In Abaza language Abaza, like Abkhaz, has no grammatical cases. Abaza is written as well as spoken. Read More
In Abkhaz Abaza and Abkhaz are so similar that many linguists consider them to be dialects of a single language. The traditional economy of the Abkhaz is based on cattle breeding, agriculture, viticulture, and beekeeping. In religion they are chiefly Sunnīte Muslims and Eastern Orthodox Christians. Read More
member of Abkhazo-Adyghian languages
In Caucasian languages: Abkhazo-Adyghian languages …Abkhazo-Adyghian group consists of the Abkhaz, Abaza, Adyghian, Kabardian, and Ubykh languages. Adyghians and Kabardians are often considered members of a larger, Circassian group. Abkhaz, with about 90,000 speakers, is spoken in Abkhazia (the southern slopes of the western Greater Caucasus, Georgia). The other languages are spread over the northern… Read More
use in Transcaucasia
In Transcaucasia: The people Abkhaz, numerically the most important Abkhazo-Adyghian language of Transcaucasia, is spoken chiefly in Abkhazia republic, Georgia; and Abaza, which is closely related to Abkhaz, is spoken along a portion of the coast of the Georgian republic of Ajaria. Read More