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One dot indicated a "minor stop" (presumably a simple word break), two dots marked or separated "special words", three dots for a "bigger stop" (such as the appositive name and title "the sovereign Alexander", below, or the title of the Gospel of Matthew, above), and six dots were to indicate the end of the sentence. Starting in the 11th ...
ႣႤႣႠჂ deday deda-y mother- NOM ႨႤႱႭჃჂႱႠ iesoüysa iesu-ysa Jesus- GEN ႣႤႣႠჂ ႨႤႱႭჃჂႱႠ deday iesoüysa deda-y iesu-ysa mother-NOM Jesus-GEN "the mother of Jesus" The "Greek" letters The Asomtavruli alphabet contains three letters which are not needed for the writing of native words: Ⴡ ē , Ⴣ ü and Ⴥ ō . These were added to the alphabet ...
The culture of Georgia has evolved over the country's long history, providing it with a unique national identity and a strong literary tradition based on the Georgian language and alphabet. This strong sense of national identity has helped to preserve Georgian distinctiveness despite repeated periods of foreign occupation.
Georgian has a word derivation system, which allows the derivation of nouns from verb roots both with prefixes and suffixes, for example: From the root - ts’er - 'write', the words ts’erili 'letter' and mts’erali 'writer' are derived. From the root - tsa - 'give', the word gadatsema 'broadcast' is derived.
Despite its popularity this system sometimes leads to ambiguity. The system is mostly used in social networks, forums, chat rooms, etc.The system is greatly influenced by the common QWERTY-derived Georgian keyboard layout that ties each key to each letter in the alphabet (seven of them: T, W, R, S, J, Z, C with the help of the shift key to make another letter).
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The charts below show the way in which the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) represents Georgian language pronunciations in Wikipedia articles. For a guide to adding IPA characters to Wikipedia articles, see Template:IPA and Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Pronunciation § Entering IPA characters.