huz ISO 639

Hunzib

  • Geography

    RU Dagestan republic: Tsuntinsky district, Garbutl, Gunzib and Nakhada; Kizilyurtovksy district, Stalskoe.
  • Language Cloud

A language of Russian Federation

huz
Enzeb, Ghunzib, Gunzib, Hontl’os myts, Khunzal, Khunzaly, Khvanal, Xunzal
1,010 in Russian Federation (2010 census). Ethnic population: 2,000. Total users in all countries: 1,420.
Dagestan republic: Tsuntinsky district, Garbutl, Gunzib and Nakhada; Kizilyurtovksy district, Stalskoe.
Georgia, Western Russian Federation: Enlarged area
6b (Threatened).
Nakh-Daghestanian, Tsezic, East Tsezic
None known. Separate from Bezhta [kap] (1989 B. Comrie) but reportedly very similar to it.
27 consonants, 16 vowels, word stress generally linked to prefinal vowel; 5 noun classes; agreement between nouns and coreferent adjectives, pronouns, verbs, and adverbs marked by prefixes; nominative-ergative system; demonstratives.
Avar [ava] and Russian [rus] are used in school and for wider communication (Salminen 2007). Home. Some young people, all adults, few child speakers. Positive attitudes. Also use Avar [ava]. Also use Bezhta [kap]. Also use Russian [rus].
No literacy in Hunzib. Avar [ava] is literary language. Dictionary. Grammar. Texts.
Unwritten [Qaax].
Muslim.
OLAC resources in and about Hunzib
Hunzib
410 in Georgia (Koryakov 2006).
Kakheti region: Lagodekhi municipality, Tkhilistsqaro, Qvareli district, Chatliskure village.
6b (Threatened)
Some young people, all adults.
View other languages of Georgia