Knowledge

Zok language

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the Armenian National Archive's data of a population of 90 residents in the village at the time of the last Armenian displacement in 1988. Zok's vowel system is the most distinguishable feature that sets it apart from other Armenian dialects, with significant changes and the addition of a unique form of vowel harmony, according to Vaux (2008).
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of Nakhijevan were forced to leave due to conflict in 1988. In 1935, Zok had approximately 10,000 speakers according to Acharyan, but it is now certain that the number of speakers is much smaller, likely less than 1,000. The Paraka dialect is estimated to have fewer than 50 living speakers based on
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or the "Zok language". Zok is significantly different from other Armenian varieties, leading to myths about its origins. One common belief is that the Zoks are half-Armenian, half-Jewish merchants who created a secret language to conceal their business dealings from outsiders. However, in reality,
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Additionally, Zok has notable morphological and syntactic innovations, particularly in the organization of its tense-aspect-mood system, which is unparalleled in other Armenian dialects.
263:"A Documentation of the Zok Language (otherwise known as the Armenian dialect of Agulis) | Endangered Languages Archive" 342: 310: 337: 168: 332: 216: 199: 63: 157: 8: 211: 132: 306: 68: 36: 149: 73: 55: 326: 194:
The language spoken by this group is similar to the neighboring dialects of
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to speakers of Standard Eastern Armenian. Its speakers refer to it as
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the Zoks are an indigenous Armenian community from the
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Originally spoken in Nakhijevan, which is now part of
161: 324: 290:(1 ed.). Taylor & Francis. p. 85. 16:Armenian variety considered a separate language 303:Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World 300: 257: 255: 253: 251: 249: 325: 301:Brown, Keith; Ogilvie, Sarah (2010). 246: 235: 285: 239:Zok: The Armenian dialect of Agulis 13: 14: 354: 305:. Elsevier Science. p. 68. 294: 279: 229: 152:. It is commonly considered a 1: 222: 7: 288:Encyclopedia of Linguistics 205: 162: 10: 359: 174: 343:Languages of the Caucasus 217:Languages of the Caucasus 123: 111: 106: 91: 52: 42: 31: 26: 21: 338:Languages of Azerbaijan 267:www.elararchive.org 236:Vaux, Bert (2007). 212:Agulis (historical) 333:Armenian languages 286:Strazny, Philipp. 169:Nakhichevan region 148:, is a variety of 139: 138: 350: 317: 316: 298: 292: 291: 283: 277: 276: 274: 273: 259: 244: 243: 233: 165: 150:Eastern Armenian 144:, also known as 135: 116: 74:Eastern Armenian 58: 19: 18: 358: 357: 353: 352: 351: 349: 348: 347: 323: 322: 321: 320: 313: 299: 295: 284: 280: 271: 269: 261: 260: 247: 234: 230: 225: 208: 177: 131: 112: 87: 59: 56:Language family 54: 45: 44:Native speakers 17: 12: 11: 5: 356: 346: 345: 340: 335: 319: 318: 311: 293: 278: 245: 227: 226: 224: 221: 220: 219: 214: 207: 204: 176: 173: 158:unintelligible 137: 136: 129: 121: 120: 117: 109: 108: 107:Language codes 104: 103: 102: 101: 98: 93: 89: 88: 86: 85: 84: 83: 82: 81: 62: 60: 53: 50: 49: 46: 43: 40: 39: 35:originally SE 33: 32:Native to 29: 28: 24: 23: 15: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 355: 344: 341: 339: 336: 334: 331: 330: 328: 314: 312:9780080877754 308: 304: 297: 289: 282: 268: 264: 258: 256: 254: 252: 250: 241: 240: 232: 228: 218: 215: 213: 210: 209: 203: 201: 197: 192: 189: 186: 182: 172: 170: 164: 159: 155: 151: 147: 146:Agulis–Meghri 143: 134: 130: 128: 127: 122: 118: 115: 110: 105: 99: 96: 95: 94: 90: 80: 77: 76: 75: 72: 71: 70: 67: 66: 65: 64:Indo-European 61: 57: 51: 47: 41: 38: 34: 30: 27:Agulis–Meghri 25: 20: 302: 296: 287: 281: 270:. Retrieved 266: 242:. p. 2. 238: 231: 193: 190: 178: 145: 141: 140: 124: 78: 183:, the last 37:Nakhichevan 327:Categories 272:2023-03-07 223:References 181:Azerbaijan 185:Armenians 156:, but is 126:Glottolog 114:ISO 639-3 206:See also 196:Karabagh 133:agul1245 92:Dialects 69:Armenian 175:History 163:zokerÄ“n 154:dialect 309:  100:Meghri 97:Agulis 200:Julfa 48:(few) 307:ISBN 198:and 142:Zok 79:Zok 22:Zok 329:: 265:. 248:^ 202:. 171:. 315:. 275:. 119:–

Index

Nakhichevan
Language family
Indo-European
Armenian
Eastern Armenian
ISO 639-3
Glottolog
agul1245
Eastern Armenian
dialect
unintelligible
Nakhichevan region
Azerbaijan
Armenians
Karabagh
Julfa
Agulis (historical)
Languages of the Caucasus
Zok: The Armenian dialect of Agulis





"A Documentation of the Zok Language (otherwise known as the Armenian dialect of Agulis) | Endangered Languages Archive"
ISBN
9780080877754
Categories
Armenian languages
Languages of Azerbaijan

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