Laz language


The Laz language is a Kartvelian language spoken by the Laz people on the southeastern shore of the Black Sea. It is estimated that there are around 20,000 native speakers of Laz in Turkey, in a strip of land extending from Melyat to the Georgian border, and about 2,000 in Georgia.

Classification

Laz is one of the four South Caucasian languages. Along with Mingrelian, it forms the Zan branch of this Kartvelian language family. The two languages are very closely related, to the extent that some linguists refer to Mingrelian and Laz as dialects or regional variants of a single Zan language, a view held officially in the Soviet era and still so in Georgia today. In general, however, Mingrelian and Laz are considered as separate languages, due both to the long-standing separation of their communities of speakers and to a lack of mutual intelligibility.
The Laz are shifting to the Turkish of Trebizond.

Geographical distribution

The Georgian language, along with its relatives Mingrelian, Laz, and Svan, comprises the Kartvelian language family. The initial breakup of Proto-Kartvelian is estimated to have been around 2500–2000 B.C., with the divergence of Svan from Proto-Kartvelian. Assyrian, Urartian, Greek, and Roman documents reveal that in early historical times, the numerous Kartvelian tribes were in the process of migrating into the Caucasus from the southwest. The northern coast and coastal mountains of Asia Minor were dominated by Kartvelian peoples at least as far west as Samsun. Their eastward migration may have been set in motion by the fall of Troy. It thus appears that the Kartvelians represent an intrusion into the Georgian plain from northeastern Anatolia, displacing their predecessors, the unrelated Northwest Caucasian and Vainakh peoples, into the Caucasian highlands.
The oldest known settlement of the Lazoi is the town of Lazos or "old Lazik" which Arrian puts 680 stadia south of the Sacred Port and 1,020 stadia north of Pityus, i.e.somewhere in the neighbourhood of Tuapse. Kiessling sees in the Lazoi a section of the Kerketai, who in the first centuries of the Christian era had to migrate southwards under pressure from the Zygoi. The same author regards the Kerketai as a "Georgian" tribe. The fact is that at the time of Arrian, the Lazoi were already living to the south of Um. The order of the peoples living along the coast to the east of
Trebizond was as follows: Colchi ; Machelones; Heniochi; Zydritae; Lazai, subjects of King
Malassus, who owned the suzerainty of Rome; Apsilae; Abacsi; Sanigae near Sebastopolis.
The ancient kingdom of Colchis was located in the same region the Laz speakers are found in today, and its inhabitants probably spoke an ancestral version of the language. Colchis was the setting for the famous Greek legend of Jason and the Argonauts.
Today most Laz speakers live in Northeast Turkey, in a strip of land along the shore of the Black Sea: in the Pazar, Ardeşen, Çamlıhemşin, Fındıklı, İkizdere districts of Rize, and in the Arhavi, Hopa and Borçka districts of Artvin. There are also communities in northwestern Anatolia where many immigrants settled since the Russo-Turkish War and now also in Istanbul and Ankara. Only a few Laz live in Georgia, chiefly in Ajaria. Laz are also present in Germany where they have migrated from Turkey since the 1960s.

Social and cultural status

Laz has no official status in either Turkey or Georgia, and no written standard. It is presently used only for familiar and casual interaction; for literary, business, and other purposes, Laz speakers use their country's official language.
Laz is unique among the South Caucasian languages in that most of its speakers live in Turkey rather than Georgia. While the differences between the various dialects are minor, their speakers feel that their level of mutual intelligibility is low. Given that there is no common standard form of Laz, speakers of its different dialects use Turkish to communicate with each other.
Between 1930 and 1938, Zan enjoyed cultural autonomy in Georgia and was used as a literary language, but an official standard form of the tongue was never established. Since then, all attempts to create a written tradition in Zan have failed, despite the fact that most intellectuals use it as a literary language.
In Turkey, Laz has been a written language since 1984, when an alphabet based on the Turkish alphabet was created. Since then, this system has been used in most of the handful of publications that have appeared in Laz. Developed specifically for the South Caucasian languages, the Georgian alphabet is better suited to the sounds of Laz, but the fact that most of the tongue's speakers live in Turkey, where the Latin alphabet is used, has rendered the adoption of the former impossible. Nonetheless, 1991 saw the publication of a textbook called Nana-nena, which was aimed at all Laz speakers and used both the Latin and Georgian alphabets. The first Laz–Turkish dictionary was published in 1999.
The only languages in which the Laz receive an education are Turkish and Georgian. Virtually all the Laz are bilingual in Turkish and Laz or in Georgian and Laz. Even in villages inhabited exclusively by Laz people, it is common to hear conversations in Turkish or Georgian. Turkish has had a notable influence on the vocabulary of Laz.
Laz speakers themselves basically regard the language as a means of oral communication. The families that still speak Laz only do so among adults in informal situations, with Turkish or Georgian being used in all other contexts. This means that the younger generations fail to fully acquire the language and only gain a passive knowledge of it.
In recent times, the Laz folk musician Birol Topaloğlu has achieved a certain degree of international success with his albums Heyamo and Aravani. The Laz rock and roll musician Kazım Koyuncu performed rock and roll arrangements of Laz traditional music from 1995 until his death in 2005.
In 2004, Mehmet Bekâroğlu, the deputy chairman of Felicity Party in Turkey, sent a notice to the Turkish Radio and Television Corporation declaring that his native language is Laz and demanding broadcasts in Laz. The same year, a group of Laz intellectuals issued a petition and held a meeting with TRT officials for the implementation of Laz broadcasts. However, as of 2008, these requests have been ignored by authorities.

Laz dialects

Laz has five major dialects:
NameName in GeorgianGeographical region
XopuriხოფურიHopa and Ajaria
Viǯur-Arkabuliვიწურ-არქაბულიArhavi and Fındıklı
ÇxaluriჩხალურიDüzköy village in Borçka
AtinuriათინურიPazar
Art̆aşenuriარტაშენურიArdeşen

The last two are often treated as a single Atinan dialect. Speakers of different Laz dialects have trouble understanding each other, and often prefer to communicate in the local official language.
EnglishAtinaArt̆aşeniArkabiXopa–Batumi
I lovemalimben / მალიმბენmaoropen / მაოროფენp̌orom / პორომp̌qorop / პყოროფ
You lovegalimben / გალიმბენgaoropen / გაოროფენorom / ორომqorop / ყოროფ
S/he-It lovesalimben / ალიმბენaropen / აოროფენoroms / ორომსqorops / ყოროფს
We lovemalimberan / მალიმბერანmaoropenan / მაოროფენანp̌oromt / პორომთp̌qoropt / პყოროფთ
You lovegalimberan / გალიმბერანgaoropenan / გაოროფენანoromt / ორომთqoropt / ყოროფთ
They lovealimberan / ალიმბერანaoropenan / აოროფენანoroman / ორომანqoropan / ყოროფან

Writing system

Laz is written in Mkhedruli script and in an extension of the Turkish alphabet.

Linguistic features

Like many languages of the Caucasus, Laz has a rich consonantal system but only five vowels. The nouns are inflected with agglutinative suffixes to indicate grammatical function and number, but not by gender.

Phonology

The Laz verb is inflected with suffixes according to person and number, and also for grammatical tense, aspect, mood, and evidentiality. Up to 50 verbal prefixes are used to indicate spatial orientation/direction. Person and number suffixes provided for the subject as well as for one or two objects involved in the action, e.g. gimpulam = "I hide it from you".

Grammar

Some distinctive features of Laz among its family are: