Комментарии:
Я из Англии, и я очень бы хотел выучить киргизский язык. Я люблю Кыргызстан, но ресурсов очень мало, и я уже умею общаться с Кыргызстанцами на русском
ОтветитьAs Uzbek entire speech was understandable
ОтветитьДа, Мзм
Ответитьin the beginning she says her name is aigul. and she comes from Kyrgyzstan and living in Moskau since 5 years now. rest is a little bit difficult for me to understand. I'm from turkey
ОтветитьAs a native Spanish speaker, I could not understand a thing 🤣 sounds nice and harmonious though!
ОтветитьЧудом моё Кыргизии нрозмовитиш выборат, неудают Кыргизои зучо хой мулот минта!
ОтветитьAigul (Kyrgyz) = Aygül (Türkish) ,I am Turkish and I can understand approx.95% of what Aigul is saying, selam to my Kyrgyz brothers and sisters.
ОтветитьWow they roll the R's
ОтветитьI’m Mongolian. If I walked passed her, not listening closely, for sure would’ve thought Mongolian. Sounds definitely more Russian.
Ответитьi speak farsi and this sounded confusing bc i could understand some of the words she said bc it sounds like farsi
ОтветитьSimilar to turkish but not so much.
Ответитьcool.
ОтветитьI am from Azerbaijan and understand a little bit what she is saying. Salam to kyrgyz brothers from Azerbaijan.
ОтветитьReally similar to Mongolian imo
Ответитьthis is a mixture of turkish and russian
ОтветитьYes she has Russian accent. That's the problem of Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan. We are hardly effected from Sowjetunion.
ОтветитьNice language.
ОтветитьDefinitely sounds related to Turkish
ОтветитьThere are many Turkish clans. The languages of the various clans differ. Most of the "stans" speaks turkic languages, except Tajikistan where people speak a form of Persian. Uyghur, Tatar, Kazakh, Uzbek, Kyrgyz, Turkmen, Azeri, Turkish, Bashkir etc are all Turkic languages. Mutual intelligibility between Turkic clans will depend on how closely related their own language is with others. For example, an Oghuz Turk from Turkey will understand Azeri or Turkmen better than let's say Kazakh.
Ответитьi am 12% kyrgyz so hello cousins :)
ОтветитьIt sounds like Mongolian and Turkish, for some reason. Despite being one of the Turkic languages, I don't see that Kyrgyz and Turkish are alike.
Ответитьmare to kai samaj m naya
ОтветитьSounds Somalian
ОтветитьSelam yeniden adım aygul kırgızistandan geldim moskovaya kırgızistanun 1 bölu 3 ünde bulbul ölur sonra babamdan bahsediyor iste gökay gökayın oglu yeni hanımız faln
ОтветитьYayy I understand this 100% and I’m Uzbek+Kazakh
ОтветитьThey way she sounds like to me, half turkic and half russian, they seriously asimilated by russians, hope one day they will return to their, our, father languages.
Ответитьthe first part sounded nothing like kyrgyz
ОтветитьDoes she have a slight Russian accent or is this regular Kyrgyz? Are there many Russian words in Kyrgyz?
ОтветитьЖумшагыраак сүйлөсөңүз болмок.
ОтветитьAs a native Turkish speaker, listening to this hurts my brain haha I understand what she's saying to a certain degree but the rest sounds like Russian
ОтветитьShe looks Eskimo
ОтветитьAs soon as I heard this, it sounded Turkish like to me so even though it's not mutually intelligible with Turkish you can hear the Turkic sound.
Ответитьthe intonation sounds like mongolian to me
ОтветитьIt sounds very much like a combination of Turkish and Russian.
ОтветитьWhat is the best food of the Kyrgyz?
ОтветитьCan any Turks understand this?
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