Ibero-Caucasian languages

Last updated
Ibero-Caucasian
Caucasian
(controversial)
Geographic
distribution
Caucasus
Ethnicity Caucasian peoples
Native speakers
c.10 million (2020)
Linguistic classification Proposed language family
Proto-languageProto-Caucasian language
Subdivisions
Language codes
Glottolog None
Caucasian Peoples and Languages as of 1990-2010.gif
The distribution of the Caucasian languages

Ibero-Caucasian (or Iberian-Caucasian) is a proposed language family suggested by Georgian linguist Arnold Chikobava of the three language families that are specific to the Caucasus mountains region of Eurasia.

Contents

The Ibero-Caucasian phylum would also include three extinct languages: Hattic, connected by some linguists to the Northwest (Circassian) family, and Hurrian and Urartian, connected to the Northeast (Nakh–Dagestanian) family as Alarodian languages.

Family status

The affinities between the three families are disputed. A connection between the Northeast and Northwest families is seen as likely by some linguists.

On the other hand, there are no known affinities between South Caucasian and the northern languages, which are two unrelated phyla even in Greenberg's deep classification of the world's languages. "Ibero-Caucasian" therefore remains at best a convenient geographical designation.

See also

References

    Further reading

    Main publications

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