Eastern Armenian (Armenian: ????????????? arevelahayeren) is one of the two standardized forms of Modern Armenian, the other being Western Armenian. The two standards form a pluricentric language.
Eastern Armenian is spoken in Armenia, Artsakh as well as Georgia, and by the Armenian community in Iran. Although the Eastern Armenian spoken by Armenians in Armenia and Iranian-Armenians are similar, there are pronunciation differences with different inflections. Armenians from Iran also have some words that are unique to them. Due to migrations of speakers from Armenia and Iran to the Armenian Diaspora, the dialect is now very prominent in countries and regions where only Western Armenian was used. It was developed in the early 19th century and is based on the Yerevan dialect.
Video Eastern Armenian
Differences from Western Armenian
Eastern Armenian and Western Armenian are, for the most part, mutually intelligible for educated or literate users of the other, while illiterate or semi literate users of lower registers of each one may have difficulty understanding the other variant. They share the same ISO 639-1 code hy. The ISO 639-3 code for both is hye. Armenian Wikipedia is coded hy and is largely Eastern Armenian. Commercial translations are generally done into Eastern Armenian, the language used by the Republic of Armenia, although not discriminated legally as the official language, which, according to law, is generic "Armenian".
Maps Eastern Armenian
Phonology
Vowels
Monophthongs
Eastern Armenian has six monophthong vowel sounds.
Consonants
This is the Eastern Armenian Consonantal System using symbols from the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA), followed by the corresponding Armenian letter in parentheses.
The phonology of Eastern Armenian preserves the Classical Armenian three-way distinction in stops and affricates: one voiced, one voiceless and one aspirated. Compare this to the phonology of the Western Armenian language, which has kept only a two-way distinction: one voiced and one aspirated. (See the Differences in Phonology from Classical Armenian in the Western Armenian language article for details.)
A few exceptional Eastern Armenian words contain voiced stop letters pronounced as voiceless aspirated stops, like Western Armenian. For instance, ??????? (king) is [t??k??'v??], not [t????'v??]; other examples are ???, ???, ????, ?????, ?????????.
Orthography
The Eastern Armenian language is written using either Traditional Armenian Orthography or Reformed Armenian Orthography. The controversial reformed orthography was developed during the 1920s in Soviet Armenia and is in widespread use today by Eastern Armenian speakers in the Republic of Armenia. Eastern Armenian speakers in Iran continue to use the traditional orthography. Nevertheless, writings of either form are mutually intelligible, since the difference between the two orthographies is not large.
Morphology
Pronouns
Armenian has T-V distinction, with ???, ??, ??? used informally and capitalized ????, ???, ??? as the polite forms.
Nouns
Eastern Armenian nouns have seven cases, one more than Western Armenian. They are: nominative (subject), accusative (direct object), genitive (possession), dative (indirect object), ablative (origin), instrumental (means) and locative (position). Of the seven cases, the nominative and accusative, with exceptions, are the same, and the genitive and dative are the same, meaning that nouns have mostly five distinct forms for case. Nouns in Armenian also decline for number (singular and plural), but do not decline for gender (i.e. masculine or feminine).
Declension in Armenian is based on how the genitive is formed. There are several declensions, but two are the most used (genitive in i, and genitive in u):
Two notes:
First, notice that the Ablative form in Eastern Armenian is /-it?s/, where it is -ê in Western Armenian:
Abl.sg WA karê/EA /???ut?s?/
Second, notice that in Western Armenian, the plural forms followed the u-declension, while in Eastern Armenian the plural forms follow the i-declension:
Gen.pl WA karineru/EA /???in?'?i/
Articles
Like some other languages such as English, Armenian has definite and indefinite articles. The indefinite article in Eastern Armenian is /mi/, which precedes the noun:
mi ?i?k? ('a book', Nom.sg), /mi ??k?i/ ('of a book', Gen.sg)
The definite article is a suffix attached to the noun, and is one of two forms, either /-?/ or /-n/, depending on whether the final sound is a vowel or a consonant, and whether a following word begins with a vowel or consonant:
/m??d?/ ('the man', Nom.sg)
/???in/ ('the barley' Nom.sg)
but:
/s? m??dn ?/ ('This is the man')
/s? ???in ?/ ('This is the barley')
Adjectives
Adjectives in Armenian do not decline for case or number, and precede the noun:
/l?v ?i?k?? ('the good book', Nom.sg)
/l?v ??k?i ('of the good book', Gen.sg)
Verbs
Verbs in Armenian are based on two basic series of forms, a "present" form and an "imperfect" form. From this, all other tenses and moods are formed with various particles and constructions. There is a third form, the preterite, which in Armenian is tense in its own right, and takes no other particles or constructions. (See also Armenian verbs and Eastern Armenian verb table for more detailed information.)
The present tense in Eastern Armenian is based on two conjugations (a, e). In Eastern Armenian, the distinct conjugations in e and i merged as e.
The present tense (as we know it in English) is made by adding the present tense of linel after the present participle form of the verb:
j?s k??dum ?m ?i?k??/ (I am reading the book)
j?s si?um ?m ?jd ?i?k??/ (I love that book)
See also
- Armenian language
- Armenian verbs
- Eastern Armenian verb table
- Western Armenian language
- Western Armenia
- Eastern Armenia
- Language families and languages
- IETF language tag:hy-arevela
References
Bibliography
- Dora Sakayan. (2007) Eastern Armenian for the English-speaking World. A Contrastive Approach (with CD-ROM). Yerevan State University Press. ISBN 5808408903
External links
- Arak29 Eastern Armenian
- Arak29 Western Armenian
- Arak29 On-Line Dictionaries
Eastern Armenian Online Dictionaries
- Nayiri.com (Library of Armenian dictionaries):
- Armenian Explanatory Dictionary (??????? ?????????? ???????) by Stepan Malkhasiants (about 130,000 entries). Written in traditional Armenian orthography. One of the definitive Armenian dictionaries.
- Explanatory Dictionary of Contemporary Armenian (??????????? ????? ????? ?????????? ???????) published by the Armenian SSR Academy of Sciences between 1969 and 1980. In Eastern Armenian, reformed orthography (about 125,000 headwords).
- Modern Armenian Explanatory Dictionary (???? ???????? ?????????? ???????) by Edward Aghayan (about 135,600 headwords). In Eastern Armenian and Soviet Armenian orthography.
- Armenian Language Thesaurus (????? ????? ??????????? ???????) by Ashot Sukiasyan (about 83,000 entries). In Eastern Armenian and Soviet Armenian orthography.
Source of article : Wikipedia