Bashkir language explained

Bashkir
Nativename:Bashkir: башҡорт теле (башҡортса)
Bashkir: başqort tele (başqortsa)
Bashkir: باشقۇرت تىُلىُ (باشقۇرتسا)
Bashkir: باشقرد تلی (باشقردسا)
Pronunciation:pronounced as /ba/
States:Bashkortostan, Russia
Region:Volga, Ural
Ethnicity:Bashkirs
Date:2020 estimate
Ref:e26
Familycolor:Altaic
Fam1:Turkic
Fam2:Common Turkic
Fam3:Kipchak
Fam4:Kipchak–Bulgar
Ancestor:Volga Turki
Nation: (Russia)
Script:Cyrillic (Bashkir alphabet)
Agency:Institute of history, language and literature of the Ufa Federal research center the RAS
Iso1:ba
Iso2:bak
Iso3:bak
Glotto:bash1264
Glottorefname:Bashkir
Lingua:44-AAB-bg
Notice:IPA
Map:Bashkir language in the Russian Empire (1897).svg
Map2:Lang Status 80-VU.svg

Bashkir ([1]) or Bashkort[2] (ba|Башҡорт теле|link=no|translit=Başqort tele, pronounced as /ba/) is a Turkic language belonging to the Kipchak branch. It is co-official with Russian in Bashkortostan. It is spoken by around 750,000 native speakers in Russia, as well as in Belarus, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and other neighboring post-Soviet states, and among the Bashkir diaspora. It has three dialect groups: Southern, Eastern and Northwestern.

Speakers

Speakers of Bashkir mostly live in the republic of Bashkortostan (a republic within the Russian Federation). Many speakers also live in Tatarstan, Chelyabinsk, Orenburg, Tyumen, Sverdlovsk and Kurgan Oblasts and other regions of Russia. Minor Bashkir groups also live in Kazakhstan and the United States.

In a recent local media report in Bashkortostan, it was reported that some officials of the republic cannot assemble a document in Bashkir language.

Classification

Bashkir together with Tatar belongs to the Kipchak-Bulgar (ru|кыпчакско-булгарская) subgroup of the Kipchak languages. These languages have a similar vocabulary by 94.9%,[3] and they not only have common origin, but also a common ancestor in the written language — Volga Turki.However, Bashkir differs from Tatar in several important ways:

The Bashkir orthography is more explicit. pronounced as /link/ and pronounced as /link/ are written with their own letters Ҡ ҡ and Ғ ғ, whereas in Tatar they are treated as positional allophones of pronounced as /link/ and pronounced as /link/, written К к and Г г.

Labial vowel harmony in Bashkir is written explicitly, e.g. Tatar тормышым tormışım and Bashkir тормошом – tormoşom, both pronounced pronounced as /[tʊɾ.mʊˈʂʊm]/, meaning "my life".[4]

Orthography

See main article: Bashkir alphabet. After the adoption of Islam, which began in the 10th century and lasted for several centuries, the Bashkirs began to use Turki as a written language. Turki was 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, the Bashkir literary language was created, moving away from the older written Turkic influences. At first, it used a modified Arabic alphabet. In 1930 it was replaced with the Unified Turkic Latin Alphabet, which was in turn replaced with an adapted Cyrillic alphabet in 1939.

The modern alphabet used by Bashkir is based on the Russian alphabet, with the addition of the following letters: Ә ә pronounced as /link/, Ө ө pronounced as /link/, Ү ү pronounced as /link/, Ғ ғ pronounced as /link/, Ҡ ҡ pronounced as /link/, Ң ң pronounced as /link/, Ҙ ҙ pronounced as /link/, Ҫ ҫ pronounced as /link/, Һ һ pronounced as /link/.

А аБ бВ вГ гҒ ғД дҘ ҙЕ еЁ ё
Ж жЗ зИ иЙ йК кҠ ҡЛ лМ мН н
Ң ңО оӨ өП пР рС сҪ ҫТ тУ у
Ү үФ фХ хҺ һЦ цЧ чШ шЩ щЪ ъ
Ы ыЬ ьЭ эӘ әЮ юЯ я
Letters of the Bashkir Cyrillic alphabet
Cyrillic version PronunciationNotes
Ааpronounced as /[ɑ]/, pronounced as /[a]/"A" is usually pronounced as pronounced as /[ɑ]/ in all syllables except last, in last syllable it is pronounced as pronounced as /[a]/.
Ббpronounced as /[b]/, pronounced as /[β]/pronounced as /[β]/ is the intervocal allophone.
Ввpronounced as /[v]/, pronounced as /[w]/pronounced as /[v]/ in Russian loanwords, pronounced as /[w]/ in Arabic and Persian loanwords.
Ггpronounced as /[ɡ]/
Ғғpronounced as /[ʁ]/
Ддpronounced as /[d]/
Ҙҙpronounced as /[ð]/
Ееpronounced as /[jɪ]/, pronounced as /[ɪ]/The letter is iotated at the beginning of a word, after a vowel or after a soft or hard sign.
Ёёpronounced as /[jɔ]/ Only used in Russian loanwords.
Жжpronounced as /[ʐ]/Only occurs in loanwords and onomatopoeia.
Ззpronounced as /[z]/
Ииpronounced as /[i], [ij]/Occurs only in the first syllable. In most other contexts, especially in open syllables, it is an underlying /ij/, for example in words like ти [tij]/[tɪj]. Hence why the suffixes use the /ð/ consonant following this vowel, unlike /l/ after other vowels: тиҙәр (tiźär) /tijˈðær/, but not тиләр (tilär).
Ййpronounced as /[j]/
Ккpronounced as /[k]/
Ҡҡpronounced as /[q]/
Ллpronounced as /[l]/, pronounced as /[ɫ]/In front vowel contexts occurs as apical pronounced as /link/, in back vowel contexts occurs as pronounced as /link/.
Ммpronounced as /[m]/
Ннpronounced as /[n]/
Ңңpronounced as /[ŋ]/, pronounced as /[ɴ]/In front vowel contexts occurs as pronounced as /link/, in back vowel contexts occurs as pronounced as /link/.
Ооpronounced as /[ʊ]/
Өөpronounced as /[ø]/, [y]Shifts to [y] in vicinity of [j]: өйҙә (öyźä) [yjˈðä]
Ппpronounced as /[p]/
Ррpronounced as //r//, pronounced as /[ɾ]/pronounced as /[ɾ]/ is the intervocal allophone.
Ссpronounced as /[s] /
Ҫҫpronounced as /[θ]/
Ттpronounced as /[t]/
Ууpronounced as /[u]/, pronounced as /[w]/These two letters are used for pronounced as //w// phoneme when they are written after a back or front vowel respectively. As the vowel phoneme, they can only occur in the first syllable. Therefore if these letters are not in the first syllable, they occur after a vowel and are pronounced as /w/.
Үүpronounced as /[ʏ]/, pronounced as /[w]/
Ффpronounced as /[ɸ]/
Ххpronounced as /[χ]/
Һһpronounced as /[h]/
Ццpronounced as /[ts]/
Ччpronounced as /[tɕ]/
Шшpronounced as /[ʂ]/
Щщpronounced as /[ɕː]/Only occurs in loanwords.
Ъъpronounced as /[ʔ]/Only occurs in back vowel contexts (except loanwords). Indicates a glottal stop if placed after a vowel, acts as a syllable separator if placed after a consonant.
Ыыpronounced as /[ɯ]/
Ььpronounced as /[ʔ]/Only occurs in front vowel contexts (except loanwords). Indicates a glottal stop if placed after a vowel, acts as a syllable separator if placed after a consonant.
Ээpronounced as /[ɪ]/
Әәpronounced as /[æ]/
Ююpronounced as /[ju]/
Яяpronounced as /[jɑ]/, pronounced as /[ja]/

Phonology

Vowels

Bashkir has nine native vowels, and three or four loaned vowels (mainly in Russian loanwords).[5]

Phonetically, the native vowels are approximately thus (with the Cyrillic letter followed by the usual Latin romanization in angle brackets):[6]

FrontBack
UnroundedRoundedUnroundedRounded
Closeиi
pronounced as /link/
үü
[{{IPA link|y}}~{{IPA link|ʉ}}]
ыı
[{{IPA link|ɯ}}]
уu
pronounced as /link/
Midэ,еe
[{{IPA link|e}}~{{IPA link|ɘ}}]
өö
[{{IPA link|ø|ø̝}}~{{IPA link|ɵ}}]
оo
[{{IPA link|o}}~{{IPA link|ɤ}}]
Openәä
[{{IPA link|æ}}]
аa
pronounced as /link/
In Russian loans there are also pronounced as /link/, pronounced as /link/, pronounced as /link/ and pronounced as /link/, written the same as the native vowels: ы, е/э, о, а respectively.

Historical shifts

Historically, the Proto-Turkic mid vowels have raised from mid to high, whereas the Proto-Turkic high vowels have become the Bashkir reduced mid series. (The same shifts have also happened in Tatar.)[7] However, in most dialects of Bashkir, this shift is not as prominent as in Tatar.

VowelCommon TurkicTatarBashkirGloss
  • e pronounced as //ɛ//
  • et
itit pronounced as //it//'meat'
  • ö pronounced as //œ//
  • söz
süzhüź pronounced as //hʏð//'word'
  • o pronounced as //ɔ//
  • sol
sulhul pronounced as //huɫ//'left'
  • i pronounced as //i//
  • it
etet pronounced as //ɪt//'dog'
  • ï pronounced as //ɤ//
  • qïz
qızqıź pronounced as //qɯð//'girl'
  • u pronounced as //u//
  • qum
qomqom pronounced as //qʊm//'sand'
  • ü pronounced as //y//
  • kül
kölköl pronounced as //køl//'ash'

Consonants

The consonants of Bashkir
BilabialLabio-
dental
DentalAlveolarPost-
alveolar
/
Palatal
VelarUvularGlottal
Nasalsмm
pronounced as /link/
нn
pronounced as /link/
ңñ
pronounced as /link/
ңñ
pronounced as /link/
PlosivesVoicelessпp
pronounced as /link/
тt
pronounced as /link/
кk
pronounced as /link/
кk
pronounced as /link/
ҡq
pronounced as /link/
ь/ъ
pronounced as /link/
Voicedбb
pronounced as /link/
дd
pronounced as /link/
гg
pronounced as /link/
гg
pronounced as /link/
FricativesVoicelessфf
pronounced as /link/
çś
pronounced as /link/
сs
pronounced as /link/
шş
pronounced as /link/
хx
pronounced as /link/
һh
pronounced as /link/
Voicedбb
pronounced as /link/
вv
pronounced as /link/
ҙź
pronounced as /link/
зz
pronounced as /link/
жj
pronounced as /link/
ғğ
pronounced as /link/
Trillрr
pronounced as /link/
Approximantsлl
pronounced as /link/
йy
pronounced as /link/
у/ү/вw
pronounced as //pronounced as /link/~pronounced as /link///
Notes
  • The phonemes pronounced as /link/, pronounced as /link/, pronounced as /link/ are found only in loanwords, and, in the case of pronounced as /link/, in a few native onomatopoeic words.
  • pronounced as /link/ is an intervocal allophone of pronounced as /link/, and it is distinct from pronounced as /link/. pronounced as /link/ is an allophone of pronounced as /link/ in back vowel contexts. pronounced as /link/ and pronounced as /link/ occur as allophones of pronounced as /link/ and pronounced as /link/ before pronounced as /link/, and both occur only in front vowel contexts.

    Grammar

    A member of the Turkic language family, Bashkir is an agglutinative, SOV language.[8] A large part of the Bashkir vocabulary has Turkic roots; and there are many loan words in Bashkir from Russian, Arabic and Persian sources.

    RussianArabicPersian
    in BashkirEtymologyTranslationin BashkirEtymologyTranslationin BashkirEtymologyTranslation
    минут (minut)from "минута" (minuta)minuteваҡыт (vaqıt)from "Arabic: وَقْت" (waqt)timeдуç (duś)from "Persian: دوست" (dost)friend
    өçтәл (öśtəl)from "стол" (stol)table, deskвәғәҙә (vəğəźə)from "Arabic: وَعْدَ" (waʿda)promiseһәр (hər)from "Persian: هر" (har)every
    сыр (sır)from "сыр" (syr)cheeseйәннәт (yənnət)from "Arabic: جَنَّة" (janna)paradiseкөмбәҙ (kömbəź)from "Persian: گنبد" (gonbad)cupola

    Plurality

    The form of the plural suffix is heavily dependent on the letter which comes immediately before it. When it's a consonant, there is a four-way distinction between "л" (l), "т" (t), "ҙ" (ź) and "д" (d); The vowel's distinction is two-way between "а" (after back vowels "а" (a), "ы" (ı), "о" (o), "у" (u)) and "ә" (after front vowels "ә" (ə), "е" (e), "и" (i), "ө" (ö), "ү" (ü)). Some nouns are also less likely to be used with their plural forms such as "һыу" (hıw, "water") or "ҡом" (qom, "sand").

    suffix consonant
    -лар, -ләрafter all vowels except for и (iy)баҡса (baqsa), "garden"Pl.: баҡсалар (baqsalar)сәскә (səskə), "flower"Pl.: сәскәләр (səskələr)
    -тар, -тәрmostly after hard consonants – б (b), д (d), г (g), ф (f), х (x), һ (h), к (k), ҡ (q), п (p), с (s), ш (ş), ç (ś), т (t)дуç (duś), "friend"Pl.: дуçтар (duśtar)төç (töś), "colour"Pl.: төçтәр (töśtәr)
    -ҙар, -ҙәрafter approximants and some others – ҙ (ź), и (iy), р (r), у/ү (w), й (y)тау (taw), "mountain"Pl.: тауҙар (tawźar)өй (öy), "house"Pl.: өйҙәр (öyźәr)
    -дар, -дәрafter nasals and some others – ж (j), л (l), м (m), н (n), ң (ñ), з (z)һан (han), "number"Pl.: һандар (handar)көн (kön), "day"Pl.: көндәр (köndər)

    Declension table

    suffixconsonant alteration (see the "plurality" table)after the plural suffixexamples
    Nominative
    Genitive-нең"н" (n), "д" (d), "т" (t) and "ҙ" (ź)-ҙеңтелдең (teldeñ), "the language's"
    -ның-ҙыңбаштың (baştıñ), "the head's"
    -ноң-ҙыңтоҙҙоң (toźźoñ), "the salt's"
    -нөң-ҙеңтөштөң (töştöñ), "the dream's"
    Dative-гә-гәтелгә (telgə), "(to) the language"
    -кәтөшкә (töşkə), "(to) the dream"
    -ға-ғатоҙға (toźğa), "(to) the salt"
    -ҡабашҡа (başqa), "(to) the head"
    Accusative-не"н" (n), "д" (d), "т" (t) and "ҙ" (ź)-ҙетелде (telde), "the language"
    -ны-ҙыбашты (baştı), "the head"
    -но-ҙытоҙҙо (toźźo), "the salt"
    -нө-ҙетөштө (töştö), "the dream"
    Locative-лә"л" (l), "д" (d), "т" (t) and "ҙ" (ź)-ҙәтелдә (teldə), "in the language"
    -ла-ҙабашта (başta), "in the head"
    Ablative-нән"н" (n), "д" (d), "т" (t) and "ҙ" (ź)-ҙәнтелдән (teldən), "from the language"
    -нан-ҙанбаштан (baştan), "from the head"
    Interrogative pronouns !! colspan="7"
    Personal pronouns
    Case who what Singular Plural
    I you (thou) he, she, it we you they
    Nominativeкем
    kem
    нимә
    nimə
    мин
    min
    һин
    hin
    ул
    ul
    беҙ
    beź
    һеҙ
    heź
    улар
    ular
    Genitiveкемдең
    kemdeñ
    нимәнең
    niməneñ
    минең
    mineñ
    һинең
    hineñ
    уның
    unıñ
    беҙҙең
    beźźeñ
    һеҙҙең
    heźźeñ
    уларҙың
    ularźıñ
    Dativeкемгә
    kemgə
    нимәгә
    niməgə
    миңә
    miñə
    һиңә
    hiñə
    уға
    uğa
    беҙгә
    beźgə
    һеҙгә
    heźgə
    уларға
    ularğa
    Accusativeкемде
    kemde
    нимәне
    niməne
    мине
    mine
    һине
    hine
    уны
    unı
    беҙҙе
    beźźe
    һеҙҙе
    heźźe
    уларҙы
    ularźı
    Locativeкемдә
    kemdə
    нимәлә
    nimələ
    миндә
    mində
    һиндә
    hində
    унда
    unda
    беҙҙә
    beźźə
    һеҙҙә
    heźźə
    уларҙа
    ularźa
    Ablativeкемдән
    kemdən
    нимәнән
    nimənən
    минән
    minən
    һинән
    hinən
    унан
    unan
    беҙҙән
    beźźən
    һеҙҙән
    heźźən
    уларҙан
    ularźan
    Demonstrative pronouns
    Case Singular Plural
    this that these those
    Nominativeбыл
    bıl
    ошо
    oşo
    шул
    şul
    теге
    tege
    былар
    bılar
    ошолар
    oşolar
    шулар
    şular
    тегеләр
    tegelər
    Genitiveбының
    bınıñ
    ошоноң
    oşonoñ
    шуның
    şunıñ
    тегенең
    tegeneñ
    быларҙың
    bılarźıñ
    ошоларҙың
    oşolarźıñ
    шуларҙың
    şularźıñ
    тегеләрҙең
    tegelərźeñ
    Dativeбыға
    bığa
    ошоға
    oşoğa
    шуға
    şuğa
    тегегә
    tegegə
    быларға
    bılarğa
    ошоларға
    oşolarğa
    шуларға
    şularğa
    тегеләргә
    tegelərgə
    Accusativeбыны
    bını
    ошоно
    oşono
    шуны
    şunı
    тегене
    tegene
    быларҙы
    bılarźı
    ошоларҙы
    oşolarźı
    шуларҙы
    şularźı
    тегеләрҙе
    tegelərźe
    Locativeбында
    bında
    ошонда
    oşonda
    шунда
    şunda
    тегендә
    tegendə
    быларҙа
    bılarźa
    ошоларҙа
    oşolarźa
    шуларҙа
    şularźa
    тегеләрҙә
    tegelərźə
    Ablativeбынан
    bınan
    ошонан
    oşonan
    шунан
    şunan
    тегенән
    tegenən
    быларҙан
    bılarźan
    ошоларҙан
    oşolarźan
    шуларҙан
    şularźan
    тегеләрҙән
    tegelərźən

    Further reading

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Book: Longman . J.C. . Longman Pronunciation Dictionary . 2008 . Pearson Education ESL . 978-1405881173 . 3.
    2. Web site: Moseley . Christopher . 2010 . Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger . 42.
    3. https://milliard.tatar/news/bratya-navek-tatarskii-i-baskirskii-yazyki-sovpadayut-na-95-procentov-104 Миллиард Татар – Братья навек: татарский и башкирский языки совпадают на 95 процентов
    4. https://ia902703.us.archive.org/17/items/bashlang/bashlang.pdf B.Tuysin, K. Shafikov, I. Khanov – Bashkirskiy jazyk – Ufa: Bashkirsiy Gosudarstvennyy Universitet RB, 2022 – 1 glava – 7 S
    5. Book: Berta, Árpád. The Turkic languages. limited. Tatar and Bashkir. 1998. Johanson. Lars . Csató. Éva Á.. Routledge. 283–300. 9780415082006.
    6. Book: Poppe, Nicholas N. . Bashkir Manual . Research and Studies in Uralic and Altaic Languages . 36 . Bloomington, IN . Indiana University . 1964 . 1147723720 . 63-64521.
    7. Book: Johanson, Lars. The Turkic languages. limited. The History of Turkic. 1998. Johanson. Lars . Csató. Éva Á.. Routledge. 92. 9780415082006.
    8. Web site: Overview of the Bashkir Language . Learn the Bashkir Language & Culture . Transparent Language . 4 Nov 2011 .