Turkic Languages Comparison

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The Turkic languages are a language family spoke in Europe and Asia. All Turkic languages are derived from a hypothetical proto-language called Proto-Turkic

Turkish: 0:00
Uzbek: 0:31
Azerbaijani: 0:59
Uyghur: 1:28
Kazakh: 1:51
Turkmen: 2:26
Tatar: 2:55
Kyrgyz: 3:27
Bashkir: 4:01
Chuvash: 4:37
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I like the sound of Turkic languages, it is quite unique. Especially when I am used to Slavic, Romance and Germanic languages.

Tyroldis
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As a French speaker, I only understood Kazakh: when she said "Dubai"!

nofun
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Bütün Türk kardeslerimize selamlar olsun... Türk olmak bir markadir...

BenTRengFR
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Iltimos . Aziz turkiylar oʻz tilingizda fikr bildiring. Oʻz ona tilingizni seving va qadrlang. Oʻzbekistondan salomlar .

salohiddinkamoldinov
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Қарақалпақстаннан сәлем🖐🏻🖐🏻🖐🏻🇦🇿🇰🇬🇰🇿🇹🇷🇹🇲🇺🇿

EsenAbdyzhappar
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As a Turkish. I did not expect that I could understand Kyrgyz so easily. I have never understood Chuvash, I know that among the living Turkic languages, Chuvash is the closest language to the original Turkic etymologically.

CruWiT
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They are very similar on the whole, except for the highly divergent Chuvash language of the Volga region of Russia . I would say they differ less on the whole than say, the Germanic languages . They certainly aren’t all mutually intelligible, but it’s still quite easy for speakers of the different Turkic languages to learn one of those which are not immediately intelligible .
For example, there’s probably less difference between the Uighur language and the Turkish of Turkey than between German and Danish despite the fact that German and Danish are geographically right next to each other and Turkish and Uighur are geographically very distant .

papazataklaattiranimam
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As an Azerbaijani speaker, Uzbek is vocabulary-wise very close to us:

Words in the video: istiqbal, yönəliş, həmkar, sərmayəvi, mühüm, imzalamaq, tədbir, təvsilat, vəkil, müzakirə, əsas, ümumi, qiymət, bitim, hazırki, etiraf edildi

zrmmibs
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as an Anatolian Turk I understood:
Turkish 100%
Uzbekh 40℅
Azerbaijanii 90℅
Kazakh 30℅
Uygur 20℅
Turkmen 10℅ (maybe video was short and not clear)
Tatar 40℅ (normaly i understand more than this but not in this video)
Kyrgyz 60℅
Bashkir 30℅
Chuvash 1℅ (only heared some words)

its easier to understand by hearing but hard to speak for us, because we need to remember all these sound changes.

XY-uctw
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Bir özbek turku olarak sadece turk Azerbaycan Türkmen dillarini ıyı anladim

shukhratdabilov
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Men O'zbekman Va Bizga Eng Yaqin Tillar Uyg'ur va Azaerbaycan Tilidir Turkchanixam Ko'p Bo'lmasaxam Tushunaman

NAZARBEK
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az a Kazakh speaker I easily understood (90-99%) Tatar, Kyrgyz and Bashkir.

magzhantursunbayev
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As a Qashqai Turk, I understood the speech of the Turkish and Uzbek presenter, and our Qashqai dialect is similar to Uzbeks.

Atleti-madrid
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As an Iraqi Turkmen, I understand
Anatolian Turkish 90%
Azerbaijani 95%
Turkmenistan 70%
Uyghur 70%
Uzbekistan 60%
Kyrgyzstan 50%
Kazakhstan 40%
Tatar 20%
Bashkir 8%
chuvash 2% It's not Turkish, it's completely Russian, haha, I just get it (Ayaq və pul) Foot and money

Greetings to all Turks, long live Turan, there is no difference between us

HoseinAlbayati
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Uzbeks and Uyghurs are from the same family. Since Uyghurs and Uzbeks are Karluk Turks, they can understand each other's words better. The situation is the same for Oghuz Turks.
Anatolian Turks, Azerbaijani Turks, Iraq and Syrian Turkmens, Turkmenistan Turkmens and Moldova Gagauz Turks understand what is said better because they are Oghuz Turks.
Kazakh Turks, Kyrgyz Turks, Crimean and Tatarstan Tatar Turks, Nogay Turks, Bashkir Turks, Hakas, Altai, Tuvan, Yakut and Soyot Turks understand their speech better because they are Kipchak Turks.
As a result, TURKISH is a big tree, there are only small details and those details are the branches of that tree, our roots that we cannot forget...
As someone from the Oghuz lineage and Kınık tribe of the Anatolian Turkish commander Alparslan, I send my love and greetings to all my TURKISH brothers wherever they live in the world, especially in our ancestral lands.

Turkic-X
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Kyrgyz sounds the closest to Turkish. Surprising.

___spiritofadventure___
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The Turkic languages have all of my favorite language sounds: rolled r's, gutteral q's, gutteral r's, gutteral "kh"'s. It's music to the ears. I can't think of another language family where all the languages are so consistently pretty.

azariacba
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So I'm an Anatolian Turk, but my elders speak an accent like Azerbaijani… I can understand Turkmen and Uzbeks very well in general, because Azerbaijani is closer to Turkmen and Uzbek language + I listen to Turkmen and Uzbek music very often. But I must say that Kyrgyz is phonetically the closest to Turkish, even though it is in the Kipshak branch of Turkic languages I can understand a lot of this clip.

yaxshibala
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*As a Brazilian I understood every single word they say, but of course, in different accents* .

RoddyBezerra
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It saddens me to see how much Central Asian Turkish has become Russianized, because even though we are not aware of it, this shows how many words we in the Middle East have borrowed from Arabic and Persian languages.

rcyparisis