Khwarshi language

Khwarshi
Khwarshi–Inkhoqwari
аᴴкьи́зас мыц aⁿƛ̓ízas myc
kedaes hikwa
Pronunciation[ãt͡ɬʼizas mɨt͡s]
[kedaes hikwa]
Native toNorth Caucasus
RegionSouthwestern Dagestan
EthnicityKhwarshi people
Native speakers
3,300 (2020 census)
8,500 (2005-2009)
Northeast Caucasian
  • Tsezic
    • Bezhta–Hunzib–Khwarshi
      • Khwarshi
Dialects
Language codes
ISO 639-3khv
Glottologkhva1239
ELPKhvarshi
  Khwarshi
Khvarshi is classified as Definitely Endangered by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger (2010)

Khwarshi (also spelled Xvarshi, Khvarshi, Khvarshi: аᴴкьи́зас мыц) is a Northeast Caucasian language spoken in the Tsumadinsky-, Kizilyurtovsky- and Khasavyurtovsky districts of Dagestan by the Khwarshi people. The exact number of speakers is not known, but the linguist Zaira Khalilova, who has carried out fieldwork in the period from 2005 to 2009, gives the figure 8,500. Other sources give much lower figures, such as Ethnologue with the figure 1,870 and the latest population census of Russia with the figure 3,296. The low figures are because many Khwarshi have registered themselves as being Avar speakers, because Avar is their literary language.

There are six dialects of the Khwarshi language based on their geographical distribution. The dialects are: Upper and Lower Inkhokwari, Kwantlada, Santlada, Khwayni and Khwarshi Proper, originating in their respective villages in the Tsumadinsky district. Due to emigration, Kwantlada-, Upper and Lower Inkhokwari–speaking communities also exist in Oktyabrskoe, Santlada-speaking communities exist in Pervomayskoe and Khwarshi Proper–speaking communities exist in Mutsalaul.