Language/Abkhazian/Grammar/Abkhazian-Pronouns/az
![Armenian](/image/flag/lang/Language_7.gif)
![Bulgarian](/image/flag/lang/Language_22.gif)
![Chinese, Mandarin (simplified)](/image/flag/lang/Language_28.gif)
![Chinese, Mandarin (traditional)](/image/flag/lang/Language_171.gif)
![Croatian](/image/flag/lang/Language_31.gif)
![Czech](/image/flag/lang/Language_32.gif)
![Dutch](/image/flag/lang/Language_34.gif)
![English](/image/flag/lang/Language_36.gif)
![Finnish](/image/flag/lang/Language_41.gif)
![French](/image/flag/lang/Language_42.gif)
![German](/image/flag/lang/Language_47.gif)
![Hebrew](/image/flag/lang/Language_53.gif)
![Hindi](/image/flag/lang/Language_54.gif)
![Hungarian](/image/flag/lang/Language_55.gif)
![Indonesian](/image/flag/lang/Language_57.gif)
![Iranian Persian](/image/flag/lang/Language_95.gif)
![Italian](/image/flag/lang/Language_61.gif)
![Japanese](/image/flag/lang/Language_62.gif)
![Kazakh](/image/flag/lang/Language_66.gif)
![Korean](/image/flag/lang/Language_70.gif)
![Lithuanian](/image/flag/lang/Language_76.gif)
![Modern Greek (1453-)](/image/flag/lang/Language_48.gif)
![North Azerbaijani](/image/flag/lang/Language_11.gif)
![Polish](/image/flag/lang/Language_96.gif)
![Portuguese](/image/flag/lang/Language_97.gif)
![Romanian](/image/flag/lang/Language_102.gif)
![Russian](/image/flag/lang/Language_103.gif)
![Serbian](/image/flag/lang/Language_107.gif)
![Spanish](/image/flag/lang/Language_119.gif)
![Standard Arabic](/image/flag/lang/Language_6.gif)
![Swedish](/image/flag/lang/Language_122.gif)
![Tagalog](/image/flag/lang/Language_123.gif)
![Tamil](/image/flag/lang/Language_125.gif)
![Thai](/image/flag/lang/Language_128.gif)
![Turkish](/image/flag/lang/Language_133.gif)
![Ukrainian](/image/flag/lang/Language_136.gif)
![Urdu](/image/flag/lang/Language_137.gif)
![Vietnamese](/image/flag/lang/Language_139.gif)
Pronouns in Abkhazian[edit | edit source]
In this lesson, you will learn about personal pronouns in Abkhazian. Personal pronouns are words that replace nouns or noun phrases, making sentences shorter and easier to say.
Subject Pronouns[edit | edit source]
Subject pronouns are used as the subject of a sentence. Here are the Abkhazian subject pronouns:
Abkhazian | Pronunciation | North Azerbaijani Translation |
---|---|---|
Аҧсуа | apʰswa | Abhazca |
Аҧшьа | apʰɕʼa | Sen |
Аҧшьы | apʰɕʼə | Biz |
Аҧшьҭа | apʰɕʼʈʰa | Onlar |
Here are some examples:
- Аҧсуа азыр амҭаҵара. (Apʰswa azyr amtʰaʦʰara.) - I am learning Abkhazian.
- Аҧшьа азыр амҭаҵара. (Apʰɕʼa azyr amtʰaʦʰara.) - You are learning Abkhazian.
- Аҧшьы азыр амҭаҵара. (Apʰɕʼə azyr amtʰaʦʰara.) - We are learning Abkhazian.
- Аҧшьҭа азыр амҭаҵара. (Apʰɕʼʈʰa azyr amtʰaʦʰara.) - They are learning Abkhazian.
Object Pronouns[edit | edit source]
Object pronouns are used as the object of a sentence. Here are the Abkhazian object pronouns:
Abkhazian | Pronunciation | North Azerbaijani Translation |
---|---|---|
Аҧсуаҩ | apʰswatʼ | Məni |
Аҧшьаҩ | apʰɕʼatʼ | Səni |
Аҧшьыҩ | apʰɕʼətʼ | Bizi |
Аҧшьҭаҩ | apʰɕʼʈʰatʼ | Onları |
Here are some examples:
- Аҳәынҭқара аҧсуаҩ аҩаҩын арахьра. (Ahyntʼqʰara apʰswatʼ aʦʼatʼən arabʕra.) - I see you.
- Аҳәынҭқара аҧшьаҩ аҩаҩын арахьра. (Ahyntʼqʰara apʰɕʼatʼ aʦʼatʼən arabʕra.) - You see me.
- Аҳәынҭқара аҧшьыҩ аҩаҩын арахьра. (Ahyntʼqʰara apʰɕʼətʼ aʦʼatʼən arabʕra.) - We see you.
- Аҳәынҭқара аҧшьҭаҩ аҩаҩын арахьра. (Ahyntʼqʰara apʰɕʼʈʰatʼ aʦʼatʼən arabʕra.) - They see you.
Possessive Pronouns[edit | edit source]
Possessive pronouns show who or what something belongs to. In Abkhazian, the possessive pronouns are formed by adding a suffix to the end of the noun. Here are some examples:
Abkhazian | Pronunciation | North Azerbaijani Translation |
---|---|---|
Аҩа | aʦʼa | Benim |
Аҩы | aʦʼə | Bizim |
Аҩҭа | aʦʼʈʰa | Onların |
Here are some examples:
- Аҩа амҭаҵара. (Aʦʼa amtʰaʦʰara.) - This is mine.
- Аҩы амҭаҵара. (Aʦʼə amtʰaʦʰara.) - This is ours.
- Аҩҭа амҭаҵара. (Aʦʼʈʰa amtʰaʦʰara.) - This is theirs.
Conclusion[edit | edit source]
Congratulations! You have learned about Abkhazian pronouns. Keep practicing and you will soon be speaking Abkhazian like a native.