Uzbek language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Uzbek
O‘zbek, Ўзбек, أۇزبېك
Spoken in: Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, Russia, China, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, USA
Total speakers: 21.5 million 
Ranking: 54
Language family: Altaic[1] (controversial)
 Turkic
  Eastern Turkic
   Uzbek 
Official status
Official language of: Uzbekistan
Regulated by: no official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-1: uz
ISO 639-2: uzb
ISO/FDIS 639-3: variously:
uzb — Uzbek (generic)
uzn — Northern Uzbek
uzs — Southern Uzbek

Uzbek (O‘zbek tili in Latin script, Ўзбек тили in Cyrillic script) is an Eastern Turkic language and the official language of Uzbekistan. It has about 21.5 million native speakers, and it is spoken by the Uzbeks in Uzbekistan and elsewhere in Central Asia. Uzbek belongs to the Qarluq family of Turkic languages, and consequently its lexicon and grammar are most closely linked to the Uighur language, while other influences rose from Persian, Arabic and Russian.

Contents

[edit] History

Turkic speakers have probably settled in the Amu-Darya, Syr-Darya and Zeravshan river basins since at least AD600-700, gradually ousting the speakers of Indo-Iranian languages who previously inhabited Soghdiana, Bactria and Chorasmia, or else changing their linguistic habits. The first Turkic dynasty in the region was that of the Karakhanids in the 9th- 12th centuries AD, who were a Qarluq tribe.

The Chagatai language championed by Mir Ali-Sher Nawa'i in the 15th & 16th centuries is widely held to be the ancestor of modern literary Uzbek. Ultimately based on the Qarluq variant of the Turkic languages, it contained large numbers of Persian and Arabic loan-words. By the 19th century it was rarely used for literary composition.

The term "Uzbek" as applied to language has meant different things at different times. Prior to 1921 "Uzbek" and "Sart" were considered to be different dialects; "Uzbek" was a vowel-harmonised Kipchak dialect (closely related to Kazakh) spoken by descendants of those who arrived in Transoxiana with Shaybani Khan in the 16th century, who lived mainly around Bukhara and Samarkand, although the Turkic spoken in Tashkent was also vowel-harmonised; "Sart" was a Qarluq dialect spoken by the older settled Turkic populations of the region in the Ferghana Valley and the Kashka-Darya region, and in some parts of the Samarkand Oblast; it contained a heavier admixture of Persian and Arabic, and did not use vowel-harmony. In Khiva Sarts spoke a form of highly Persianised Oghuz Turkic. After 1921 the Soviet regime abolished the term Sart as derogatory, and decreed that henceforth the entire settled Turkic population of Turkestan would be known as Uzbeks, even though many had no Uzbek tribal heritage. The standard written language that was chosen for the new republic in 1924, however, despite the protests of Uzbek Bolsheviks such as Faizullah Khojaev, was not pre-revolutionary "Uzbek" but the "Sart" language of the Samarkand region. All three dialects continue to exist within modern, spoken Uzbek.

[edit] Number of speakers

In the CIS countries, there are about 24.7 million people who speak dialects of Uzbek. In Uzbekistan, 21 million people speak Uzbek as their native language. There are about 1.2 million speakers in Tajikistan, 550,096 in Kyrgyzstan, 332,017 in Kazakhstan, and 317,333 in Turkmenistan. According to the 1990 census, about 3,000 people in Xinjiang (China) speak Uzbek.

[edit] Loan words

The influence of Islam, and by extension, Arabic, is evident in Uzbek, as well as the residual influence of Russian, from the time when Uzbekistan was under czarist and Soviet domination. Most of the Arabic words have found their way into Uzbek through Persian. Uzbek shares much Persian and Arabic vocabulary with neighbouring languages such as Persian, Tajik and Dari

[edit] Dialects

The Uzbek language has many dialects, varying widely from region to region. However, there is a commonly understood dialect which is used in mass media and in most printed material. Some linguists consider the language spoken in northern Afghanistan by ethnic Uzbeks to be a dialect of Uzbek.

[edit] Writing systems

Before 1924, all Central Asian languages were written in the Arabic script. Between 1924 and 1940 the new official Uzbek language was written in the Latin script, before an enforced switch to Cyrillic under Stalin. Until 1992, Uzbek continued to be written using the Cyrillic alphabet, but now the Latin script has been officially introduced, although the use of Cyrillic is still widespread. The deadline for making this transition has been repeatedly changed. The latest deadline was 2005, but was shifted once again to provide a few more years. Some scholars are not convinced that the transition will be made at all.

In the Xinjiang province of China, Uzbek speakers write using a modified Persian-Arabic alphabet, like that used for Uighur.

Table of Uzbek Cyrillic and Latin alphabets, and represented sounds

Cyrillic Latin IPA
а a /a, æ/
б b /b/
в v /w/
г g /g/
д d /d/
е (y)e /(j)e/
ё yo /jo/
ж j /dʒ/
з z /z/
и i /i, ɨ/
й y /j/
к k /k/
л l /l/
м m /m/
н n /n/
о o /ɒ/
п p /p/
р r /r/
с s /s/
т t /t/
у u /u, y/
ф f /ɸ/
х x /χ/
ч ch /tʃ/
ш sh /ʃ/
ъ /ʔ/
э e /e/
ю yu /ju/
я ya /ja/
ў o‘ /o, ø/
қ q /q/
ғ g‘ /ʁ/
ҳ h /h/

[edit] Text sample

Latin Cyrillic English
Barcha odamlar erkin, qadr-qimmat va huquqlarda teng bo'lib tug'iladilar. Ular aql va vijdon sohibidirlar va bir-birlari ila birodarlarcha muomala qilishlari zarur. Барча одамлар эркин, қадр-қиммат ва ҳуқуқларда тенг бўлиб туғиладилар. Улар ақл ва виждон соҳибидирлар ва бир-бирлари ила биродарларча муомала қилишлари зарур. All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.

[edit] References

  • E. Allworth: Uzbek Literary Politics (The Hague, Mouton 1964).
  • Vasily Bartold "Sart" Ency. of Islam Vol. IV S-Z (Leiden & London) 1934 pp175-6
  • Yuri Bregel “The Sarts in the Khanate of Khiva” Journal of Asian History Vol.12 (1978) pp146-9
  • András J. E. Bodrogligeti: Modern Literary Uzbek. A Manual for Intensive Elementary, Intermediate, and Advanced Courses (Munich, Lincom 2002), 2 vols.
  • William Fierman: Language planning and national development. The Uzbek experience (Berlin etc., de Gruyter 1991).
  • Khayrulla Ismatulla: Modern literary Uzbek (Bloomington, Indiana University Press 1995).
  • Karl A. Krippes: Uzbek-English dictionary (Kensington, Dunwoody 1996).
  • Andrée F. Sjoberg: Uzbek Structural Grammar (The Hague, 1963).
  • A. Shermatov "A New Stage in the Development of Uzbek Dialectology" Essays on Uzbek History, Culture and Language Ed. Bakhtiyar A. Nazarov & Denis Sinor (Bloomington, Indiana) 1993 pp101-9
  • Natalie Waterson (ed.): Uzbek–English dictionary (Oxford etc., Oxford University Press 1980).

[edit] See also

Wikipedia
Uzbek language edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

[edit] External links

v  d  e
Turkic languages
West Turkic
Bolgar Bolgar* | Chuvash | Hunnic* | Khazar*
Chagatay Aini2| Chagatay* | Ili Turki | Lop | Uyghur | Uzbek
Kypchak Baraba | Bashkir | Crimean Tatar1 | Cuman* | Karachay-Balkar | Karaim | Karakalpak | Kazakh | Kipchak* | Krymchak | Kumyk | Nogay | Tatar | Urum1
Oghuz Afshar | Azerbaijani | Crimean Tatar1 | Gagauz | Khorasani Turkish | Ottoman Turkish* | Pecheneg* | Qashqai | Salar | Turkish | Turkmen | Urum1
East Turkic
Khalaj Khalaj
Kyrgyz-Kypchak Altay | Kyrgyz
Uyghur Chulym | Dolgan | Fuyü Gïrgïs | Khakas | Northern Altay | Shor | Tofa | Tuvan | Western Yugur | Sakha / Yakut
Old Turkic*
Notes: 1 Listed in more than one group, 2 Mixed language, * Extinct