Encyclopedia

Kumyk

The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Kumyk

 

the language of the Kumyks, who live mainly in the Dagestan ASSR and also in the Chechen-Ingush and Severnaia Osetiia ASSR’s. There are about 185,900 speakers of Kumyk (1970 census).

Kumyk is related to the Kipchak group of Turkic languages. Some features of Kumyk are the presence of initial g instead of k (gishi instead of kishi, “person”), long consonants, the participial form -agan/-egen, and the genitive affix -nï/ni without a final consonant (it coincides with the accusative form). Kumyk has three dialects: Kaitak, Buinak, and Khasav”iurt (the literary language is based on the last two dialects). The Kaitak dialect is characterized by a number of sharp differences from the other dialects and the literary language—for example, dissimilation of vowels and the presence of the glottalized consonants ts’, k’, t’, and ch ’ (an influence of the Caucasian languages). The Kumyk literary language was created during the Soviet period and is one of the literary languages of the Dagestan ASSR. The Kumyk writing system was based on Arabic script until 1929 and on Latin script until 1938; it has been based on Russian script since 1938.

REFERENCES

Dmitriev, N. K. Grammatika kumykskogo iazyka. Moscow-Leningrad, 1940.
Gadzhieva, N. Z. “Kumykskii iazyk.” In the collection Mladopis’mennye iazyki narodov SSSR. Moscow-Leningrad, 1959.
Russko-kumykskii slovar’. Moscow, 1960.
Magomedov, A. G. “Kumykskii iazyk.” In Iazyki narodov SSSR, vol. 2. Moscow, 1966.
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
The son of a Russian Cossack father and Nogai mother, Atarshchikov spent his early childhood in a Cossack stanitsa on the Terek River before moving for the rest of his upbringing to an isolated Kumyk aul in the Dagestan mountains.
groups include the Avar (29.4%); Dargin (17%); Kumyk (14.9%); and the
(25) The Karachays are a Sunni Muslim Turkic people who closely related to the Balkars and Abkhaz, and less closely to the Nogai and Kumyk of Dagestan.
Largest among these ethnic groups are the Avar, Dargin, Kumyk, Lezgin, and Laks.
The same form is attested for Kazakh (Bektaev 2001: 166), Karakalpak (Baskakov 1967: 903, entry sapogi) and Kumyk (Bammatov 1969: 379).
(10) The variant without umlaut, erik, occurs among other things in Koman (Gronbech 1942: 92), Karakalpak (Baskakov 1967: 14, entry abrikos), Kumyk (Bammatov 1969: 376), Karachay-Balkar (Tenisev and Sujuncev 1989: 770, meaning: 'plum') and Turkish (meaning: 'plum').
A well-known example for vowel lowering is the Turkic word kemi 'ship, boat' (Clauson 1972: 721) which survives with a closed vowel in Oghuz: Tur/Azr germ, Tkm ga:mi (TDS 232), Ili Salar ki:mu (Yakup 2002: 135), but with an open vowel elsewhere: Uyghur has keme 'ship, boat' (UTIL 4: 743) with the vowel modification in the first syllable described above under the heading "I-umlaut", Uzb kema (OTIL 1: 378), Kaz keme (Bektaev 2001: 233), Krg keme (Judaxin 1965: 371), Krc keme (Tenisev and Sujuncev 1989: 322), Kumyk genre (Bammatov 1969: 96), Alt keme (Baskakov and Toscakova 1947: 79), Xak kime (Baskakov and Inkizekova-Grekul 1953: 75) and Tuv xeme (Tenisev 1968: 473).
Some Kipchak languages have preserved the high vowel as well, as Karakalpak tuwri (Baskakov 1967: 822, entry prjamo) and Tatar turi (TatRS 558), while others have a low vowel, as Kazakh tuwra (Bektaev 2001: 448), Kirghiz tuura (Judaxin 1965: 772-773), Kumyk tuwra (Bammatov 1969: 321) and Karachay-Balkar tuwra (Tenisev and Sujuncev 1989: 657).
Most languages preserve the closed vowel: Karachay-Balkar tolu (Tenisev and Sujuncev 1989: 643), Kumyk tolu (Bammatov 1969: 319), Kazakh toli (Bektaev 2001: 444), Karakalpak toli (Baskakov 1967: 719, entry polnyj), Tuvan dolu (Tenisev 1968: 170), Turkish dolu, Ili Salar do:li (Yakup 2002: 80).
'ill-fated', 'ill-starred', 'miserable' in Chuvash; 'bad', 'scary', 'terrible', 'nasty', 'ugly', 'bleak', 'tragic', 'dismal' in Turkish and Kumyk; 'usual', 'simple'; 'tragic'; 'mass', 'crowd' in Kazakh; 'great', 'powerful', 'severe' used for rulers' proper names of Karakhanid.
The languages used by RL in 1954 ranged from Ukrainian and Turkmen to Ossetin, Arar, and Kumyk. (36)
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