Southern Uzbek language explained

Southern Uzbek
Nativename:اۉزبېکچه, اۉزبېکی, اۉزبېک تورکچه سی
States:Afghanistan
Ethnicity:Uzbeks
Speakers:L1

million

Speakers2:L2

million (2022)

Date:2017
Ref:e27
Familycolor:Altaic
Fam1:Turkic
Fam2:Common Turkic
Fam3:Karluk[1]
Fam4:Uzbek
Ancestor:Middle Turkic
Ancestor2:Khorezmian Turkic
Ancestor3:Chagatai
Nation:Afghanistan (3rd most spoken language)
Script:Perso-Arabic
Iso3:uzs
Lingua:44-AAB-da, db
Glotto:sout2699
Glottorefname:Southern Uzbek
Notice:IPA
Minority:
  • China
Agency:Afghan Ministry of Education

Southern Uzbek, also known as Afghan Uzbek, is the southern variant of the Uzbek language, spoken chiefly in Afghanistan with up to 4.6 million speakers including first and second language speakers. It uses the Perso-Arabic writing system in contrast to the language variant of Uzbekistan.

Southern Uzbek is intelligible with the Northern Uzbek spoken in Uzbekistan to a certain degree. However, it has differences in grammar and also many more loan words from Dari, the local New Persian variety, in which many Southern Uzbek speakers are proficient.[2]

Southern Uzbek Alphabet

See main article: Uzbek alphabet.

Southern Uzbek is written using the Perso-Arabic writing system called Arab Yozuv ("Arab Script"). The writing system is for the most part identical to Persian alphabet, with 3 additional letters. These include two vowels, "اۉ / ۉ" and "اې / ې" (optional in writing, and substitutable in practice by "او / و" and "ای / ی" respectively), which are meant to represent the sounds represented in Uzbek Latin Script with "E e" and "Oʻ oʻ". The alphabet also includes a combined consonant letter "نگ", formerly (and currently in writing systems such as Uyghur) shown with the letter "ڭ". This letter represents the sound /ŋ/, and represented in the Latin writing system with "-ng". This letter makes the Voiced velar nasal sound, where in English one can for example hear when pronouncing the word "wingman".

Uzbek has 6 vowels, and it has lost its vowel harmony rules, unlike other Turkic languages.[3]

Table of Vowels in Uzbek Arabic Alphabet[4] [5]
NotesIPAArabicLatin Cyrillic
FinalMedialInitial
[æ ~ ɑ] A a А а
[ɒ ~ ɔ]‌ O o О о
[i] I i И и
In unvocalized spelling, it may be substituted by ی.[e] E e Э э / Е е
Only used in Persian and Arabic loanwords.[i, e]N/AI i
E e
И и
Э э / Е е
[u]‌ U u У у
In unvocalized spelling, it may be substituted by و.[o]Oʻ oʻ Ў ў
Only used in Persian and Arabic loanwords.[u, o]N/AU u
Oʻ oʻ
У у
Ў ў

Other than the additional combined letter "نگ / -ng", the consonants of Uzbek Arabic Alphabet are identical to that of Persian. Thus, there indeed is a case of various letters representing the same sound, as is the case in Persian. But the letters "ث، ح، ذ، ژ، ص، ض، ط، ظ، ع" are not used for writing of native Uzbek words. They're solely used for writing of loanwords from Arabic, Persian, or any of the European languages.

LetterLatinIPA
FinalMedialInitialIsolated
B b/b/
P p/p/
T t/t/
S s/s/
J j/dʒ/
Ch ch/tʃ/
H h/h/
X x/x/
D d/d/
Z z/z/
R r/r/
Z z/z/
J j/ʒ/
S s/s/
Sh Sh/ʃ/
S s/s/
Z z/z/
T t/t/
Z z/z/
ʻ/ʔ/
Gʻ gʻ/ɣ~ʁ/
F f/f/
Q q/q/
K k/k/
G g/g/
M m/m/
N n/n/
-ng|/ŋ/|-|colspan=2||||V v|/v/|-|||||H h|/h/|-|||||‌ Y y|/j/|-|||||ʻ|/ʔ/|}

See also

External links

Dictionaries

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Notes and References

  1. Book: Scott Newton. Law and the Making of the Soviet World: The Red Demiurge. 20 November 2014. Routledge. 978-1-317-92978-9. 232.
  2. Web site: Uzbek, Southern.
  3. Asamura, Takao. “Longing for Legacy: Vowel Harmony in the Uzbek Standard Language, 1924-1934.” Russian and East European Studies 2007, no. 36 (2007): 48–60. https://doi.org/10.5823/jarees.2007.48.
  4. Book: Sjoberg. Andrée F.. Uzbek Structural Grammar. Uralic and Altaic Series. 18. 1963. Indiana University. Bloomington. 16–18.
  5. Uzbek Turki to Persian/Dari Dictionary, authored by D. Faizullah Aimaq (فرهنگ تورکی اوزبیکی به فارسی/ دری، تألیف داکتر فیض الله ایماق) https://www.kabulnath.de/Sal-e-Shanzdahoum/Shoumare-366/Farhang%20Vol%201.pdf (Archive)