Oghuz languages
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:
- West Oghusian:
- East Oghusian:
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
- ↑ Lars Johanson, Éva Csató (Ed.): The Turkic languages. Routledge, London et al. 1998, ISBN 0-415-08200-5 , p. 82.
- ↑ Lars Johanson, Éva Csató (Ed.): The Turkic languages. Routledge, London et al. 1998, ISBN 0-415-08200-5 , p. 83.