SIBERIAN TURKIC LANGUAGES
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 21 ธ.ค. 2022
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The Siberian Turkic or Northeastern Common Turkic languages, are a sub-branch of the Turkic language family.
If you are interested to see your native language/dialect be featured here.
Submit your recordings to otipeps24@gmail.com.
Looking forward to hearing from you!
Yakut ❌
Sakha ✅
Fun fact : Old Uighur was a Siberian Turkic language whereas the modern one belongs to the Karluk branch
1) Brainwashing of 1921, they are descendants of Karakhanids. The Yugurs are real descendants of Orkhon Uygurs linguistically and genetically.
2) Siberian Turkic is just cultural taxon of languages (Siberian "East Taxon" vs Muslim "West Taxon"), not genetical.
Karluk-Karakhanid language was closer than Kipchak and Oghuz to Old Turkic and Old Yughur.
Karakhanid: aδaq vs Old Turkic: 𐰑𐰴 (adaq), Old Uyghur: ʾʾdʾq (adaq)
Karakhanid: sarïɣ vs Old Turkic: 𐰽𐰺𐰃𐰍 (sarïɣ), Old Uyghur: sʾryγ (sarïɣ)
Kipchak: ayaq, sarï
Oghuz: ayaq, sārï
Well if you look at like that old KRGZIS were SIBERIAN TURKIC
Most of the Common Turkic languages descended from the proto Turkic which was spoken in Siberia that's why old Uyghur is also Siberian Turkic. This doesn't mean that Modern Uyghur is not descended from the Old Uyghur.
Some linguists like Anna Dybo thinks that modern uyghur language also belongs to Altai branch
I don't understand why Western linguists obsessed with categorising Proto-Turkic languages into modern Turkic language sub groups 🙄 all Turkic languages evolved from Proto-Turkic languages. It's silly to claim that Modern Uyghur is not developed from Old Uyghur. Where did modern Uyghur came from then? Did we just took it out of our ass in the middle of Tarim basin 🤣
As a Turkic from Turkey Altai seems to be closest , at first when i heard he numbers i said "oh it's almost the same" then came the sentences and the only parts that i could understand was the parts that had same words , grammar rules are almost exactly the same but the words are soo different and uncommon , it's really hard to understand for me .
I am very pleased that our native languages are more or less mutually intelligible.
What a coincidence, "seven" is "sette" in both Italian and Yakut! The spelling is the same, the pronunciation is all in all the same, but they are not related to each other! I love such words…
Setta is number 6 in Arabic 😅
@@wessam2453 Wow, how amazing! I'm sure we could find much more examples like this from different languages… Actually we all are so similar as human beings, there're so many things that unite us 💫 and language is one big proof that reflects it very well. Greetings 🖐
Also Dört is in Turkic Four and Döröv is Mongolian Four
Beş is Turkish Five and Penc is Persian Five
@@abdullahsartas5948 Turks and Mongolians share many words and also share nearly identical grammatical structure and that’s for historical and geographical reasons
@@alitopdemir722 Satta is also 7 in many Indo-Aryan Languages
Saqa 🤝 Chavash
Being alienated by other Turkic nations
Yakut Official Cyrillic:
Таҥара, харахтарын уутун хас биирдии таммаҕын сотуоҕа, өлүү-сүтүү диэн аны суох буолуоҕа; энэлгэн, ытабыл-соҥобул, ыарыы эмнэ сүтүөҕэ. Урукку барыта ааста.
As a Turk from Turkey, I understood Altai the best, though all of them would be undecipherable without context lol
Altai language has been grouped as the Kyrgyz-Kipchak subgroup with the Kypchak languages which is within the Turkic language family
Only southern altai
for me Altai language 70% understandable
Altai and Tuvan both languages sound more to be Kipchak than Siberian Turkic.
I’m an uzbek. Altai is understandable around 30-40%. But, I think kyrgyzs can understand it better than other turkic groups except of course siberian group. Many words, and construction of words and tenses is as in the way of kyrgyzs build the sentences.
good observation
Two means "Ikki" in Yakut? If so, then the Phoenix Saint should be the number 2 in importance for Yakutians, after Seiya or Hyoga, of course. LOL
Can you do Malagasy and Lingala in other videos?
Khakas Official Cyrillic (corrected):
Худай оларның полған на харах чазын чызыбызар. Алнындағы прай нимелер ирт парғаннар, öлім дее, ылғас таа, сыхтас таа паза ағырығлар даа чоғ пол парарлар.
Why the clarification "official"?
Is there an unofficial one?
@@yas9116 Yes, the one used in the video is unofficial.
@@Yoochko Oh, I probably know too little about the Khakas language.
Tuvan❤
Can you find Dolgan Turkic content?I'm also curious about this dialect. If you can...
Sou apaixonada por esse canal e fico animada pela diversidade cultural e linguística dos vídeos. Sou fascinada pelas línguas siberianas, particularmente Tuvan e Altai, é difícil achar conteúdos tão bom como esse vídeo no TH-cam sobre línguas poucos conhecidas e de menos interesse popular. Obrigada❤
Turkic numbers really don't change that much, in all 3 of these Turkic languages videos the numbers are almost identical.
Can You Make Kipchack & Karluk Turkic Language, Please???
Altai language was the closest language among these 4 languages which I, being an ethnic Kazakh, could understand better. Long live TURKIC world!!!
Эзенлер,казактар
I, as a Sakha, also understood the Altai language more
I love Khakas soo much!!
As an Azerbaijani speaker, Altai seems to be the "closest", then Tuvan and then Khakas. Yakut looks as if it was from another language family.
cool.
Interesting how Yakut sounds so much different than all the other Turkic languages, although it's in the same language family. Seems like there are many words of Mongolian origin.
Yakut Turkish was influenced by Mongolian; true. However, Yakut language is Turkish in terms of origin and language structure. Yakut Turkish is the oldest form of the main Turkish.
Yes influenced by Mongol or Tungusic
@@KeekCat The Sakha were from the Samoyed Touba peoples and they were allied with the ancient Mongols Xianbei later they were able to defeat the Mongols and seize the eastern steppe and subdued the Turks and after the establishment of the Gokturk Empire the Turks evacuated the Avars to Europe and Sakha to the north and only the Tuvan people remained from the Samoyeds in Mongolia and many peoples descended from them Samoyed origins such as:Tuvan, Tofalar, Dukha, Chelkans
,Koibals , Kachins ,Mongush
Oorzh and a section of the Khakass people, although they speak Turkish now, their origins, lifestyle, and their DNA are all Still Samoyed style.
@@Tokyo2905 You said with your own mouth: "They established the GökTÜRK Empire." There are many expressions praising Turkishness in the Orhun and Yenisey inscriptions.
Hmm not really, even though yes yakut has the most mongol words than any other turkic language but it's not more than like 12% which is nothing compared to russian's 14% tatar words. Yakutian is mainly of turkic words but the way they pronounce it and write it down is just an influence from their paleo-siberian neighbours
make a video about Nahuatl pls
Tyva 😁😁
@bismarck yea ik
please make a video about khalaj turkic language
Hey why 7 (sette) and the rest, are like Romance languages?
coincidence
As a Sakha, besides Yakut, it goes without saying that the Altai language is more understandable
altai is the most understandable for me
as an azerbaijani i understood altai the most
Altai Official Cyrillic:
Кудай олордыҥ кӧзинеҥ ончо јашты арчыыр. Ӧлӱм де, ачу-корон до, сыгыт та, јобол до база болбос, нениҥ учун дезе башкызы јӱре берген.
Bu dillərin içində Azərbaycan türkcəsinə ən yaxını Altay türkcəsidi❤
I love Tuvan Turkish language! I learn Tuvan Turkish. Inshallah I will be able to speak and understand Tuvan Turkish in the future! 💙💛🤍
Turkish and Turkic are different things. Tuva, Yakutia, Khakassia and Altai are only indirectly related to Turkey.
Actually, I don't completely agree with that. Because Turkish is a "single language" derived from "a single root".
The reason for the differences in the language is due to the dialect structure and diversity of utterance. Sometimes these dialects also interacted with other languages. However, structurally, they are accepted as the Turkish language. They are Turks in terms of nationality and history, and their language is Turkish.
Since Türkiye Turkish is from the Oghuz branch, it is somewhat distant from Siberian Turkish. However, once you have grammar and some vocabulary, it is not impossible to understand them. I can understand a Kazakh Turk without knowing Kazakh Turkish. This is an indication that we speak the same language.
@@ayg6694 I don't call Poles or Czechs Russians, and Icelanders or Englishmen Germans. These are different peoples.
Yakuts, Khakas, Tuvans have nothing to do with the Turks, except for a distant linguistic kinship.
Europeans may not see themselves as one race. But the Turks were descended from a single origin. I don't mean to be condescending, but we and you are not the same. Your understanding of a small nation contradicts our understanding of a big nation. Could I explain?
@@ayg6694 but the Yakuts themselves do not consider themselves related to Turks or Uzbeks.
Culturally, they are close to the Russian Slavs, not the Turks. And the Yakuts, Tuvans, Khakas and other Turkic peoples of Russia do not identify themselves with Turkey in any way.
For them, Turkey is nothing more than just a place for a cheap vacation by the sea.
Tuvan sounds very close to Mongolian
For me Tuva sounds a little bit like of the northern east dialect in Turkiye, and I agree with that Altai is more intelligible with Turkish. And Altay is a common male name ❤
The numbers are easy to count, but the Bible phrases show a little but certain influence of languages from China and the Caucasus, in my opinion.
Thanks for still making such educational videos❣️😘🤗💕
What sorts of influences do you see?
@@DonTornado I think their kind of pronunciation is like the kind of pronunciation of the languages of China and the Caucasus. 😊
Could you please do Kosovo’s Albanian next? 🙏👍🏼
The numbers are interesting! They look stolen from other languages but giving some digits the wrong name.
Yakut sounds most Mongolian to me
Because it is
I'm Yakut and I don't think you've ever heard Mongolian before lol, the two languages sound COMPLETELY different
@@AnimatedTreasure "sounds most Mongolian" doesn't mean "similar to Mongolian"
@@ikhebdieishetnietgoeddathe4057 and I said "SOUND completely different". Go ahead and listen to some Mongolian first
@@AnimatedTreasure still Yakut sounds more Mongolian than Tuvan, Khakas and Altai does, doesn't matter how different Mongolian is so I can still say it sounds the most Mongolian
The Yakuts"Sakha" and most of the Tuvan and Khakass are of Samoyed origin. Their mother Language changed from Samoyed to Turkish after the establishment of the Gokturk Empire
and they are still living the Samoyed lifestyle, We are proud to have Turkish Samoedian "Tuoba peoples"💙🤍💙
we are not samoyeds
and the tuoba are a sinicized turco-mongol clan.
Tuvans are literally the purest uriankhai.
khakhas are yeniseian khirgiz actually. kypchak people.
"sakha", samoyed lifestyle smh...
Harika
As a Yakut I will tell you, I am a supporter of the non-Turkic origin of my people, there is such a definition as the Balto-Slavs, why not separate the Yakuts from the Turks and call a spade a spade, definitely we are related to the Turks, but at the cousin level.And if you link the people of the Yakuts to the Turkic group, then single them out as Yakut-Turkic as Balto Slavs.
I’m sure you are not yakut.
🇹🇷=Oghuz✅️
🇹🇷=Turk❌️
🇰🇿🇹🇷🇦🇿🇰🇬🇹🇲🇺🇿...=Turkic✅️
🇰🇿🇹🇷🇦🇿🇰🇬🇹🇲🇺🇿...=Turkish❌️
We are turkic= oghuz,tatar,sakha,dukha,uzbek,kazakh,hazar,krgyz,uyghur,balkar,nogai,chuvash,altai,tuva...