Bashkir (, ; Bashkir: ''Bashqortsa'', ''Bashqort tele'', ) is a
Turkic language belonging to the
Kipchak branch. It is co-official with
Russian in
Bashkortostan. It is spoken by approximately 1.4 million native speakers in Russia, as well as in
Ukraine,
Belarus,
Kazakhstan,
Uzbekistan,
Estonia and other neighboring
post-Soviet states, and among the
Bashkir diaspora. It has three
dialect groups: Southern, Eastern and Northwestern.
Speakers
Speakers of Bashkir mostly live in the republic of
Bashkortostan (a republic within the Russian Federation). Many speakers also live in
Tatarstan,
Chelyabinsk,
Orenburg
Orenburg (russian: Оренбу́рг, ), formerly known as Chkalov (1938–1957), is the administrative center of Orenburg Oblast, Russia. It lies on the Ural River, southeast of Moscow. Orenburg is also very close to the Kazakhstan-Russia bor ...
,
Tyumen,
Sverdlovsk and
Kurgan Oblast
Kurgan Oblast (russian: Курга́нская о́бласть, ''Kurganskaya oblast'') is a federal subject of Russia (an oblast). Its administrative center is the city of Kurgan. In June 2014, the population was estimated to be 874,100,Kurgan ...
s and other regions of
Russia. Minor Bashkir groups also live in
Kazakhstan and other countries.
Classification
Bashkir together with
Tatar belongs to the Bulgaric (russian: кыпчакско-булгарская) subgroups of the
Kipchak languages. They share the same vocalism and the vowel shifts (see
below
Below may refer to:
*Earth
*Ground (disambiguation)
*Soil
*Floor
*Bottom (disambiguation)
Bottom may refer to:
Anatomy and sex
* Bottom (BDSM), the partner in a BDSM who takes the passive, receiving, or obedient role, to that of the top or ...
) that make both languages stand apart from most other Kipchak and
Oghuz Turkic languages.
However, Bashkir differs from Tatar in several important ways:
* Bashkir has dental fricatives and in the place of Tatar (and other Turkic) and . Bashkir and , however, cannot begin a word (there are exceptions: ҙур ''dhur'' 'big', and the particle/conjunction ҙа/ҙә ''dha/dhä''). The only other Turkic language with a similar feature is
Turkmen
Turkmen, Türkmen, Turkoman, or Turkman may refer to:
Peoples Historical ethnonym
* Turkoman (ethnonym), ethnonym used for the Oghuz Turks during the Middle Ages
Ethnic groups
* Turkmen in Anatolia and the Levant (Seljuk and Ottoman-Turkish desc ...
. However, in Bashkir and are two independent phonemes, distinct from and , whereas in Turkmen
�and
�are the two main
realizations of the common Turkic and . In other words, there are no and phonemes in Turkmen, unlike Bashkir which has both and and and .
* The word-initial and morpheme-initial is turned into . An example of both features can be Tatar сүз ''süz'' and Bashkir һүҙ ''hüź'' , both meaning "word".
* Common Turkic (Tatar ) is turned into Bashkir , e.g., Turkish ''ağaç'' , Tatar агач ''aghach'' and Bashkir ағас ''aghas'' , all meaning "tree".
* The word-initial in Tatar always corresponds to in Standard Bashkir, e.g., Tatar җылы ''zhïlï'' and Bashkir йылы ''yïly'' , both meaning "warm". However, the eastern and northern dialects of Bashkir have the > /~/ shift.
The Bashkir orthography is more explicit. and are written with their own letters Ҡ ҡ and Ғ ғ, whereas in Tatar they are treated as positional allophones of and , written К к and Г г.
Labial
vowel harmony
In phonology, vowel harmony is an Assimilation (linguistics), assimilatory process in which the vowels of a given domain – typically a phonological word – have to be members of the same natural class (thus "in harmony"). Vowel harmony is t ...
in Bashkir is written explicitly, e.g. Tatar тормышым ''tormïshïm'' and Bashkir тормошом ''tormoshom'', both pronounced , meaning "my life".
Orthography

After the adoption of
Islam
Islam (; ar, ۘالِإسلَام, , ) is an Abrahamic religions, Abrahamic Monotheism#Islam, monotheistic religion centred primarily around the Quran, a religious text considered by Muslims to be the direct word of God in Islam, God (or ...
, which
began in the 10th century and lasted for several centuries, the Bashkirs began to use
Turki as a written language. Turki was written in a variant of the
Arabic script
The Arabic script is the writing system used for Arabic and several other languages of Asia and Africa. It is the second-most widely used writing system in the world by number of countries using it or a script directly derived from it, and the ...
.
In 1923, a writing system based on the
Arabic script
The Arabic script is the writing system used for Arabic and several other languages of Asia and Africa. It is the second-most widely used writing system in the world by number of countries using it or a script directly derived from it, and the ...
was specifically created for the Bashkir language. At the same time, the Bashkir literary language was created, moving away from the older written Turkic influences. At first, it used a modified Arabic
alphabet. In 1930 it was replaced with the
Unified Turkic Latin Alphabet
Unified may refer to:
* The Unified, a wine symposium held in Sacramento, California, USA
* ''Unified'', the official student newspaper of Canterbury Christ Church University
, mottoeng = The truth shall set you free
, estab ...
, which was in turn replaced with an adapted
Cyrillic
, bg, кирилица , mk, кирилица , russian: кириллица , sr, ћирилица, uk, кирилиця
, fam1 = Egyptian hieroglyphs
, fam2 = Proto-Sinaitic
, fam3 = Phoenician
, fam4 = G ...
alphabet in 1939.
The modern alphabet used by Bashkir is based on the
Russian alphabet
The Russian alphabet (russian: ру́сский алфави́т, russkiy alfavit, , label=none, or russian: ру́сская а́збука, russkaya azbuka, label=none, more traditionally) is the script used to write the Russian language. I ...
, with the addition of the following letters:
Ә ә ,
Ө ө ,
Ү ү ,
Ғ ғ ,
Ҡ ҡ ,
Ң ң ,
Ҙ ҙ ,
Ҫ ҫ ,
Һ һ .
Phonology
Vowels
Bashkir has nine native vowels, and three or four loaned vowels (mainly in Russian loanwords).
Phonetically, the native vowels are approximately thus (with the Cyrillic letter followed by the usual Latin romanization in angle brackets):
In Russian loans there are also , , and , written the same as the native vowels: ы, е/э, о, а respectively.
The mid vowels may be transcribed as lowered near-high
, , and the
close front or
close central rounded vowel
may be transcribed as
near-close near-front [].
Historical shifts
Historically, the Old Turkic mid vowels have Raising (phonetics), raised from mid to high, whereas the Old Turkic high vowels have become the Bashkir reduced mid series. (The same shifts have also happened in
Tatar.)
Consonants
;Notes
: The phonemes , , , , , , are found only in loanwords, and, in the case of , in a few native onomatopoeic words.
* are dental , and is apical alveolar . The exact place of articulation of the other dental/alveolar consonants is unclear.
Grammar
A member of the
Turkic language family, Bashkir is an
agglutinative,
SOV language.
A large part of the Bashkir vocabulary has Turkic roots; and there are many loan words in Bashkir from
Russian,
Arabic and
Persian sources.
Declension of nouns
Declension of pronouns
References
Further reading
*
*
*
External links
National Corpus of the Bashkir languageMachine fund of the Bashkir languageSpoken corpus of Bashkir (Rakhmetovo and Baimovo)
Short grammar of Bashkir
{{Authority control
Agglutinative languages
Subject–object–verb languages
Kipchak languages
Languages of Kazakhstan
Languages of Russia
Turkic languages
Vowel-harmony languages
Languages written in Cyrillic script