southern half is part of the de facto country of South Ossetia (recognized by the United Nations as Russian-occupied territory that is de jure part of Georgia). Ossetian-speakers number about 614,350, with 451,000 recorded in Russia per the 2010 Russian census.[7]


Despite Ossetian being the official languages of both North and South Ossetia, since 2009 UNESCO has listed Ossetian as "vulnerable". In the 2010 Russian census only 36% of North Ossetians claimed to be fluent in Ossetian, with the number decreasing year by year.[8]

Dialects[edit]

There are two important dialects: Digoron (distributed in the west of the Republic of North Ossetia-Alania and Kabardino-Balkaria) which is considered more archaic and Iron (in the rest of the Republic of North Ossetia-Alania and in South Ossetia and Karachay-Cherkessia),[6] spoken by one-sixth and five-sixths of the population, respectively. A third dialect of Ossetian, Jassic, was formerly spoken in Hungary.

Phonology[edit]

Vowels[edit]

The Iron dialect of Ossetic has 7 vowels:

færǽt "an axe"

fǽræt "the axe"

Syntax[edit]

Ossetic uses mostly postpositions (derived from nouns), although two prepositions exist in the language. Noun modifiers precede nouns. The word order is not rigid, but tends towards SOV. Wackernagel's law applies. The morphosyntactic alignment is nominative–accusative, although there is no accusative case: rather, the direct object is in the nominative (typically if inanimate or indefinite) or in the genitive (typically if animate or definite).[9]

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

For numerals above 20, two systems are in use – a decimal one used officially, and a vigesimal one used colloquially. The vigesimal system was predominant in traditional usage. The decimal one is said to have been used in pre-modern times by shepherds who had borrowed it from the Balkars, but it came into more general use only after its introduction in Ossetian schools in 1925 to facilitate the teaching of arithmetic.[42] For example, 40 is цыппор cyppor (from цыппар cyppar 'four') and 60 is ӕхсӕй æxsaj (from ӕхсӕз æxsæz 'six') in the decimal system, whereas the vigesimal designations are дыууиссӕдзы dywwissædzy (from дыууӕ dywwæ 'two' and ссӕдз ssædz 'twenty') and ӕртиссӕдзы ærtissædzy (from ӕртӕ ærtæ 'three' and ссӕдз ssædz 'twenty'). In the same way, the inherited decimal сӕдӕ sædæ 'one hundred' has the vigesimal equivalent фондзыссӕдзы fondzyssædzy ('5 times twenty'). An additional difference is that the decimal system places tens before units (35 is ӕртын фондз ærtyn fondz '30 + 5'), whereas the vigesimal uses the opposite order (35 is фынддӕс ӕмӕ сӕндз fynddæs æmæ ssædz '15 + 20'). Ordinal numbers are formed with the suffix -ӕм -æm, or, for the first three numbers, -аг -ag.[43]

Jász people

Abaev, V. I. 1964. (Russian version)

A grammatical sketch of Ossetic

Abaev, V. I. Ossetian Language and Folklore, USSR Academy of Sciences, Moscow-Leningrad, 1949

Arys-Djanaieva, Lora. Parlons Ossète. Paris: L'Harmattan, 2004,  2-7475-6235-2.

ISBN

Erschler, David (2018). Ossetic. Geoffrey Haig and Geoffrey Khan (eds.), The Languages and Linguistics of Western Asia: Berlin: DeGruyter Mouton. pp. 851–881.

(2022). The Ossetes: Modern-Day Scythians of the Caucasus. London: Bloomsbury. ISBN 9780755618453.

Foltz, Richard

. Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. Retrieved 2 December 2017. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)

"Ossetian"

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. :10.1515/byzs.2010.017. hdl:1887/18310. S2CID 162785119.

doi

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. :10.1046/j.1529-8817.2004.00131.x. PMID 15598217. S2CID 1717933.

doi

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). . Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-79703-4.

The Iranian Languages

Web portal on documentation and grammatical studies of Ossetic

Ossetic National Corpus

Genetic Evidence Concerning the Origins of South and North Ossetians

(in English) by Fridrik Thordarson

An article on Ossetic grammar

at the Minority languages of Russia on the Net Archived 2009-04-20 at the Wayback Machine project (in Russian)

Ossetic language page

(in Russian)

History of the Ossetian writing system and a comprehensive table of characters

Ossetic language materials in English and partly French

Archived 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine (in English)

Laboratory of Field Linguistics: Ossetic (studies on Ossetic grammar, modern spoken texts in Ossetic)

Omniglot – Ossetian (Ирон ӕвзаг / Дигорон ӕвзаг)

Ossetic (Iron and Digor) basic lexicon at the Global Lexicostatistical Database

Russian-Ossetic On-Line Dictionary