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Topic: Kirghiz language


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In the News (Wed 11 Nov 09)

  
  Kirghiz - Qwika
The Kirghiz Language The Kirghiz Language (Kyrgyz of tili) It is extended...
Kizilsu Kirghiz Autonomous Prefecture Kizilsu Kirghiz Autonomous Prefecture (Chinese:克孜勒苏柯尔克孜自治州, Pinyin: Kèzīlèsū Kē'ěrkèzī Zìzhìzhōu, Kirghiz: كىزىلسۋ كىزگىز اۆتونومييالى وبلاستى / Кызылсу Кыргыз aвтономиялы...
SSR - Lithuanian SSR - Moldavian SSR - Latvian SSR - Kirghiz SSR - Tadzhik SSR - Armenian SSR - Turkmen SSR...
www.qwika.com /find/Kirghiz   (444 words)

  
  Kirghiz - UPSID Language Profile   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
segst(n, [voiceless, aspirated, dental_alveolar, plosive], [breton, bulgarian, bengali, kashmiri, punjabi, e_armenian, kirghiz, mongolian, korean, akan, igbo, beembe, swahili, khasi, sedang, khmer, lakkia, yay, lungchow, cham, adzera, mandarin, taishan, hakka, amoy, fuchow, kan, burmese, lahu, jingpho, karen, nambakaengo, haida, tolowa, mazahua, kwakw7ala, tiwa, wiyot, wichita, dakota, s_nambiquara, quechua, cofan, gilyak, lak, burushaski]).
segst(n, [voiceless, aspirated, uvular, plosive], [kirghiz, sui, lahu, haida, klamath, kwakw7ala, quechua, jaqaru, gilyak, lak, burushaski]).
segst(n, [voiceless, uvular, plosive], [kurdish, kirghiz, arabic, neo_aramaic, tuareg, awiya, iraqw, hamer, sui, atayal, lahu, haida, tlingit, hupa, wintu, totonac, k7ekchi, nootka, quileute, squamish, puget_sound, luiseno, hopi, pomo, achumawi, abipon, quechua, jaqaru, gununa_kena, greenlandic, aleut, ket, yukaghir, chukchi, gilyak, burushaski]).
www.langmaker.com /db/ups_kirghiz.htm   (450 words)

  
 [No title]
The Kirghiz, in private as well as in public, have expressed their approval of their new environment, which is entirely suitable for raising sheep, most of the grass around Altindere being of a variety with which they are familiar from the Pamirs.
Language difficulties among individuals up to the age of 35 are basically non-existent, as they all have nearly total fluencey in modern Turkish.
This phenomenon of "different languages" or the creation thereof was encouraged, indeed enforced, and their "existence" propagandized by the Soviet authorities, and prior to that by their tsarist predecessors.[6] The Kirghiz of Van express a strong affinity with the Chaghatay dialect, referring to it as Turkistani, or simply Turki.
www.angelfire.com /on/paksoy/kirghiz.html   (3138 words)

  
 www.telelanguage.com
In the event that all of our interpreters in a particular language are busy on calls, we will give you an option to be put in the que until a needed language interpreter becomes available or we can call you back when someone becomes available to handle your call.
Languages cannot be literally interpreted; therefore, the message is conveyed with the important details.
In the event you need a language that is not on our list, in most cases we will be able to find an interpreter in a desired language fairly quickly by subcontracting through an established network of language companies.
www.telelanguage.com /customersupportfaqs.cfm   (1162 words)

  
 Soviet Language Policy in Central Asia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Since a nation is primarily defined by its language and (to a lesser degree) its territory, one of the first tasks of the government was to legislate geographic boundaries and develop national languages for those groups that were considered to be nations.
This process, in which the Turkic languages were subjected to Russian phonological, morphological, syntactic and lexical semantic influences, led on the one hand to the undermining of their structures and systems and, on the other, narrowed their social functions, creating the necessary preconditions for the dominant language eventually to supersede them (Bruchis 1984:138).
The former increased from 211 in 1978 to 618 in 1979 to 1050 in 1981-82.
www.oxuscom.com /lang-policy.htm   (9502 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Kyrgyz language   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Kyrgyz, also Kirghiz (Кыргыз тили), is a Northwestern Turkic language, and, together with Russian, an official language of Kyrgyzstan.
The Turkic languages are a group of related languages that are spoken by a variety of people distributed across a vast area from Eastern Europe to Siberia and Western China.
The Cyrillic alphabet (or azbuka, from the old name of the first letters) is an alphabet used to write six natural Slavic languages (Belarusian, Bulgarian, Macedonian, Russian, Serbian, and Ukrainian) and many other languages of the former Soviet Union, Asia and Eastern Europe.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Kyrgyz-language   (434 words)

  
 Kyrgyz language -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
тили), is a Northwestern (A subfamily of Altaic languages) Turkic language, and, together with (A native or inhabitant of Russia) Russian, an official language of (A landlocked republic in west central Asia bordering on northwestern China; formerly an Asian soviet but became independent in 1991) Kyrgyzstan.
Kyrgyz is written in modified (An alphabet drived from the Greek alphabet and used for writing Slavic languages) Cyrillic (Kyrgyzstan) and modified (The Semitic language of the Arabs; spoken in a variety of dialects) Arabic ((A communist nation that covers a vast territory in eastern Asia; the most populous country in the world) China) scripts.
A (Any dialect of the language of ancient Rome) Latin script was used between 1928 and 1940 in Kyrgyzstan, and is enjoying official endorsement again, but actual use is sporadic and inconsistent.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/k/ky/kyrgyz_language.htm   (234 words)

  
 Turkic language
The forms of the lost languages of the Khitans, Tanguts and Jurchens, like the Korean writing, had all appeared to be some kind of revision on top of Chinese pictographs.
A simple comparison of some words in later Mongolian language yields the following interesting points: The word for the Mongolinas, Mongqol irgen, is the same word 'irgen' as used in ancient Chinese pronunciation which could be corrobated by the Cantonese pronunciation of 'irgen' and Japanese pronuncitation of 'nin' or 'dgen'.
After the collapse of the Kushan empire, Bactrian language continued in use till the ninth-century, as evidenced by inscriptions from the Tochi valley in Pakistan and the remnants of Buddhist and Manichean manuscripts found in the Turfan oasis.
www.findthelinks.com /history/Huns_Turks/Turkic_language.htm   (1112 words)

  
 Kirghiz Rugs Guide
Kirghiz is a language spoken by people called Kirghiz.
It is in the Altaic Language family and is related to the Turkic languages and to Mongol.
Kirghiz are very special to rug scholars because they have been very isolated from corrupting market influences.
www.spongobongo.com /0her9889.htm   (659 words)

  
 Welcome to AATT - Tatar
The Tatar language belongs to the Altaic or north western Qypchak branch of the Turkic language family.
The language closest to Tatar among all Turkic languages is Bashkir.
In June 1920, Tatar was declared the official language of the new Autonomous republic of the Soviet Union along with Russian.
www.princeton.edu /~turkish/aatt/tatar.htm   (1452 words)

  
 META Language Tag - Metadata Elements
This document is mostly concerned with how to specify the primary language(s) (there could be more than one) and the base language (there is only one) in HTML documents.
All 2-letter tags are interpreted according to ISO standard 639, "Code for the representation of names of languages" [ISO 639].
Language META Tag and ISO 639 2 letter and 3 letter language codes can be found at the W3C - www.w3.org - ISO 639 Language Codes.
www.seoconsultants.com /meta-tags/language.asp   (153 words)

  
 Kirghiz language resources
Kirghiz tlh   Klingon ; tlhIngan-Hol kom kv Komi kon kg Kongo kok   Konkani kor ko Korean kos   Kosraean kpe   Kpelle...
Kirghiz Komi Kongo Konkani Korean Kpelle Kru Kuanyama Kumyk Kurdish Kurukh Kusaie Kutenai Ladino Lahnda Lamba Langue d'oc Lao Lapp Latin Latvian Letzeburgesch Lezgian Lingala Lithuanian Lozi Luba...
KIRGHIZ KIRGHIZ, a large and widespread division of the Turkish family, of which there are two main branches, the Kara-Kirghiz of the uplands and the Kirghiz-Kazaks of the steppe.
www.mongabay.com /indigenous_ethnicities/languages/languages/Kirghiz.html   (1303 words)

  
 Kyrgyz language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kyrgyz or Kirghiz (Кыргыз тили) is a Northwestern Turkic language, and, together with Russian, an official language of Kyrgyzstan.
After Kyrgyzstan gained independence in 1991, there was a popular idea among some of the Kyrgyz politicians to return Kyrgyz language back to the Latin alphabet, but this plan has never been implemented.
This page was last modified 16:17, 17 October 2005.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Kirghiz_language   (129 words)

  
 UCLA Language Materials Project Language Profiles Page
Kazakh and Kyrgyz are now the current standard references for the languages and peoples of Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan respectively, but this has not always been the case.
The Turkic languages, and the Mongolian-Tungus (Manchu-Tungusic) languages of Siberia and northeastern China are major divisions of the Altaic family or phylum (see Ruhlen 1987).
As a SOV language where objects precede the verb, Krygyz has postpositions rather than prepositions, and relative clauses that precede the verb.
www.lmp.ucla.edu /Profile.aspx?LangID=62&menu=004   (1049 words)

  
 Kirghiz SSR - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kirghiz SSR (Kirghiz Soviet Socialist Republic) also known as Kirghizia was the name for Kyrgyzstan during its time as part of the USSR.
Established on October 14, 1924 as the Kara-Kirghiz AO (Autonomous Oblast) of the Russian SFSR, it was transformed into the Kirghiz ASSR on February 1, 1926, still being a part of the Russian SFSR.
On December 5, 1936 it became a separate constituent republic of the USSR.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Kirghiz_SSR   (245 words)

  
 Hindi Translation Service - English to Hindi Translation   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Some estimates, put the total number of native speakers at about 500 million and the total number of people who understand the language may be as high as 800 million.
Hindi is the national language of India and is spoken by almost half a billion people in India and throughout the world and is the world’s second most spoken language.
Languages and dialects in the Western Hindi group are Hindustani, Haryanvi, Braj Bhasha, Kanauji, Bundeli; see separate entries.
www.appliedlanguage.com /languages/hindi_translation.shtml   (519 words)

  
 learning Kyrgyz: Books: Kyrgyz language and Kyrgyzstan
The dictionary covers all eight major Turkic languages in their alphabets and in a roman transliteration.
It includes examples taken from the literary language under Soviet rule and as Kyrgyz (Kirghiz) is used in the West and in China.
The book is designed to present the reader with an understanding of both the variety of materials available in Kyrgyz and with the internal structure of the language.
kyrgyzcha.blogspot.com /2005/05/books-kyrgyz-language-and-kyrgyzstan.html   (327 words)

  
 Turk & Uygur (UIGUR, UIGHUIR, UIGUIR, and WEIWUER) -- Political, Social, Cultural, Historical Analysis Of China -- ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
After the collapse of the Kushan empire, Bactrian language continued in use till the ninth-century, as evidenced by inscriptions from the Tochi valley in Pakistan and the remnants of Buddhist and Manichean manuscripts found in the Turfan oasis.
When the Kirghiz defeated the Uygurs in AD 840 and took over northern Mongolia, there was a group of people called the Naimans who remained in their homelands in the Altai Mountains and attached themselves to the Kirghiz.
Kirghiz, with the help of a defector Huihu (Uygur) general and combining a cavalry forces of 100000, defeated Huihu (Uygur) and killed the Huihu khan around AD 840s.
www.uglychinese.org /uygur.htm   (14154 words)

  
 Translation Services Company - Translation Quotes Available Online   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Applied Language fund raising for Barnardo’s in Huddersfield
Applied Language Solutions started in October 2003 and has grown from one man Gavin Wheeldon to over 60 employees.
We want you to become part of the team and start your way to a fantastic career and benefits as a Applied Language member of staff.
www.appliedlanguage.com   (453 words)

  
 Latin Translation Service - English to Latin Translation   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Latin is unlike most of the languages we translate, in that it’s an extinct language.
Over 50% of English language, in common use, is taken, directly or indirectly, from the Latin language.
The Romance languages are directly descended from Latin, and many words adapted from Latin are found in other modern languages.
www.appliedlanguage.com /languages/latin_translation.shtml   (421 words)

  
 Kyrgyz Translation Services - Translators English/Kirghiz
Kazakh is a reference to the people and language of Kazakhstan while Kyrgyz is now the standard terminology for the people and language of Kyrgyzstan.
While standard modern Kyrgyz is based on the northern dialect (which receives significant influence from the Mongolian language), the principal influence of the northern dialect is Kazakh, while Uzbek has been the greatest influence on the Southern dialect.
Not until the Soviet period was the Kyrgyz language standardized after it began to be used for governmental purposes along with Russian.
www.greentranslations.com /kyrgyz-translation.html   (249 words)

  
 Spanish Translation Service - English to Spanish Translation   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Language is a living thing it develops and changes constantly.
To ensure our translators keep abreast of the language our Spanish translators live in-county and translate into their mother tongue.
The Aragonese dialect of Spanish is different from the Aragonese language.
www.appliedlanguage.com /languages/spanish_translation.shtml   (523 words)

  
 KLEIN: Syriac Writings and Turkic Language according to Central Asian Tombstone Inscriptions
After a brief note on the use of Syriac as an ecclesiastical language amongst Turkic communities, the paper proceeds to show how those who erected the inscriptions were not familiar with Syriac, and then discusses forms of the letters used in the inscriptions.
The study is not a philologist one; rather, it aims at presenting some of the pecularities in the said tombstone inscriptions, from the standpoint of research into the history of religion.
2 Recent finds of around 40 tombstones on Kirghiz territory show clearly that the actual Christian center, with a large cemetery, was at Bishkek, whereas the second cemetery of Burana, near Tokmak, yielded relatively modest finds3 All these tombstones can be dated from circa 1250 to 1342, in Almalyk up to the 1370s.
syrcom.cua.edu /Hugoye/Vol5No2/HV5N2Klein.html   (3070 words)

  
 The U of MT -- Mansfield Library LangFing Altaic
You have reached the page on Altaic languages, which is just one part of the "Language Finger" homepage, which is an index by language to the holdings of the Mansfield Library of The University of Montana.
The language is spoken in the Chuvash Autonomous Republic.
Mongolian was the language of the great Mongol Empire established by Genghis Khan in the 13th century.
www.lib.umt.edu /guide/lang/altaiclh.htm   (2024 words)

  
 The Hungarian Language
The origin of the Hungarian language is one of the several mysteries that surround the early history of the Magyars.
The most closely related language to Hungarian is spoken on the eastern side of the Ural Mountain in western Sibiria by Khanty and Manshi people.
These words also show a general affinity to the so called Eastern-Turkic languages (see the Altaic language families) spoken in certain parts of Central-Asia, such as Kirghiz, Kazakh, and Uyghur, the language of the largest minority of China living on both sides of the Tien-Shan.
studentorgs.utexas.edu /husa/language.html   (886 words)

  
 UniLang Community :: Language Resources
This page is meant to be a general overview page and a kind of summary about how various languages make use of diminutives.
This is a list of the phrase "I don't speak [language name]" in many languages.
This is a list of the phrase "Merry Christmas and a happy new year" in many languages.
home.unilang.org /main/resources.php?l=en§ion=bylanguage   (392 words)

  
 Future tense   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Chekalina, E. "Funktsional'no-smyslovaja interpretatsija proshlogo i budushchego v sovremennom shvedskom jazyke." [The functional-meaning interpretation of the present and future in the contermporary Swedish language.] Vestnik moskovskogo universiteta.
"Language Contact, Grammaticalization Theory and the Albanian Future." Presented at 12th Biennial Conference on Balkan and South Slavic Linguistics, Literature and Folklore, University of Kansas, Lawrence, May 4-6, 2000.
"Eesti ja soome &emdash; futuurumita keeled?" [Estonian and Finnish: futureless languages?.] Keel ja Kirjandus 37.534-47, 603-16.
www.scar.utoronto.ca /~binnick/TENSE/FutTense.html   (8338 words)

  
 Hebrew translation you can trust   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
Hebrew is one of the world's oldest languages, spoken and written today in much the same way as it was more than two thousand years ago.
After ceasing to exist as a spoken language about 250 B.C., it was reborn as a modern language in the 19th century, and today it is the principal language of the State of Israel.
Hebrew gradually came into use among the Jewish settlers in Palestine and became the official language of the State of Israel when that nation was created in 1948.
www.appliedlanguage.com /languages/hebrew_translation.shtml   (436 words)

  
 Translating Simplified Chinese   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-18)
However, if the translation needs to be colloquial - for instance, translating a training handbook for salesmen - the process becomes more complex, because the language habits of different regions have to be taken into consideration.
To ensure our translators keep abreast of the language our Simplified Chinese translators live in-county and translate into their mother tongue.
But as with most other languages Chinese has it’s own cultural issues so there are always more considerations than just the language and style of copy.
www.appliedlanguage.com /languages/simplified_chinese_translation.shtml   (852 words)

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