Uzbek

Uzbek
Description

Uzbek

uzbek
Salom, салом – Hello 

Uzbek (O‘zbek tili/O’zbekcha, Ўзбек тили, أۇزبېك ﺗﻴﻠی) is a member of the Turkic branch of the Altaic language family. Uzbek is a macrolanguage that consists of two distantly related languages: Northern and Southern Uzbek. They are distinct languages whose speakers can understand each other only with difficulty due to differences in pronunciation, grammar, and vocabulary.

Uzbek is descended from Chagatai Turkic, an extinct Turkic language which once served as a lingua franca in Central Asia. The word Chagatai relates to the Chagatai Khanate, the western part of the Mongol empire, left to Genghis Khan’s second son Chagatai Khan. In the 14th century, the Chagatai Khanate was conquered by Timur, a native of Samarkand. Timur’s successors were later ousted from the Chagatai Khanate by the Uzbeks. The Kazakhs, originated as dissident Uzbeks during the same period. Both groups became part of the Soviet Union in 1917. After the fall of the Soviet Union,Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan became independent countries.

 

Status

 

 

Northern Uzbek

Northern Uzbek is spoken by 21.3 million people in Uzbekistan. It is also spoken in other Central Asian countries, in addition to small expatriate communities in North America, Australia, and Europe . It is estimated that the total numbers of speakers of Uzbek worldwide is around 24 million (

Ethnologue). In 1989, Northern Uzbek became the official language of the Republic of Uzbekistan. Today it is used in the country’s media, education, entertainment, business, and government. More than half of the newspapers in Uzbekistan are published in Uzbek. Education in Uzbek is available from elementary to post-secondary level.

Southern Uzbek
Southern Uzbek is a related language spoken by about 2.9 million people in Afghanistan. It is a provincial statutory language in several of the country’s northern provinces (Ethnologue).

Dialects

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  • Northern Uzbek dialects are usually divided into two groups:
    the “O” group, which includes the dialects of Tashkent, Samarkand, Bukhara and the surrounding regions, e.g., odam ‘man’
    the “A” group, e.g., adam ‘man’.
  • Standard Uzbek is based on the Tashkent-Fergana dialect.

 

Structure

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Sound system

Unlike all other Turkic languages, Uzbek does not have vowel harmony, a type of phonological process that involves constraints on which vowels may be found near each other.

Vowels

Northern Uzbek has 5 vowel phonemes, i.e., sounds that distinguish word meaning. Vowels can be either short or long. Vowel length makes a difference in word meaning. Long vowels do not occur at the beginning of words. Unlike all other Turkic languages,

The table below shows the vowels of Uzbek..

 
Front
Central
Back
Close
i
 
u
Close-mid
e
 
o
Open  
a
 

 

Consonants
Northern Uzbek has 25 consonant phonemes, i.e., sounds that distinguish word meaning.

    Bilabial Labio-dental Dental/Alveolar Post-alveolar Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
Stops voiceless
p
 
t
   
k
q
ʔ
voiced
b
 
d
   
g
   
Fricatives voiceless  
f
s
ʃ
 
x
 
h
voiced  
v
z
ʒ
 
ɣ
   
Affricates voiceless      
       
voiced      
       
Nasals  
m
 
n
   
ŋ
   
Tap (flap)      
r
         
Lateral      
l
         
Approximant  
w
     
j
     
  • /ʔ/ = sound between the vowels in uh-oh
  • /q, x, ɣ/ have no equivalents in English
  • /ʃ/ = sh in shop
  • /ʒ/ = s in vision
  • /tʃ/ = ch in chop
  • /dʒ/ = j in job
  • /ŋ/ = ng in song
  • /j/ = in yet

 

Stress
Uzbek words are normally stressed on the final syllable.

Grammar

Like all Turkic languages, Uzbek is agglutinative, i.e., grammatical relations are indicated by the addition of suffixes to stems. There are no prefixes. There is a one-to-one relationship between suffixes and their meanings, so that suffixes are strung together one after another, sometimes resulting in long words. There are various rules for the ordering of suffixes. Uzbek uses post-positions rather than prepositions to signal grammatical relationships.

Noun phrase

  • Uzbek nouns are marked for number (singular and plural).
  • There is no grammatical gender.
  • There are five cases: nominative, genitive, dative, accusative, ablative. Cases are marked by inflectional suffixes and governed by verbs and post-positions.
  • There are no articles.

 

Verb phrase
Verbs agree with their subjects in person and number. Verbs have the following grammatical categories:

  • two numbers: singular and plural;
  • three persons: 1st, 2nd, 3rd;
  • five moods: indicative, dubitative, imperative, conditional, subjunctive;
  • two voices: active and passive;
  • three tenses: present, past, future;
  • politeness;
  • evidentiality: Uzbek contrasts direct information (reported directly) and indirect information (reported indirectly).

 

Word order
The normal word order in Uzbek is Subject – Object – Verb, but other word orders are possiblefor marking topic and comment in discourse, e.g., Men kitob yozdim ‘I book wrote’. As a language where objects precede the verb, Uzbek has post-positions rather than prepositions, and relative clauses that precede the verb, e.g., Biz non haqida gapirdik ‘We bread about talked’. Adjectives precede the nouns they modify.

Vocabulary

Uzbek lexicon is basically Turkic with borrowings from Arabic, Persian, and Russian. Northern Uzbek is influenced by Arabic (through Islam) and by Russian from the time when Uzbekistan was under czarist and Soviet domination, e.g., magazin from Russian magazin ‘store,’ televizor from Russian televizor ‘TV set,’ telefon trubkasi ‘telephone receiver’ from Russian telefonnaya trubka. Southern Uzbek has borrowed from Arabic, Persian, Dari, Pashto, and Tajik. Most of the Arabic loanwords came through Persian.

Below are some common words and phrases in Uzbek.

Hello salom caлoм
Good bye Xayr хайр 
Thank you Raxmat раҳмат 
Please Marxamat марҳамат
Sorry, pardon Kechiring кечиринг
Yes Xa ҳа 
No Yo’q йўк 
Man Odam/adam одам/адам 
Woman Ayol айол 

 

Below are Uzbek numerals 1-10n Cyrillic and Latin scripts.

 
 1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Cyrillic
бир 
икки 
уч 
тўрт 
беш 
олти 
етти 
саккиз 
тўққиз 
ўн 
Latin
bir
ikki
uch
to’rt
besh
olti
yetti
sakkiz
to’kkiz
o’n

 

Writing

Over the course of its history, Uzbek was written in several scripts.

  • An early form of Uzbek, known as Chagatai (named after one of the sons of Genghis Khan) and written with the Arabic script, emerged as a literary language in the 14th century.
  • A Latin-based alphabet for Northern Uzbek was adopted in 1927.
  • In 1940, the Roman alphabet was forcibly replaced by a modified version of the Cyrillic alphabet that is still in use today. Letters that were added to the Cyrillic alphabet to represent Uzbek sounds are normally listed at the end of the alphabet. Letters that are used only in borrowed words are given in parentheses.
  • In 1995, an official Latin-based alphabet was introduced, however, the use of Cyrillic continues to be widespread. The deadline for making the switch to Latin has been pushed back a number of times. Some scholars believe that the switch will not be made at all. The official 1995 Uzbek alphabet is given below.
  • in the Xinjiang province of China, Uzbek speakers continue to write using a modified Perso-Arabic alphabet, like that used for Uyghur. The same is true of Southern Uzbek spoken in Afghanistan.
Modified Cyrillic-based alphabet for Uzbek
А а
Б б
В в
Г г
Д д
E e
Ë ë
Ж ж
З з
И и
Й й
К к
Л л
М м
Н н
O o
П п
Р р
С с
Т т
У у
Ү ү
Ф ф
Ц ц
Х х
Ч ч
Ш ш
(Щ щ)
Ы ы
(ъ)
Э э
Ю ю
Я я
Ў ў
Қ қ
Ғ ғ
Ҳ ҳ
         

 

Modified Latin-based alphabet for Uzbek
А а
B b
D d
E e
F f
G g
H h
I i
J j
K k
L l
M m
N n
O o
P p
Q q
R r
S s
T t
U u
V v
X x
Y y
Z z
O’ o’
G’ g’
Sh sh
Ch ch
Ng ng
 

 

Take a look at Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in Uzbek.

Cyrillic
1-модда
Барча одамлар эрҝин, қадр-қиммат ба ҳуқуқларда танг бўлиб ту иладилар. Улар ақл ва виждон соҳибидилар ва бир-бирла ига биродарларча муомала қилишлари зарур.
Latin
1-modda
Barcha odamlar erkin, qadr-qimmat ba huquqlarda tang bo’lib tug’iladilar. Ular aql va vijdon sohibidilar va bir-birla iga birodarlarcha muomala qilishlari zarur.


http://frontype.com/keyboard/Uzbek-Cyrillic-keyboard-layout.html

 

Most Popular keyboard for Download

Change your keyboard layout

  1. Swipe in from the right edge of the screen, tap Settings, and then tap Change PC settings. (If you're using a mouse, point to the lower-right corner of the screen, move the mouse pointer up, click Settings, and then click Change PC settings.)
  2. Tap or click Time and language, and then tap or click Region and language, and then tap or click Add a language.
  3. Browse for the language you want, and then tap or click it to add it to your language list.

Download and install a language pack

  1. Swipe in from the right edge of the screen, tap Settings, and then tap Change PC settings. (If you're using a mouse, point to the lower-right corner of the screen, move the mouse pointer up, click Settings, and then click Change PC settings.)
  2. Tap or click Time and language, and then tap or click Region and language.
  3. If the language says Language pack available, tap or click Options. Note: If you don't see Language pack available, you might be able to download the language pack at the Download Center.
  4. Tap or click Download. The download process might take a while, depending on your PC and the size of the language pack. 

Set a language as your primary language

  1. Swipe in from the right edge of the screen, tap Settings, and then tap Change PC settings. (If you're using a mouse, point to the lower-right corner of the screen, move the mouse pointer up, click Settings, and then click Change PC settings.)
  2. Tap or click Time and language, and then tap or click Region and language.
  3. Tap or click the language that you want to see Windows in, and then tap or click Set as primary. The Will be display language after next sign-inmessage will appear under the language.
  4. Tap or click Set as primary to move the language to the top of the list. If the language can become your Windows display language, you'll see Will be display language after next sign-in appear under the language.
  5. Sign out of Windows, and then sign back in. When you change your primary language, your keyboard layout might also change. When signing back in to Windows, make sure you're using the right keyboard layout for entering your password. Otherwise, you might not be able to sign in. You can change your keyboard layout on the sign-in screen by tapping or clicking the language abbreviation button in the lower-right corner.

Change the keyboard layout or other method you use to type

Whenever you add a language, a keyboard layout or input method is added so you can enter text in the language. If you want to use a different keyboard layout or input method, you can add a new one or switch between the ones you have. Add a keyboard layout or input method for a language

  1. Swipe in from the right edge of the screen, tap Settings, and then tap Change PC settings. (If you're using a mouse, point to the lower-right corner of the screen, move the mouse pointer up, click Settings, and then click Change PC settings.)
  2. Tap or click Time and language, and then tap or click Region and language.
  3. Tap or click the language you want to add a keyboard to, and then tap or click Options.
  4. Tap or click Add a keyboard, browse the input method list for the one you want to use, and then tap or click it.

Switch between keyboard layouts or input methods You can enter text with different keyboard layouts or input methods by switching between them. There are a few different ways to switch between keyboard layouts or input methods:

Change the default keyboard layout or input method

Windows Install or change a display language

You can change the language Windows uses to display text in wizards, dialog boxes, menus, and other items in the user interface. Some display languages are installed by default, while others require you to install additional language files.
Hide all To install a display language To install a Language Interface Pack (LIP), double-click the file to open the setup program. To install a language pack, follow these steps:
  1. Open Region and Language by clicking the Start button  , clicking Control Panel, clicking Clock, Language, and Region, and then clicking Region and Language.
  2. Click the Keyboards and Languages tab.
  3. Under Display language, click Install/uninstall languages, and then follow the steps. If you're prompted for an administrator password or confirmation, type the password or provide confirmation. Note: The Display language section will be visible only if you have already installed a Language Interface Pack or if your edition of Windows supports a language pack. Language packs are available only in Windows 7 Ultimate and Windows 7 Enterprise.  To change your display language When you change the display language, the text in menus and dialog boxes for some programs might not be in the language that you want. This happens because the program might not support Unicode. 
  1. Open Region and Language by clicking the Start button  , clicking Control Panel, clicking Clock, Language, and Region, and then clicking Region and Language.
  2. Click the Keyboards and Languages tab.
  3. Under Display language, choose a language from the list, and then click OK. Note: If you don't see the list of display languages, you need to install additional language files. 

Change your keyboard layout

  1. On the Language bar, click the Input language button, and then select an input language.   
  2. Click the Keyboard layout button, and then select a keyboard layout.
Note: If you don't see the Language bar, right-click the taskbar, point to Toolbars, and then click Language bar. To change the keyboard layout on the Welcome screen On the Welcome screen, click the Keyboard layout button, and then select a keyboard layout. Note: If you don't see the Keyboard layout button, you might not have more than one input language, or your regional and language settings might not be applied to reserved accounts.