Uyghur language From Wikipedia

كتبهاET AWAZI ، في 21 يوليو 2007 الساعة: 23:50 م

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Uyghur
ئۇيغۇرچە
Uyƣurqə
уйғурчә

Spoken in:
China, Kazakhstan 

Region:
Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region

Total speakers:
About 10 million 

Ranking:
76

Language family:
Altaic
 Turkic
  Southeastern
   Eastern
    Uyghur 

Official status

Official language of:
Xinjiang

Regulated by:
Working Committee of Ethnic Language and Writing of Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region

Language codes

ISO 639-1:
ug

ISO 639-2:
uig

ISO 639-3:
uig

Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.

Uyghur (ئۇيغۇرچە‎/Uyƣurqə/Уйғурчә, or ئۇيغۇر تىلى‎/Uyƣur tili/Уйғур тили)[1] is a Turkic language spoken by the Uyghur people in Xinjiang (also called East Turkestan or Uyghurstan), formerly also “Sinkiang” and “Chinese Turkestan,” a Central Asian region administered by China. In English, the name of the ethnicity and its language is spelled variously as Uyghur, Uighur, Uygur and Uigur. Many English speakers pronounce it as "wEEger" (IPA: [ˈwi.ɡɚ]) but the pronunciation "ooygOOr" (IPA: [uj.ˈɡur]) is closer to native [ʔʊɪ'ʁʊː].

Contents

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[edit] Classification

The Uyghur language belongs to the southeastern branch of the Turkic language family, which is grouped by some linguists among the Altaic languages.

[edit] Geographic distribution

A bilingual sign using Uyghur, Chinese and Hanyu Pinyin in Yining.

Uyghur is spoken by 8.5 million (2004) in China, mostly in the far western Xinjiang Autonomous Region. Uyghur is also spoken by 300,000 in Kazakhstan, and there are Uyghur-speaking communities in Afghanistan, Australia, Belgium, Canada, Germany, Indonesia, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Sweden, Taiwan, Tajikistan, Turkey, United Kingdom, USA, and Uzbekistan.

[edit] History

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Like the Uzbek language, the Uyghur language is descended from Chagatay Turkic common to Central Asian regions under the Chagatay and Timurid dyansties between 13 and 19th centuries, in turn descended from the Göktürk language. The Chagatay Turkic language in turn owed its origin in the Turkic dialects of the Qarluks and the Karakhanid state, centered around Kashgar. Contrary to some official histories, the Idikut states of Hami and Turpan, which would be properly labeled "Uyghur" during the Karakhanid and Mongol Yuan periods, spoke a dialect closer to Yugur than to Qarluk-Karakhanid. However these oases came under Chagatay and Timurid rule later in the 14th century, and slowly adopted the common language of the Muslim state when their own Buddhist culture eventually died out. Whereas colloquial Chagatay Turkic in Uzbekistan came under heavy modification by absorbing a Tajik Language substrate and a Tatar or Kazakh superstrate, the local variants in what is today Xinjiang came into contact with substratal local languages in Khotan, Kumul (Hami), Turpan and Gulja (Ili), notably the Indo-European substrates of Khotan and Turpan, and the distinctive Turkic language in Hami and Turpan closer to Yugur than Chagatay Turkic. Kashgar, being an important political and religious center of the Xinjiang Chagatayid states, gave rise to a Kashgarlik variety of the language with great currency in inter-oasis trade. However, since the 19th century Jadid Movement in Xinjiang, the Ili variety, one developed rather recently by Uyghur migrants from all oases since as late as 17th century, became the basis for modern standard Uyghur. This owed much to the strategic location of Ili being an entrepot between Xinjiang and Soviet, Uzbek and Afghan Central Asia, to the relative modern outlook of the Ililik intelligentsia, and to the homogeneous nature of the Ililik dialect as combining features from dialects of all Uyghur oases.

[edit] Official status

The Uyghurs are one of the 56 official nationalities in China, and Uyghur is an official language of Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region.

[edit] Dialects

The dialects of Uyghur identified by the Ethnologue are Central Uyghur, Hotan (Hetian), and Lop (Luobu). There are two main languages in Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region: Uyghur and manderin Chinese. Manderin Chinese is not used widely in southern Xinjiang. About 80 newspapers and magazines are available in Uighur; five TV channels and ten publishers serve as the Uighur media. The same as in all China, all of the information and news provided has to be censored by the government.

[edit] Sounds

Syllable structure can be CV, CVC, or CVCC. However, Uyghur phonology tends to simplify phonemic consonant clusters by means of elision and epenthesis. Uyghur is not a tonal language. Like other Turkic languages, Uyghur has vowel harmony.

Furthermore, it distinguishes short and long vowels that respond differently to certain phonological processes, but vowel length distinctions are not indicated in the official orthographies, nor is the difference between front /i/ and back /ɯ/ which plays a phonological role. Of particular note is the Uyghur-specific feature of "vowel reduction" (or "vowel raising") in which unrounded non-high vowels in initial open syllables followed by /ɯ/ or /i/ are changed to [e] and unrounded vowels in other non-final open syllables are changed to [ɪ]; e.g. |al-Iŋ| → /eliŋ/ (cf. Turkish alın) ‘take!’, |ata-lAr-Im-Iz| → /atilirimiz/ (cf. Turkish atalarımız) ‘our fathers’ — not *etilirimiz in Uyghur because the second syllable has an underlying /a/, not /ɯ/: ata ‘father’; cf. |at-Im-Iz| → /etimiz/ (cf. Turkish atımız) ‘our horse’).

Another phonological Uyghur feature, which is rare among Turkic languages, is that the language is “non-rhotic”, similar to many English dialects of Southern England and New England. Syllable-final /r/ is “dropped;” more correctly speaking, it is assimilated to the preceding vowel and lengthens it; e.g., Uyghurlar [ʔʊɪ'ʁʊːlaː] ‘Uyghurs’. Many speakers occasionally do sound syllable-final /r/, for instance when they enunciate very carefully, such as in recitation or song or when wanting to teach non-Uyghurs “good” Uyghur, and in so doing they often overcompensate by inserting an [r] after a long vowels where there is no phonemic /r/.

[edit] Uyghur consonants

  Labial Labiodental Dental Palatal Velar Glottal Voiceless stop

p
 
t
 
k
ʔ

Voiced stop

b
 
d
 
ɡ
 

Voiceless affricate

 
 
 

 
 

Voiced affricate

 
 
 

 
 

Voiceless fricative

 
f
s
ʃ
x
h

Voiced fricative

 
v
z
ʒ
ɣ
 

Nasal

m
 
n
 
ŋ
 

Lateral

 
 
l
 
 
 

Rhotic

 
 
r
 
 
 

Semivowel

w
 
 
j
 

[edit] Grammar

Uyghur has Subject Object Verb word order, postpositions, genitives, adjectives, numerals, relatives before noun heads, and initial question words. There are prefixes and suffixes. Word order distinguishes subjects and indirect objects, topic and comment. There are eight noun cases marked by suffixes. Verb suffixes mark person, number, 2nd person marks plural and three levels of respect. Types of verbs include passive, reflexive, reciprocal and causative.

[edit] Vocabulary

Uyghur vocabulary is basically from Turkic stock; however, like Uzbek, it has taken on a large quantity of loan words from Persian. Many internationalisms entered the Uyghur language from Russian, and there are some more recent loans from Chinese.

[edit] Writing system

Main article: K̡ona Yezik

based on Turkish orthography, is used in Turkey and on the internet.
currently used in the former Soviet Union, corresponding modern Turkish spellings and the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). The table is arranged according to the order of the present alphabet.

Comparison of Uyghur alphabets Arabic Latin Cyrillic ULY Turkish IPA

 

Arabic Latin Cyrillic ULY Turkish IPA

ئا
A a
A a
A a
A a
/a/
ق
Ķ ķ
Қ қ
Q q
K k
/q/

ئە
Ə ə
Ə ə
E e
E e
/æ/
ك
K k
K k
K k
K k
/k/

ب
B b
Б б
B b
B b
/b/
ڭ
-ng
Ң ң
-ng
-ng
/ŋ/

پ
P p
П п
P p
P p
/p/
گ
G g
Г г
G g
G g
/ɡ/

ت
T t
Т т
T t
T t
/t/
ل
L l
Л л
L l
L l
/l/

ج
J j
Җ җ
J j
C c
/ʤ/
م
M m
М м
M m
M m
/m/

چ
Q q
Ч ч
CH ch
Ç ç
/ʧ/
ن
N n
Н н
N n
N n
/n/

خ
H h
X x
X x
H h
/x/
ھ
H̡ h̡
Һ һ
H h
H h
/h/

د
D d
Д д
D d
D d
/d/
ئو
O o
О о
О о
O o
/o/

ر
R r
Р р
R r
R r
/r/
ئۇ
U u
У у
U u
U u
/u/

ز
Z z
З з
Z z
Z z
/z/
ئۆ
Ɵ ɵ
Ө ө
Ö ö
Ö ö
/ø/

ژ
Ⱬ ⱬ
Ж ж
J j
J j
/ʒ/
ئۈ
Ü ü
Ү ү
Ü ü
Ü ü
/y/

س
S s
С с
S s
S s
/s/
ۋ
V v
В в
W w
V v
/v/

ش
X x
Ш ш
SH sh
Ş ş
/ʃ/
ئې
E e
E e
É é
E e
/e/

غ
Ƣƣ
Ғ ғ
GH gh
Ğ ğ
/ʁ/
ئى
I i
И и
I i
İ i/I ı
/i/ or /ɨ/

ف
F f
Ф ф
F f
F f
/f/
ي
Y y
Й й
Y y
Y y
/j/

The Uyghur Cyrillic alphabet has two additional letters, which are a combination of two sounds. Here they are with the Arabic and Latin equivalents.

Cyrillic Arabic Latin

Ю ю
يۇ
yu

Я я
يا
ya

Uyghur alphabet (Uyghur Latin Yéziqi̡ — ULY).
Uyghur.

Reference: http://www.uyghurdictionary.org/excerpts/An%20Introduction%20to%20LSU.pdf

Note that the characters in the above tables will not be displayed correctly by your browser unless Unicode fonts are installed on your computer.

[edit] Text sample

Here the sample of Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Article 1) in Uyghur:

Sample of writing in various Uyghur orthographies K̡ona Yezik̡

ھەممە ئادەم زاتىدىنلا ئەركىن، ئىززەت-ھۆرمەت ۋە ھوقۇقتا بابباراۋەر بولۇپ تۇغۇلغان. ئۇلار ئەقىلغە ۋە ۋىجدانغا ئىگە ھەمدە بىر-بىرىگە قېرىنداشلىق مۇناسىۋىتىگە خاس روھ بىلەن مۇئامىلە قىلىشى كېرەك

Yengi Yezik̡

H̡əmmə adəm zatidinla ərkin, izzət-h̡ɵrmət wə hok̡uk̡ta babbarawər bolup tuƣulƣan. Ular ək̡ilƣə wə wijdanƣa igə h̡əmdə bir-birigə k̡erindaxlik̡ munasiwitigə hax roh bilən mu’amilə k̡ilixi kerək.

Cyrillic Uyghur

Һәммә адәм затидинла әркин, иззәт-һөрмәт вә һоқуқта баббаравәр болуп туғулған. Улар әқилғә вә виджданға игә һәмдә бир-биригә қериндашлиқ мунасивитигә хаш рох билән му’амилә қилиши керәк.

ULY

Hemme adem zatidinla erkin, izzet-hörmet we hoquqta babbarawer bolup tughulghan. Ular eqilghe we wijdan’gha ige hemde bir-birige qérindashliq munasiwitige xas roh bilen muamile qilishi kérek.

Turkish Uyghur

Hemme adem zatidinla erkin, izzet-hörmet we xoquqta babbarawer bolup tuğulğan. Ular eqilğe we wicdanğa ige hemde bir-birige qérindaşliq munasiwitige xaş rox bilen mu’amile qilişi kérek.

English

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] Notes

  1. ^ Its name in other languages in which it might be often referred to is as follows:

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Wikipedia
Uyghur language edition of Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

hide] v  d  e Altaic languages

Turkic languagesMongolic languagesTungusic languagesJaponic languages*Korean language*

Notes: *Japonic and Korean are not generally recognized as belonging to the Altaic language family. A hypothetical language family that would include both the Japonic languages and Korean is sometimes referred to as the Buyeo language family.

v  d  e

Turkic languages

Bulgar
Bulgar† | Chuvash | Hunnic† | Khazar†

Uyghur
Old Turkic† | Aini²| Chagatay† | Ili Turki | Lop | Uyghur | Uzbek

Kypchak
Baraba | Bashkir | Crimean Tatar¹ | Cuman† | Karachay-Balkar | Karaim | Karakalpak | Kazakh | Kipchak† | Krymchak | Kumyk | Nogai | Tatar | Urum¹ | Altay | Kyrgyz

Oghuz
Afshar | Azerbaijani | Crimean Tatar¹ | Gagauz | Khorasani Turkish | Ottoman Turkish† | Pecheneg | Qashqai | Salar | Turkish | Turkmen | Urum¹

Khalaj
Khalaj

Northeastern
Chulym | Dolgan | Fuyü Gïrgïs | Khakas | Northern Altay | Shor | Tofa | Tuvan | Western Yugur | Sakha / Yakut

Notes: ¹Listed in more than one group, ²Mixed language, ³Disputed, †Extinct

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