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KAZAKH LANGUAGE

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Kazakh
Қазақ тілі, قازاق تءىلءي, Qazaq tili
Spoken in: Kazakhstan, China, Mongolia, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Russia, Iran 
Region: Central Asia
Total speakers: 11.5 million 
Ranking: 93
Language family: Altaic
 Turkic
  Kypchak
   Kypchak-Nogay
    Kazakh 
Official status
Official language of: Kazakhstan
Regulated by: no official regulation
Language codes
ISO 639-1: kk
ISO 639-2: kaz
ISO/FDIS 639-3: kaz 

Kazakh, also Kazak, Qazaq, Khazakh, Kosach, and Kaisak (Қазақ тілі in Cyrillic, Qazaq tili in the Latin alphabet, and قازاق تءىلءي in the Arabic alphabet) is a Western Turkic language closely related to Kyrgyz, Nogai and Karakalpak.

Kazakh is an agglutinative language, and it employs vowel harmony.

Contents

Geographic Distribution

Kazakh is the official state language of Kazakhstan, along with Russian, the official language of commerce. In Kazakhstan, nearly 10 million speakers are reported (based on CIA World Factbook's estimates for population and percentage of Kazakh speakers). Another million or more speakers reside in China. Other sizeable populations of Kazakh speakers live in Mongolia (fewer than 200,000). Smaller numbers exist elsewhere in Central Asia and the former Soviet Union, and in Afghanistan, Iran, Turkey, and other countries.

There are also some Kazakh speakers in Germany. They are newly immigrated (in the second half of the 20th century) descendants of Volga Germans who were deported to Kazakhstan.

Writing system

Main article: Kazakh alphabet

Related predecessors to Kazakh were written in the Orkhon script, containing 24 letters. Modern Kazakh can be written using modified versions of the Latin, Cyrillic, and Arabic scripts. The names of the Kazakh letters are derived mostly from their corresponding names in the Arabic alphabet.

Phonology

Kazakh exhibits front-back vowel harmony, with some words of recent foreign origin as exceptions. There is also a system of rounding harmony which resembles that of Kyrgyz, but which doesn't apply as strongly and isn't reflected in the orthography.

Consonants

The following chart depicts the consonant inventory of Kazakh; many of the sounds, however, are allophones of other sounds or appear only in recently loan-words. The 18 consonant phonemes listed by Vajda are in bold—since these are phonemes, their listed place and manner of articulation are very general, and will vary from what's shown. Allophones and borrowed sounds are in Roman.

Consonant inventory of Kazakh
Bilabial Labio-
dental
Dental Alveolar Post-
alveolar
Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
Plosives p b t d k g q
Nasals m n ŋ ɴ
Fricatives β f v s z ʃ ʒ ɕ x ɣ χ ʁ h
Affricates
Tap ɾ
Approximant w j
Lateral
approximants
ɫ l

f, v, ɕ, , x only occur in recent borrowings, mostly from Russian.

The following can be argued not to be distinct phonemes, due to their distribution in front versus back vowel contexts:

Front Back
k q
g ʁ
ɫ l
ŋ ɴ

In addition, the following alternations are the result of lenition between vowels:

V_V Elsewhere
χ q
ɣ g
β b

Vowels

While the three "diphthongoid" vowels can be said to be phonetically composed of other elements in the language, Vajda argues that this has no phonemic bearing, and that they are in fact not phonemically composed of the elements which make them up, but are instead one phonemic element.

front back
-rd +rd -rd +rd
+high ɪ ʉ ə ʊ
-high ɑ
æ

Generally the vowels ʉ, , æ, , and ʊ don't phonemically occur in any syllable but the first of the word; the rounded variants often occur after the first syllable as allophones of unrounded vowels, caused by rounding harmony to a rounded vowel in the first syllable.

Morphology and Syntax

Kazakh is generally verb-final, though various permutations on SOV word order can be used. Verbal and nominal morphology in Kazakh exists almost exclusively in the form of agglutinative suffixes.

Pronouns

Kazakh has six personal pronouns:

Personal pronouns
Singular Plural
Kazakh (transliteration) English Kazakh (transliteration) English
Мен (Men) I Біз (Biz) We
Сен (Sen) You (singular informal) Сендер (Sender) You (plural informal)
Сіз (Siz) You (singular formal) Сіздер (Sizder) You (plural formal)
Ол (Ol) He/She/It Олар (Olar) They

Tense/Aspect/Mood

Kazakh may express different combinations of tense, aspect, and mood through the use of various verbal morphology or through a system of auxiliary verbs, many of which might better be considered light verbs. For example, the (imperfect) present tense in Kazakh bears different aspectual information depending on whether basic present-tense morphology is used, or one of (commonly) four verbs is used:

Aspect in the Present Tense in Kazakh
Kazakh aspect English translation
Жеймін non-progressive "I eat."
Жеп жатырмын progressive "I am eating."
Жеп отырмын progressive/durative "I am [sitting and] eating." / "I have been eating."
Жеп тұрмын progressive/punctual "I am eating [this very minute]."
Жеп жүрмін habitual/frequentative "I eat [lunch at noon every day]."


Evidentiality

Kazakh exhibits a two-way evidentiality system which does not neatly align with morphological paradigms.

References

External links

Wikipedia
Kazakh language edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


v·d·e
Turkic languages
West Turkic
Bolgar Bolgar* | Chuvash | Khazar*
Chagatay Aini | 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 | Yakut
Notes: 1 Listed in more than one group, * Extinct