Budukh language


Budukh or Budugh is a Samur language of the Northeast Caucasian language family spoken in parts of the Quba Rayon of Azerbaijan. It is spoken by about 200 of approximately 1,000 ethnic Budukhs.
Budukh is a severely endangered language, and classified as such by UNESCO's Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger.

Grammar

Gender and agreement

Authier reports that Budugh has six 'gender-number' classes:
Verbs normally agree with their absolutive argument in gender. In the following examples, the verb 'beat' shows animate agreement with 'donkey' and non-human plural agreement with 'donkeys'.
Compare these examples with the following, where the verb agrees with the intransitive subject:

Verb agreement

Budukh verbs typically agree with a single argument, the absolutive. In the agreement paradigms, the majority of verbs show no overt agreement for the masculine, neuter, and nonhuman plural. Consider the following paradigm for the verb 'keep' in the perfective :
In this paradigm, /ˤa/ is a preverb which must appear with the verb root /q/ 'keep', and the agreement morphology appears between the preverb and the root. Due to historical changes, the relationships between the various members of an agreement paradigm are often more complex and show changes of vowel and/or consonant. The following perfective paradigm for 'go' shows this
Mvi-xhi
Fv-r-xhi
Avüxhü < *vi-v-xhi
N/NPLvidki < *vi-d-xhi
HPLvibki < *vi-b-xhi

Word order

Budukh is an SOV language, as seen in the following example:
It has possessors before possessed nouns:
Adjectives appear before the nouns that they modify: