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Crimean Tatar is another example of a language that cannot be easily classified.
Features
of both Oghuz and Kipchak are found mixed within the language, which exhibits both
Ag and
Aw as reflexes of Proto-Turkic
Ag. While the original Turkic language of the Crimea was
Kipchak, migrations of speakers of Oghuz languages to the Crimea during periods of Ottoman
rule resulted in Oghuz and Kipchak-based varieties existing side by side.
Subsequent population
upheavals (namely, the migration of Greek Orthodox speakers to the Donetsk region, the
decimation of Jewish and Karaite speakers during the Holocaust, and the deportation of Crimean
Tatars to Central Asia) resulted in further
mixing of these varieties, leading to the difficulty in
classifying modern Crimean Tatar (Polinsky 1992). Due to the great similarity between most
branches of Turkic and their proximity to one another, the mixing
of languages of different
branches is not uncommon, making classification a challenging task.
Despite occasionally difficulties in classifying certain languages, a phylogram based
upon a neighbor-adjoining network (Saitou and Nei 1987) reveals that the basic divisions that
have been proposed thus far still hold. The tree in Figure 2 was created using SplitsTree (Huson
and Bryant 2006) and takes into account the modern reflexes of eighteen phonological features,
including the reflexes of *
d and final velars.
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Figure 2: Neighbor-Adjoining Tree of the Turkic Languages
While Kazakh
is solidly a Kipchak language, Uzbek does not always meet the criteria for
being classified as Southeastern. In certain circumstances it, too, has lost final *
G after high
vowels, as in the adjective forming suffix *
lIG, which has become -
li in modern literary Uzbek
(e.g.
tog’-li ‘mountainous’). According to Schönig (2007), this indicates that Uzbek occupies an
intermediate position between the Kipchak and Southeastern languages. As the loss of *
G
occurs only
in this context, however, it is more likely that this is a contact effect. In support of
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the contact hypothesis is the existence of a ‘dialects’ of Uzbek that are clearly more Kipchak
than Southeastern (Daniyarov 1975). The official literary dialect of Uzbek, which is clearly
more Southeastern in nature despite occasional Kipchak
influences, is the dialect that is used in
this study. In comparing Turkic languages from two different branches, it is hoped that the
claims made about Uzbek and Kazakh may be applicable to a broad range of other Turkic
languages.
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