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Kartvelian language family with a total of about 5.2 million speakers.
This proposed family does not usually include the neighboring Kartvelian languages.
There are approximately 5.2 million speakers of Kartvelian languages worldwide.
Both these languages belong to the Kartvelian language family.
Nearly all also include the Dravidian and Kartvelian language families.
This feature is also shared with other Kartvelian languages.
The presence of Kartvelian languages was also highly probable.
The Kartvelian language family consists of four closely related languages:
Some scholars point that they were not exactly Zan but represented one the Kartvelian languages.
Mingrelian is one of the Kartvelian languages.
Screeve - A similar concept in Kartvelian languages.
Laz is a Kartvelian language.
Along with Mingrelian, it forms the Zan branch of this Kartvelian language family.
The theory suggested that the Kartvelian languages had a common origin with the Semitic languages.
Georgian: Linking Basque to Kartvelian languages is now widely discredited.
Although each continues to be used, Mkhedruli (see below) is taken as the standard for Georgian and its related Kartvelian languages.
In Megrelian there are four types of version marking like in other Kartvelian languages:
The Georgian alphabet is used to write in the Georgian language and other Kartvelian languages.
Part of the small and ancient Kartvelian language family, it is related to no others, though some have fancifully claimed a distant cousinhood with Basque.
Megrelian shares a noun classification scheme with other Kartvelian languages and classifies objects as: '
The Kartvelian peoples are the ethno-linguistic groups of speakers of Kartvelian languages.
These include the Indo-European, Uralic, Altaic and Kartvelian languages.
At the other end of the scale, the Kartvelian languages of Georgia are drastically more permissive of consonant clustering.
In its more restricted, current form, it includes the Indo-European, Uralic, Altaic and Kartvelian languages.
Svan and Mingrelian languages are both Kartvelian languages and are closely related to the national Georgian language.