Volume 9. Caucasian languages
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Caucasian → Northeast Caucasian → Nakh
Main country: Russian Federation (show on the map)
Map designer: Yuri Koryakov
| [B‑2] | Prosodic unit carrier | Syllable [B‑2‑1] | ||
| [B‑3] | Character of prosodic unit by its choice | Non-phonological [B‑3‑2] | ||
| [B‑4] | Stress type (quality characteristics) | Dynamic [B‑4‑1] | ||
| [B‑5] | Stress fixedness | Fixed [B‑5‑2] | ||
| [B‑16] | Target of vowel harmony | No vowel harmony [B‑16‑9] |
| [C‑1] | Syllable onset | Both null and non-null onset possible [C‑1‑4] |
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| [C‑2] | Syllable coda | Both null and non-null coda possible [C‑2‑4] |
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| [C‑3] | Consonant clusters in syllable | Consonant clusters are possible at both the onset and the coda of syllable [C‑3‑4] |
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| [E‑1] | Type of language by type of morpheme combination in a word | Agglutinative with some fusional features [E‑1‑2] | ||
| [E‑4] | Type of language by degree of morpheme cohesion | Synthetic with elements of analytism [E‑4‑6] |
| [G‑1] | Number in nouns | Singular and plural [G‑1‑1] | ||
| [G‑2] | Single number marking | Unmarked [G‑2‑2] | ||
| [G‑6] | Numeral system | Vigesimal [G‑6‑6] |
| [H‑1] | Number of noun cases | Thirteen-twenty [H‑1‑4] | ||
| [H‑4] | Case marking of possessive relations | Genitive [H‑4‑1] | ||
| [H‑5] | Other means of expressing possessive relations | Possessive pronouns [H‑5‑4] |
| [I‑5] | Tense forms | Past [I‑5‑1] | ||
| [I‑5] | Tense forms | Present [I‑5‑2] | ||
| [I‑5] | Tense forms | Future [I‑5‑3] |
| [J‑5] | Morphological expression of (in)definiteness | Absent [J‑5‑1] | ||
| [J‑6] | Words expressing (in)definiteness | Pronouns [J‑6‑2] | ||
| [J‑8] | Expression of negation | Negative affixes [J‑8‑1] | ||
| [J‑9] | Negation marker position | Postposition [J‑9‑4] |
| [K‑1] | Personal pronouns inflection | Case affixes of pronouns are the same as noun case affixes [K‑1‑2] | ||
| [K‑2] | Articles | No articles [K‑2‑1] | ||
| [K‑7] | Number of conjugation types | Nine types of conjugation [K‑7‑7] | ||
| [K‑14] | Attribute agreement of adjectives | Always present [K‑14‑1] | ||
| [K‑15] | Attributive agreement types | In number [K‑15‑2] | ||
| [K‑15] | Attributive agreement types | In case [K‑15‑3] | ||
| [K‑15] | Attributive agreement types | In class [K‑15‑5] | ||
| [K‑16] | Inflectional categories of noun | Number and case [K‑16‑7] | ||
| [K‑18] | Inflection means | Internal flection, stem truncation/augmentation and affixes [K‑18‑10] |
| [L‑1] | Word formation means | Derivation and compounding [L‑1‑12] | ||
| [L‑2] | Derivation affixes | Prefixes and suffixes [L‑2‑3] |
| [M‑1] | Morphosyntactic alignment | Ergative with elements of accusative [M‑1‑9] | ||
| [M‑2] | Word order fixedness | Non-fixed [M‑2‑2] | ||
| [M‑5] | Pro-drop | Impossible [M‑5‑2] |
| [N‑1] | Clauses order in compound sentence | Not fixed [N‑1‑3] | ||
| [N‑2] | Dependent clause distinctions in complex sentences | Special form of predicate [N‑2‑4] | ||
| [N‑3] | Dependent clause predicate | Both finite and non-finite forms possible [N‑3‑3] | ||
| [N‑4] | Compound sentence types | Subordination and compounding [N‑4‑4] | ||
| [N‑5] | Compound sentence syndesis and asyndeton | Both syndesis and asyndeton possible [N‑5‑3] |