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Uzbek language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Uzbek ( O‘zbek tili or O'zbekcha in Latin script, Ўзбек тили or Ўзбекча in Cyrillic script; أۇزبېك ﺗﻴﻠی in Arabic script) is a Turkic language and the official language of Uzbekistan. It has ...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uzbek_language |
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Uzbekistan being a multi nation country, earlier had various linguistics if the ethnic groups influencing the Uzbeks. Uzbek was declared the state language in 1992. Uzbekistan Language is actually the creation of the Soviet state. ... Many alphabets of Arab, Turkish and Latin predominated the local language of Uzbekistan.
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Uzbek is a Turkic language with about 16.5 million speakers mainly in Uzbekistan. but also in Australia, China, Germany, Israel, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkey (Asia), Turkmenistan, Ukraine and the USA.
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Under Soviet rule, officially at least, this mosaic was replaced by Uzbek, which almost overnight became the official language of the Turkic population of the republic. But Russian, which at the same time was declared the "international language" of Uzbekistan, was favored above even Uzbek in official usage.
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The official linguistic policy of the Karimov government has been that Uzbek is the language of the state, and Russian is the second language. Residents of Uzbekistan are required to study Uzbek to be eligible for citizenship.
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JUDEO-CRIMEAN TATAR: a language of Uzbekistan ... The following is the entry for this language as it appeared in the 14th edition (2000). It was superseded by the corresponding entry in the 15th edition (2005). See also the corresponding entry in the current edition of Ethnologue...
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