Languages of Kyrgyzstan
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Languages of Kyrgyzstan | |
---|---|
Official | Kyrgyz (national/state language) Russian (official and interethnic)[1] |
Main | Kyrgyz |
Indigenous | Dialects of Kyrgyz language |
Minority | Tajik; Uzbek; Uyghur |
Immigrant | Turkic languages |
Foreign | English; Arabic (coming with Islam); Chinese; French |
Signed | Russian Sign Language |
Keyboard layout | |
Source | [2] |
Alphabet | Kyrgyz alphabets Kyrgyz Braille |
Kyrgyzstan is one of four former Soviet republics in Central Asia to have Russian as a de jure official language. The Kyrgyz language was adopted as the official language in 1991. After pressure from the Russian and other minorities in the country, the republic adopted Russian as an official language as well in 2000, to become an officially bilingual country.[3]
Official languages
[edit]The languages of government in Kyrgyzstan are Russian as the official and inter-ethnic language and Kyrgyz as the state/national language.[citation needed]
Kyrgyz is a Turkic language of the Kipchak branch, closely related to Kazakh, Karakalpak, and Nogay Tatar. It was written in the Arabic alphabet until the twentieth century. Latin script was introduced and adopted in 1928, and was subsequently replaced on Stalin's orders by Cyrillic script in 1941. As a result of the pending language reform in neighboring Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan will be the only independent Turkic-speaking country in a few years that exclusively uses the Cyrillic script.[4]
According to the 2009 census,[5] 4.1 million people spoke Kyrgyz as native or second language and 2.5 million spoke Russian as native or second language, with 482,000 specifically identifying as native speakers.[6]
Russian TV media enjoy enormous popularity in Kyrgyzstan, especially in Russian-speaking city of Bishkek and Chüy Region. Russian media outlets have an enormous impact on public opinion in Kyrgyzstan, especially in areas such as human rights and international political developments.[7]
Education
[edit]Following the 2005 Tulip Revolution, educational reforms in 2007 required that Kyrgyz become a required subject in non-Kyrgyz-language schools, and that Russian become a required subject in schools with a language of instruction other than Russian.[6]
Minority languages
[edit]Uzbek is spoken by approximately 850 thousand residents of Kyrgyzstan and is the second most spoken native language, ahead of Russian and behind Kyrgyz.[citation needed]
In 2011, Almazbek Atambayev won a highly contested elections marked by irregularities by the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSEC). The Atambayev government subsequently banned graduating high school students from taking exit examinations in Uzbek, or any language other than Kyrgyz or Russian.[6]
Language by number of speakers
[edit]Language name | Native speakers | Second-language speakers | Total speakers |
---|---|---|---|
Kyrgyz | 3,830,556 | 271,187 | 4,121,743 |
Russian | 482,243 | 2,109,393 | 2,591,636 |
Uzbek | 772,561 | 97,753 | 870,314 |
English | 28,416 | 28,416 | |
French | 641 | 641 | |
Other | 277,433 | 31,411 | 308,844 |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Kyrgyzstan's Constitution of 2010 with Amendments through 2016" (PDF). Constitute Project. Retrieved 2 September 2020.
- ^ "To hear the world through the sign language, to see the world through the finger tips | United Nations Development Programme". UNDP.
- ^ "Закон КР от 29 мая 2000 года № 52 Об официальном языке Кыргызской Республики". Централизованный банк данных правовой информации Кыргызской Республики.
- ^ "'Only Kyrgyzstan in Central Asia insists on Cyrillic' — Tokayev - News of Kyrgyzstan, press and media".
- ^ "Перепись населения и жилищного фонда Кыргызской Республики (Population and Housing Census of the Kyrgyz Republic), 2009". NSC of Kyrgyzstan. Archived from the original on 21 January 2013. Retrieved 9 October 2012.
- ^ a b c McDermott, Ashley (2019). "The Linguistic Landscape of Post-Soviet Bishkek". Region. 8 (2): 227–256. ISSN 2166-4307.
- ^ "Major Russian TV Channel Sidelined in Kyrgyzstan - Jamestown".