Posted on 10/27/2017 9:34:09 PM PDT by Olog-hai
Kazakhstans President Nursultan Nazarbayev on Friday announced the countrys alphabet will gradually switch from Cyrillic to Latin script.
Kazakh, a Turkic language, currently uses a modified Cyrillic alphabet with 42 letters.
The Latin alphabet will have 32 letters. Certain sounds will be covered by the use of apostrophes. The changeover is scheduled to be fully implemented by 2025.
Officials said the switch is part of a modernization drive and an attempt to make use of technology easier. The Kazakh Cyrillic keyboard, for example, uses all number and punctuation keys in order to cover the 42 letters of Cyrillic alphabet.
The Foreign Ministry said in September that the switch to Latin script would also benefit Kazakhstans development. [Latin] is used by approximately 70 percent of all countries, making it an essential part of communicating across the globe, especially in terms of technology, business, science and education, the ministry said.
The oil-rich republic is a close ally of Russia and has the largest ethnic-Russian population of the former Soviet republics in Central Asia. Russian will remain an official language.
(Excerpt) Read more at dw.com ...
That’s a tiugh row to hoe.
At least they don’t have to switch directions too.
Looks like Putin has some more ethnic Russians to “protect.” Nazarbayev best tip toe through the tulips on this one.
Yeah, I don’t see how you can make this work.
That’s a third time in a century. They’ve started with Arabic script. Overall I think half of Kazakhs don’t even know their language and like nine in ten people are using Russian instead.
The same is true about most of the other stans which are artifical collections of tribes using Russian to understand each other.
“Yeah, I dont see how you can make this work.”
Turkey did (Arabic script to Latin alphabet).
Mongolia went from Hudum Mongol bichig to Cyrillic. And that was after TWICE adopting the Latin alphabet: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongolian_Latin_alphabet
On Kazakhstan’s part, however, this is a mistake because 1) Everyone there is already familiar with the Cyrillic alphabet and 2) this will alienate its substantial Russian population. Russians and Ukrainians are 25% of the population.
It wont be nearly as tough as Turkeys 20th century complete replacement of its Persian-Arabic based alphabet with a Latin-based Western alphabet.
In the long term, Russia will annex at least part of Kazakhstan.
Does Erdogen hope to reverse that?
Hell yeah, ANSI rules!!!
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=yt5GrfUknKs
Slums of Alma-Aty song from earlier 1990s. Slavics and Germans in Kazakhstan inner cities are thinking should they take a flight to Russia or revolt against discrimination by their muslim overlord. LOL.
Thanks, I learn something new every day.
There are so many cool Russian words that people are missing out on because their latinized versions are no longer included.
Absolutely stupid and useless and tending toward separating people rather than bringing them together.
Gee, I suggested this here about two weeks ago, but to bring Russia closer to the West.
Kazakhstan has the coolest sport ever: Kokpar.
Here’s an example from the 2017 world championships: Usa vs. Mongolia. I didn’t even know the USA had a Kokpar team. It’s safe to watch as nobody takes a knee for the anthem.
This gambit by Bill Clinton (meddling in a foreign election) got the Russian uranium scheme going. Bill's calculated handshake was a bonanza for the Kazahk president's re-election. Nazarbayev responded in kind and signed-off on the initial phase of Russia's takeover of US uranium assets.
Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev greets former
president Clinton (L) in Almaty on September 6, 2005.
CIRCA 2015 A Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times reporter claims that former President Bill Clinton falsely denied hosting a meeting with Kazakh officials when she tried to write a story that involved his foundation several years ago.
Jo Becker, who works on the newspaper's investigative desk, said Clinton only confirmed the meeting took place after she informed him there were photographs.
Clinton's role in a deal that involved Kazakhstan, the Russian government, and a man who donated millions to the president's charitable foundation were detailed in a story Becker published on Thursday.
That article revisited some of her earlier reporting and included information from the upcoming book "Clinton Cash," which is generating widespread headlines amid a flurry of reports suggesting it will raise serious questions about Clinton's family foundation.
The donor in question is Canadian mining executive Frank Giustra, a longtime friend of the former president who has given tens of millions to the Clinton Foundation in the past few years. (A couple of hours after the NYT story was published, Giustra issued a defiant statement. We've included that below.)
Becker initially wrote about the February 2007 meeting between Clinton, Giustra, and executives from the state-owned nuclear company Kazatomprom in 2008. The gathering took place at Clinton's home in Chappaqua, New York.
"When I first contacted both the Clinton foundation Mr. Clinton's spokesman and Mr. Giustra, they denied any such meeting ever took place," Becker recalled in footage aired by Fox News on Thursday.
However, Becker said Clinton and Giustra both changed their stories after she confronted them with evidence to the contrary.
"And then when we told them, 'Well we already talked to the head of Kazatomprom, who not only told us all about the meeting, but actually has a picture of him and Bill at the home in Chappaqua, and that he proudly displayed on his office wall.' They then acknowledged that yes, the meeting had taken place," Becker continued in the television interview.
The purpose of the meeting, then Kazatomprom President Moukhtar Dzhakishev told The Times, was to discuss Kazakhstan potentially buying a 10% stake in Westinghouse, a US nuclear company. Becker's 2008 story also noted one of Giustra's companies secured a deal to buy uranium deposits from Kazatomprom in 2005.
That agreement was made after Clinton accompanied Giustra on a trip to Kazakhstan. During the trip, Giustra and Clinton met with Kazakhstan's President Nursultan Nazarbayev.
Clinton issued a public statement praising the Kazakh leader despite his questionable, antidemocratic record. The Times called the praise a "propaganda coup" for Nazarbayev. (he later "won relection" w/ an unbelievable 90% of the vote)
"Just months after the Kazakh pact was finalized, Mr. Clinton's charitable foundation received its own windfall: a $31.3 million donation from Mr. Giustra that had remained a secret until he acknowledged it last month. The gift, combined with Mr. Giustras more recent and public pledge to give the William J. Clinton Foundation an additional $100 million, secured Mr. Giustra a place in Mr. Clintons inner circle," wrote Becker and another reporter, Don Van Natta.
A spokesperson for the Clinton Giustra Enterprise Partnership told Business Insider they are "working on a formal statement" in response to a request for comment on Thursday. Clinton Giustra Enterprise Partnership is an initiative of the Clinton Foundation that was cofounded by Clinton and Giustra in 2007. A Clinton Foundation spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment.
http://www.businessinsider.com/nyt-reporter-clinton-lied-about-meeting-2015-48/25
Transliteration muddles the process of rendering the sense of what a Russian word or expression really means. It adds an extra step.
I was deployed to Uzbekistan where they had converted from Cyrillic to Latin lettering after 1991. However, it was much easier to learn some Russian since most Uzbeks still speak it. Our Russian teachers (Uzbek & Kazakh) started the class with transliterations; however, the learning process was made much simpler by plunging into Cyrillic and learning to hear it in the same fashion that we instinctively hear Latin letters written out.
One tool I used was to regard Cyrillic as modified Greek, which it is. This made learning it much simpler. And once past the alphabet barrier, Russian isn’t all that difficult.
Kazakh belongs to the Kipchak branch of the Turkic languages and earlier they used the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Turkic_alphabet
The new script is a modified form of the Latin alphabet, which is used to write not only English but many other languages, including Turkic ones related to Kazakh, such as Turkish.
But the version of Cyrillic the Soviets adopted was unnecessarily cumbersome, with 42 letters, including several representing sounds that do not occur in Kazakh, such as shch and ts. The new script will have a mere 32 letters: 23 ordinary Latin ones (c, w and x did not make the cut), and nine with apostrophes.
Thanks AdmSmith. It would have been amusing if they'd adapted the Turkish alphabet instead.
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