Yakut Language Oral and written literature - Search results - Wiki Yakut Language Oral And Written Literature
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Yakut /jəˈkuːt/ yə-KOOT, also known as Yakutian, Sakha, Saqa or Saxa (Yakut: саха тыла), is a Turkic language belonging to Siberian Turkic branch and... |
regions, and the Taymyr and Evenk Districts of the Krasnoyarsk region. They speak Yakut, which belongs to the Siberian branch of the Turkic languages. According... |
(and even written) considerably earlier than the dates of the earliest extant samples provided here. A written record may encode a stage of a language... |
Olonkho (category Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity) individual epic poems. An ancient oral tradition, it is thought that many of the poems predate the northwards migration of Yakuts in the 14th century, making... |
oral language: phones, intonation and the separation of syllables. To represent additional qualities of speech—such as tooth gnashing, lisping, and sounds... |
Nicholas Poppe (category Articles containing Russian-language text) Khalkha-Mongolian and Buriat-Mongolian, Yakut, the Alar dialect, and Bashkir. His publications in the realm of Mongolian oral literature include eleven volumes... |
Latinisation in the Soviet Union (category CS1 uses Russian-language script (ru)) & Ter) (1931) Selkup language (1931) Shor language (1931) Shughni language (1932) Yakut language (1920/1929) Tabasaran language (1932) Tajik alphabet... |
Romani alphabets (category Articles containing Romani-language text) Romani language has for most of its history been an entirely oral language, with no written form in common use. Although the first example of written Romani... |
Lezgins (category Articles with Russian-language sources (ru)) republic of Russia, and northeastern Azerbaijan, and speak the Lezgin language. Their social structure is firmly based on equality and deference to individuality... |
Azerbaijanis (category CS1 uses Russian-language script (ru)) prior knowledge of the other. Early literature was mainly based on oral tradition, and the later compiled epics and heroic stories of Dede Korkut probably... |
Mongols (category Articles containing Mongolian-language text) assimilated into the Yakuts after their migration to northern Siberia and about 30% of Yakut words have Mongol origin. However, remnants of the Yuan imperial... |
Sanskrit grammar (category Articles containing Sanskrit-language text) prescriptive and generative grammar with algebraic rules governing every single aspect of the language, in an era when oral composition and transmission... |
Uzbeks (category Articles with Russian-language sources (ru)) day Abkhaz people, while the best proxy for their eastern ancestry are Yakuts (or alternatively, Tuvans). A study on modern Central Asians comparing them... |
Bulgars (category CS1 German-language sources (de)) lexical and morphological, to Ottoman Turkish and Yakut Archived, Article (1982). ""The Hunnic Language of the Attila Clan" (pages 428, ..., 476), author:... |
Huns (category States and territories established in the 370s) racial characteristics, they were unlikely to have looked as Asiatic as the Yakut or Tungus. He notes that archaeological finds of presumed Huns suggest that... |
Swan maiden (category CS1 French-language sources (fr)) A Type Index of Chinese Folktales in the Oral Tradition and Major Works of Non-religious Classical Literature. (FF Communications, no. 223) Helsinki, Academia... |
Seljuk Empire (category States and territories established in 1037) written in Turkic language survive from the Seljuk Empire. While the Maliknama was compiled from Turkic oral accounts, it was written in Persian and Arabic... |
List of English words of Russian origin (category Russian words and phrases) the former USSR, and to a lesser extent of the Russian post-Soviet government. Mammoth (Russian: ма́монт mamont [ˈmamənt], from Yakut мамонт mamont, probably... |
Russian grammar (category Articles with Russian-language sources (ru)) frequently appeared in compounds: Basic word order, both in conversation and written language, is subject–verb–object. However, because grammatical relationships... |
Portuguese grammar (category Pages with non-English text lacking appropriate markup and no ISO hint) quem, o que and qual can be preceded by any preposition, but in this case o que will usually be reduced to que. Frequently in oral language, and occasionally... |