Dialects of Chechen language can be classified by their geographic position within the Chechen language Republic.
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Dialects of Chechen language can be classified by their geographic position within the Chechen language Republic.
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For instance, many of these dialects lack a number of vowels found in the standard Chechen language which were a result of long-distance assimilation between vowel sounds.
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Chechen language usage is strong among the Chechen community in Jordan.
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Some phonological characteristics of Chechen include its wealth of consonants and sounds similar to Arabic and the Salishan languages of North America, as well as a large vowel system resembling those of Swedish and German.
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Chechen language has, like most indigenous languages of the Caucasus, a large number of consonants: about 40 to 60, far more than most European languages.
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Chechen language nouns belong to one of several genders or classes, each with a specific prefix with which the verb or an accompanying adjective agrees.
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Chechen is an ergative, dependent-marking language using eight cases and a large number of postpositions to indicate the role of nouns in sentences.
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Chechen presents interesting challenges for lexicography, as creating new words in the language relies on fixation of whole phrases rather than adding to the end of existing words or combining existing words.
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Chechen language nouns are divided into six lexically arbitrary noun classes.
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In 1992, a new Latin Chechen language alphabet was introduced, but after the defeat of the secessionist government, the Cyrillic alphabet was restored.
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