Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Kipchak–Cuman confederation spoke a Turkic language (Kipchak languages, Cuman language) [26] whose most important surviving record is the Codex Cumanicus, a late 13th-century dictionary of words in Kipchak, Cuman, and Latin.
The Kipchak languages (also known as the Kypchak, Qypchaq, Qypshaq or the Northwestern Turkic languages) are a sub-branch of the Turkic language family spoken by approximately 30 million people in much of Central Asia and Eastern Europe, spanning from Ukraine to China.
Interfax Kazakhstan — Information Agency Interfax Kazakhstan English/Kazakh/Russian languages. Qazaqstan — Kazakhstan state television channel English/Kazakh/Russian languages. Kazakhstan Today — Information portal of Kazakhstan English/Kazakh/Russian languages. Total — Information portal of Kazakhstan Kazakh/Russian languages.
Kazakhstan's Ministry of Emergency Situations told ABC News that the plane was carrying 69 people -- 64 passengers and five crew members. The ministry said 29 people survived the crash, with many ...
Cuman or Kuman (also called Kipchak, Qypchaq or Polovtsian, self referred to as Tatar (tatar til) in Codex Cumanicus) [4] was a West Kipchak Turkic language spoken by the Cumans (Polovtsy, Folban, Vallany, Kun) and Kipchaks; the language was similar to today's various languages of the West Kipchak branch.
A map shows site of an Azerbaijan Airlines plane crash in Kazakhstan, Dec. 25, 2024. / Credit: Murat Usubali/Anadolu/Getty
[2] [3] In 1975 he defended his PhD dissertation on Kipchak monuments written in the Armenian script in Kamianets-Podilskyi. In 1987, he received a Doctor of Philology in Turkic languages for his work on Armeno-Kipchak and Urum materials. In 1989, the Crimean Tatars were permitted to return their homeland.
Flight records for the plane made by Brazil's Embraer that crashed last week in Kazakhstan are headed to the South American country so the data can be extracted, the Brazilian Air Force said in a ...