Middle Armenian
Language of the second period in written Armenian
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Middle Armenian (Armenian: Միջին հայերէն or կիլիկեան հայերէն), also called Cilician Armenian (a term that may also refer to modern dialects),[1] was the second phase of the Armenian language, spoken and written in between the 12th and 18th centuries, after Grabar (Classical Armenian) and before Ashkharhabar (Modern Armenian).[2]
developed into modern Armenian
- Middle Armenian
| Middle Armenian | |
|---|---|
| Cilician Armenian | |
| Region | Armenian Highlands, Cilicia |
| Era | c. 1100 - 1700 AD developed into modern Armenian |
Indo-European
| |
| Armenian alphabet | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | axm |
axm | |
| Glottolog | None |
Classical Armenian was predominantly an inflecting and synthetic language; in Middle Armenian, agglutinative and analytical forms influenced the language.[3] In this respect, Middle Armenian is a transition stage from Old Armenian to Modern Armenian (Ashkharhabar).[4] Middle Armenian introduced the letters օ (o) and ֆ (fe), based on the Greek letters "o" and "φ".
Additions
The letter օ, based on the Greek letter o, was added during this period. It originally represented the IPA sound /o/ (close-mid back rounded vowel), which developed out of the Classical Armenian diphthong աւ /ɑw/. Today, in the Armenian alphabet, it represents IPA /ↄ/ (open-mid back rounded vowel) and is indistinguishable in most cases from ո. Therefore, in standard orthography, o is only written word-initially (using ո represents the cluster /vↄ/ initially).
The letter ֆ, based on the Greek letter φ, was added during this period. It represents the IPA sound /f/ (voiceless labiodental fricative), which is not a native phoneme in Armenian. However, it was prevalent in borrowed words, making it necessary to use a letter to write it. It is still used today in the Armenian alphabet.[5]