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Lezgi Language | colspan="2" bgcolor="lightgreen" style="font-size:120%"|Lezgi ( ) | | valign="top"|Spoken in: | Russia, also spoken in Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan. | | valign="top"|Region: | Southern Dagestan, western Caspian Sea coast, central Caucasus. | | valign="top"|Total speakers: | about 450,000 | | valign="top"|Ranking: | Not in top 100, see http://www.davidpbrown.co.uk/help/top-100-languages-by-population.html. | valign="top"|Genetic classification: | Caucasian languages Northeast Caucasian Lezgian languages Lezgi | | colspan="2" bgcolor="lightgreen"|Official status | | valign="top"|Official language of: | valign="top"|- | | valign="top"|Regulated by: | valign="top"|- | | colspan="2" bgcolor="lightgreen"|Language codes | | a href="/encyclopedia/ISO-639" title="ISO 639">ISO 639-1 | - | | SO 639-2 | lez | | a href="/encyclopedia/SIL" title="SIL">SIL | LEZ | Classification Lezgi belongs to the Lezgian group of the Dagestan or Northeast Caucasian language family. Geographic distribution In 1996, Lezgi was spoken by about 257,000 people in Russia, mainly in Southern Dagestan, as well as 171,400 people in Azerbaijan. Lezgi is also spoken in Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan. The total number of speakers is about 451,000. Official status Lezgi is not an official language. Dialects The Lezgi spoken in Dagestan has ten spoken dialects: Lezgi, Tabassaran, Rutul, Aghul, Tsakhur, Budukh, Kryts, Khinalugh, Udi and Archi. These dialects have the same names as the Lezgin tribes. These Lezgin tribes use a modified version of the Cyrillic alphabet to write their Lezgin dialects. The Quba dialect spoken in Azerbaijan differs considerably from the standard language. Grammar Lezgi is unusual for a Caucasian language in not having noun classes. External links
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