| Bashkir language | ||
|---|---|---|
| Башҡорт теле Başqort tele | ||
| Spoken in | Russia, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan | |
| Total speakers | 2,059,700[1] | |
| Language family | Altaic | |
| Official status | ||
| Official language in | Bashkortostan | |
| Regulated by | No official regulation | |
| Language codes | ||
| ISO 639-1 | ba | |
| ISO 639-2 | bak | |
| ISO 639-3 | bak | |
| Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. | ||
The Bashkir language (self-designation:
башҡорт теле (·info) ) is a Turkic language, and is the language of the Bashkirs. It is co-official with Russian in the Republic of Bashkortostan.
Contents |
Speakers
Speakers of the Bashkir language mostly live in the Russian republic of Bashkortostan. Substantial number of the speakers also live in Chelyabinsk, Orenburg, Sverdlovsk, Samara and Kurgan Oblasts, Khanty-Mansi Autonomous Okrug—Yugra, Tatarstan and Udmurtia. Large Bashkir minority groups also live in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.
Alphabet and dialects
After the Mongol invasion, the Kypchak language became more common due to the fact that it was the language spoken by the majority of the Golden Horde tribes.
The modern Bashkir language is part of the Kypchak group of Turkic languages. Today the language has many dialects, some of which are similar to Tatar. In the past, Bashkirs used the Chagatay language as a written language. In the late 19th century it was replaced with a regional variety of Turki, a literary Turkic language, which was in use until 1923.
Both Chagatay and Turki were written in a variant of the Arabic script.
In 1923, a writing system based on the Arabic script was specifically created for the Bashkir language. At the same time, a Bashkir literary language was created, moving away from the Tatar influences. At first, it used a modified Arabic alphabet. In 1930 it was replaced with a Latin-based alphabet, which was in turn replaced with an adapted Cyrillic alphabet in the winter of 1938.
The alphabet used by Bashkir is based on the Cyrillic alphabet, with the addition of the following letters: Ә ә [æ], Ө ө [œ], Ү ү , Ғ ғ , Ҡ ҡ , Ң ң , Ҙ ҙ , Ҫ ҫ , Һ һ .
| Аа (а) | [a] | Бб (бэ) | [b] | Вв (вэ) | [v] |
| Гг (гэ) | [g] | Ғғ (ғы) | Дд (дэ) | [d] | |
| Ҙҙ (ҙэ) | [ð] | Ее (йе) | [e], [je] | Ёё (йо) | [jo] |
| Жж (жэ) | Зз (зэ) | [z] | Ии (и) | [i] | |
| Йй (ҡыҫҡа и) | [j] | Кк (ка) | [k] | Ҡҡ (ҡы) | [q] |
| Лл (эль) | [l] | Мм (эм) | [m] | Нн (эн) | [n] |
| Ңң (эң) | [ŋ] | Оо (о) | [o] | Өө (ө) | [ø] |
| Пп (пэ) | [p] | Рр (эр) | [r] | Сс (эс) | [s] |
| Ҫҫ (ҫэ) | [θ] | Тт (тэ) | [t] | Уу (у) | [u] |
| Үү (ү) | [y] | Фф (эф) | [f] | Хх (ха) | [x] |
| Һһ (һа) | [h] | Цц (цэ) | Чч (чэ) | ||
| Шш (ша) | Щщ (ща) | Ъъ (ҡатылыҡ билдәһе) | [ʔ] | ||
| Ыы (ы) | Ьь (йомшаҡлыҡ билдәһе) | Ээ (э) | [e] | ||
| Әә (ә) | [æ] | Юю (йу) | [ju] | Яя (йа) | [ja] |
Bibliography
- Poppe, Nicholas (1997), Bashkir Manual, Routledge, pp. 186, ISBN 978-0700708369
References
External links (in Bashkir)
- Ethnologue entry for Bashkir
- Bashkir folk-tales and legends (English)
- Swadesh list in Bashkir (Bashkir)
- "Bashinform" news agency (Bashkir)
- "Bashkortostan" newspaper (Bashkir)
- Site on the 450th anniversary of Bashkortostan's joining Russia (Bashkir)
- Ufa city administration's site (Bashkir)
- "Ural batyr" epos (Bashkir)
- Bashkir folk songs' texts (Bashkir)
- Bashkir folk-tales and legends (Bashkir)
- E. Čaušević: Baschkirisch. in: M. Okuka (Hg.): Lexikon der Sprachen des europäischen Ostens. Klagenfurt (= Wieser Enzyklopädie des europäischen Ostens 10) 2002. S. 777. (PDF-Datei; 187 kB) (German)
- Bashkir Grammar (can be downloaded as PDF/Word) (Russian)
- Учебник по башкирскому языку (Russian)
- Bashkir folk-tales and legends (Russian)
- Bashkir folk tales, by Andrey Platonov (Russian)
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This page was last modified on 4 March 2010 at 02:20.
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