The following are the current most viewed articles on Wikipedia within Wikipedia's Languages of the Caucasus category. Think of it as a What's Hot list for Languages of the Caucasus. More info »
This is a beta release and so the figures may be a day or two out of date. We'd love to get your thoughts.
| Rank | Topic | Wikipedia views | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Russian language | 12,993 | ![]() |
| 2 | Armenian language | 2,065 | ![]() |
| 3 | Languages of the Caucasus | 282 | ![]() |
| 4 | Karachay-Balkar language | 112 | ![]() |
| 5 | Ibero-Caucasian languages | 27 | ![]() |
| 6 | Franz Anton Schiefner | 10 | ![]() |
This category is for languages spoken in the geographic region of Caucasus.
Language families unique to this region are Northwest Caucasian languages, Northeast Caucasian languages and South Caucasian languages. The relationships between those families is a matter of debate between linguists.
In addition to those families, Indo European (Slavic, Iranian, Armenian) and Turkic languages are spoken in the Caucasus.
This category has the following 4 subcategories, out of 4 total.
The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. This list may not reflect recent changes (learn more).
A |
IOR |
S |
Languages spoken in the Caucasus; that is, in Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, and the Southern Federal District of Russia. For languages belonging to the Caucasian language families, see Category:Caucasian languages.
This category has the following 35 subcategories, out of 35 total.
*A |
CDEGIKL |
L cont.MNORSTU |
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