Professional Researcher's Encyclopaedia

Knowledge is only a click away

Turkmen language - enyclopaedia article

Turkmen language

Summary: Turkmen (Туркмен, ISO 639-1: tk, ISO 639-2: tuk) is the name of the national language of Turkmenistan. Turkmen is spoken by approximately 3,430,000 people in Turkmenistan, and by an additional approximately 3,000,000 people in other countries, including Iran (2,000,000), Afghanistan (500,000), and Turkey (1,000). Turkmen is in the Turkic group of the Altaic language family. It is a southern ...

read the full Turkmen language article

Buy Turkmen language related products:


Buy from Amazon.co.uk Books - Music - Classical - VHS - DVD - Video-games - Software - Electronics - Toys
Buy from Amazon.com Books - Music - Classical - VHS - DVD - Videogames - Software - Electronics - Photo - Toys
Buy from Amazon.ca Books - Music - Classical - VHS - DVD - Video-games - Software - Livres en Français
Buy from Amazon.de - - - - - - -
Buy from Amazon.fr - - - - -
Advanced Product Search (new):    uk    |     us    |     ca    |     de    |     fr

Turkmen language

     From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Turkmen (Туркмен, ISO 639-1: tk, ISO 639-2: tuk) is the name of the national language of Turkmenistan. Turkmen is spoken by approximately 3,430,000 people in Turkmenistan, and by an additional approximately 3,000,000 people in other countries, including Iran (2,000,000), Afghanistan (500,000), and Turkey (1,000).

Turkmen is in the Turkic group of the Altaic language family. It is a southern Turkic language, in the Turkmenian group, closely related to Crimean Turkish and Salar, and less closely related to Turkish and Azeri (Azerbaijani).

Turkmen is written using the Cyrillic alphabet or the Arabic alphabet, although in recent years, President Saparmurat Niyazov has decreed that Turkmen was now to be written in a specially modified and adapted version of the Roman alphabet.

Source: Ethnologue, SIL code: TCK

External links

link to this article with the following HTML

 
This article is from Wikipedia. This article was up-to-date as of 8 May 2004 - See live article
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.

This page is part of Professional Researcher
Web site design by Dean Marshall