Georgian dialects
Eastern dialects
Fereydanian is spoken in Fereydunshahr, IranNorthwest dialects
Southwest dialects
Central dialects
Northeast dialects
Georgian language|Georgian is a Kartvelian language spoken by about 4 million people, primarily in Georgia but also by indigenous communities in northern Turkey and Azerbaijan, and the diaspora, such as in Russia, Turkey, Iran, Europe, and North America. It is a highly standardized language, with established literary and linguistic norms dating back to the 5th century.There are at least 18 dialects of the language. Standard Georgian is largely based on the prestige Kartlian dialect. It has over centuries wiped out significant regional linguistic differences within Georgia, particularly through the centralized educational system and the mass media. Dialects still retain their unique features in terms of phonology, morphology, syntax, and vocabulary, but they are virtually entirely intelligible with each other. The three other Kartvelian languages—Mingrelian, Svan and Laz—are sisters to Georgian, but are only partly intelligible to speakers of Standard Georgian or other Georgian dialects.
Some of the basic variations among the Georgian dialects include:
- The presence of glides and before certain vowels;
- The presence of qʰ and ʔ sounds;
- Distinction between long and short vowels;
- Extra vowel sounds not found in Standard Georgian;
- The usage of n plural form;
- Plural adjectival forms;
- Non-standard verb forms;
- Archaisms and borrowings from neighboring languages not found in Standard Georgian.
- Different stress patterns;
Classification
Northwest dialects
- Imeretian in Imereti
- Lechkhumian in Lechkhumi
- Rachan in Racha
Southwest dialects
- Gurian in Guria
- Adjarian in Adjara
- Imerkhevian in Imerkhevi
Central dialects
This group is spoken by the mountaineers in northeast Georgia.
- Mokhevian, spoken in Khevi
- Mtiuletian-Gudamaqrian in Mtiuleti and Gudamaqari
- Khevsurian in Khevsureti
- Pshavian in Pshavi
- Tushetian in Tusheti
Eastern dialects
- Kakhetian in Kakheti
- Tianetian in Ertso-Tianeti
- Ingiloan in Saingilo
- Fereydanian in Fereydan
Other dialects
- The obsolescent Kizlar-Mozdokian dialect, was spoken in the north central Caucasian areas of Kizlyar and Mozdok by descendants of those Georgians who fled the Ottoman occupation of Georgia in the early 18th century. It was technically a mixture of various Georgian dialects laden with Russian loanwords. Subsequently, the group was largely Russified and the dialect became extinct.
- Judæo-Georgian is a language spoken by the Georgian Jews. Largely Georgian phonetically, morphologically, and syntactically, and mixed Georgian-Hebrew lexically, it is considered by some not to be a distinct language but rather a dialect of Georgian.