Uzbek Alphabet - Wikipedia

Bartangi language, alphabet and pronunciation

Uzbek Alphabet - Wikipedia. Verwandte lateinisches alphabet koptische schrift armenisches alphabet glagolitische schrift: A, e, i, o, u o'.

Bartangi language, alphabet and pronunciation
Bartangi language, alphabet and pronunciation

Notes when the uzbek language is written using the latin script, the letters oʻ (cyrillic ў) and gʻ (cyrillic ғ) are properly rendered using the character u+02bb ʻ modifier letter turned comma, which is also known as the ʻokina. For an introductory guide on ipa symbols, see help:ipa. Uzbek (ўзбек тили / o'zbek tili /. Uzbek language in nastaliq.jpg 1,588 × 1,656; Below you will be able to hear how the letters above are pronounced, just press the play button: It has about 40 million. They are to some extent mutually intelligible, although there are differences in. But it is longer when followed by another i or y sound. Afghanistan, tajikistan, pakistan, kyrgyzstan, kazakhstan, turkmenistan, russia, and china. A number of languages written in a cyrillic alphabet have also been written in a latin alphabet, such as azerbaijani, uzbek, serbian and romanian (in the republic of moldova until 1989, in romania throughout the 19th century).

Uzbek ( o'zbek tili or o'zbekcha in latin script, ўзбек тили or ўзбекча in cyrillic script, أۇزبېك تیلی in arabic script) is a turkic language. Northern uzbek and southern uzbek. There are two main varieties of uzbek: É a lingua oficial do uzbekistán, con 18,5 millóns de falantes nativos. Afghanistan, tajikistan, pakistan, kyrgyzstan, kazakhstan, turkmenistan, russia, and china. View all the information about 'uzbek alphabet' that is contained in the knowledge graph. ) uzbek is a turkic language spoken by about 30 million people mainly in uzbekistan, and also in afghanistan, turkey. Uzbek language in nastaliq.jpg 1,588 × 1,656; It is the official language of uzbekistan. In 1926 the latin alphabet was introduced and went through several revisions throughout the 1930s. Clock in the ruhabad mosque in samarkand, the inscription in the uzbek language (in cyrillic alphabet).jpg.