Oghuz languages

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The Oghus languages ( Turkish Oğuz dilleri / Oğuzca ) or Southwest Turkish are a branch of the Turkic languages . Today they cover nine languages ​​with up to 100 million native speakers .

Its most important representatives today are the Turkish with around 60 million and the Azerbaijani language with around 30 million speakers.

Today's Oghusian Turkic languages ​​are "West Oghusian", "East Oghusian" and "South Oghusian". These Turkic languages ​​include the following languages ​​or dialects:

Salarian is now part of the south-east Turkish group ( Uighur ), but historically it developed from the Oghus language branch of the Turkic languages. Conversely, the Crimean Tatar and the Urum (language) developed from the Kipchak language group , but came closer to the Oghuz languages.

language Number of speakers mainly widespread in the following countries (with number of speakers)
Turkish 60 million Turkey 55 million ( S2 70 million), Balkans 2.5 million, Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus 300,000, CIS 300,000,
Germany 2 million, other Western and Central Europe 700,000
Gagauz 330,000 Republic of Moldova 170,000, Balkans 130,000, Ukraine 20,000, Bulgaria 10,000
Azerbaijani 20-30 million Iran 12–20 million, Azerbaijan 8 million, Turkey 500,000, Iraq 500,000, Russia 350,000,
Georgia 300,000, Armenia 200,000
Turkmen 6.8 million Turkmenistan 3.8 million, Iran 2 million, Afghanistan 500,000, Iraq 250,000, Uzbekistan 250,000
Khorasan Turkish 1,000,000 Iran ( Khorasan Province )
Kashgai 1.5 million Iran ( Fars Provinces , Chuzestan )
Aynallu 7,000 Iran ( Markazi , Ardebil , Zanjan provinces )
Afsharish 300,000 Afghanistan ( Kabul , Herat ), northeast Iran
Salarian 55,000 China ( Qinghai Provinces , Gansu )

literature

  • Heinz F. Wendt: The Fischer Lexicon. Languages (= Fischer pocket books. 4561). Revised and corrected new edition, original edition. Fischer-Taschenbuch-Verl., Frankfurt am Main 1987, ISBN 3-596-24561-3 .

Individual evidence

  1. Lars Johanson, Éva Csató (Ed.): The Turkic languages. Routledge, London et al. 1998, ISBN 0-415-08200-5 , p. 82.
  2. Lars Johanson, Éva Csató (Ed.): The Turkic languages. Routledge, London et al. 1998, ISBN 0-415-08200-5 , p. 83.