Uzbek Although the Latin alphabet is official in Uzbekistan, the Cyrillic alphabet is found in
older works and is still in common use. Cyrillic texts have been transliterated. The
Uzbek alphabet and approximate phonetic correspondences are found in Table 1. Table 1: The Uzbek Latin Alphabet
/a,æ/
/b/
/d/ /e/ /f/ /g/ /h/ /i,ɨ/ /dʒ, ʒ/ /k/ /l/ /m/ /n/ /ɒ/ /p/ /q/ /r/ /s/ /t/ /u,y/ /v,w/ /x/ /j/ /z/ /o, ø/ /ɣ/ /tʃ/ /ʃ/ /ŋ/<’> /ʔ,Ø/ Standard Uzbek does not exhibit much of the vowel harmony or consonant assimilations
typical of other Turkic languages. The only commonly encountered phonological process
in Uzbek is the assimilation of /g/ (as in the dative suffix -ga), which changes to /k/ after
/k/ (hakkok-ka - 'to the jeweler'), and to /q/ after /q/ (yoq-qa - 'to the side'). When
following /g'/, both sounds change to /q/ (tog'- 'mountain' ∼ toq-qa- 'to the mountain').
Kazakh Kazakh is written in the Cyrillic script, so it has been necessary to transliterate data into
the Latin script. For the purposes of this work, I have employed a system that is
commonly used in works on the Turkic languages. Table 2 provides the native Cyrillic