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|topic= will aid in categorization.Content in this edit is translated from the existing Russian Wikipedia article at [[:ru:Даргинские языки]]; see its history for attribution. {{Translated|ru|Даргинские языки}} to the talk page. |
Dargin | |
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Dargwa | |
Geographic distribution | Southcentral Dagestan[citation needed] |
Native speakers | 590,000 (2020 census)[1] |
Linguistic classification | Northeast Caucasian
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Subdivisions | |
ISO 639-2 / 5 | dar |
ISO 639-3 | dar |
Glottolog | darg1242 |
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Dargin | |
![]() Map of individual Dargin languages according to Koryakov 2021.[2] |
The Dargin languages consist of a dialect continuum of over 60[3] Northeast Caucasian languages or dialects spoken by the Dargin people in southcentral Dagestan. Kajtak, Kubachi, Itsari, and Chirag are often considered dialects of the same Dargin/Dargwa language. Ethnologue lists these under a common Dargin language, but also states that these may be separate languages from Dargwa proper.[citation needed]
The Dargin languages are classified as follows by Koryakov 2021:[2]
Dargin
Mutalov 2021 proposes a different classification:[4]
Dargin languages
Glottolog uses a different classification, based on Koryakov 2012.[5][6]
Dargwic
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Avar–Andic |
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Tsezic |
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Dargin |
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Lezgic |
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Nakh |
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Other |
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Italics indicate extinct languages |
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Caucasian (areal) |
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Indo- European |
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Turkic |
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Others |
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Authority control databases: National ![]() |
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