- is
probably higher. The
territory of the
Bezhtas was
nominally part of the Avar Khanate. In 1806, the
Bezhtas were
incorporated into the
Russian empire...
-
Viikberg (1993). "The
Bezhtas". The Red Book of the
Peoples of the
Russian Empire. The
Bezhta People and
Language (P.J. Hillery)
Bezhta Vocabulary List (from...
-
Bezhta (or
alternatively Bezheta, also
called Kapucha or Kapuchin)
could refer to: the
Bezhta language the
Bezhta people "kapuchin" may be a misspelling...
- and
Bezhta–Hunzib–Khwarshi,
according to
research published in 2009. They were
formerly classified geographically into East
Tsezic (Hinukh, and
Bezhta) and...
-
Arshtins Bats
Chechens Kists Durdzuks Ingush Malkh Tsezic (Didoic) peoples:
Bezhtas Hinukhs Hunzibs Khwarshis Tsez
Northwest Caucasian languages Abazins Abkhazians...
- Tsez (Dido) (12,500)
Hinukh (Hinux, Ginukh) (5 as of 2010)
Bezhta–Hunzib–Khwarshi
Bezhta (Kapucha) (6,800)
Hunzib (Gunzib) (1,420)
Khwarshi (Khvarshi)...
- required)
Belarusian at
Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
Bezhta at
Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)
Bosnian at Ethnologue...
-
sometimes used in a
broader sense to
refer to the Tsez as well as the
Bezhtas, Hinukhs,
Khwarshis and Hunzibs,
which are also
categorized as Avar subgroups...
- Niger–Congo →
Bantu → Eton
Cameroon Ewondo, Eton
Christianity Bezhta Northeast Caucasian →
Tsezic →
Bezhta Russia (Tsuntinsky District)
Islam → ****
Islam Bhils...
-
superscript en (ᵸ) is a
phonetic symbol and a
grapheme used in the
writing of the
Bezhta and
Godoberi languages. It is
formed of the
Cyrillic letter en ⟨н⟩ put in...