Old Turkic

Earliest attested Turkic language From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Old Turkic, also known as East Old Turkic, was a Siberian Turkic language spoken around East Turkistan and Mongolia.[1] It was first discovered in inscriptions originating from the Second Turkic Khaganate, and later the Uyghur Khaganate, making it the earliest attested Common Turkic language. In terms of the datability of extant written sources, the period of Old Turkic can be dated from slightly before 720 AD to the Mongol invasions of the 13th century.

Quick facts Native to, Region ...
Old Turkic
East Old Turkic
Talas Inscription 1
Native toSecond Turkic Khaganate, Uyghur Khaganate
RegionEast Asia, Central Asia and parts of Eastern Europe
Era5th–13th centuries
Turkic
Dialects
Old Turkic script, Old Uyghur alphabet
Language codes
ISO 639-3otk (Old Turkish)
otk Old Turkish
Glottologoldu1238
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Monument to Kul Tegin

Classification and dialects

Old Turkic can generally be split into two dialects, the earlier Orkhon Turkic and the later Old Uyghur. There is a difference of opinion among linguists with regard to the Karakhanid language, some (among whom include Omeljan Pritsak, Sergey Malov, Osman Karatay and Marcel Erdal) classify it as another dialect of East Old Turkic, while others prefer to include Karakhanid among Middle Turkic languages;[2] nonetheless, Karakhanid is very close to Old Uyghur.[3] East Old Turkic and West Old Turkic together comprise the Old Turkic proper, though West Old Turkic is generally unattested and is mostly reconstructed through words loaned through Hungarian.[4] East Old Turkic is the oldest attested member of the Siberian Turkic branch of Turkic languages, and several of its now-archaic grammatical as well as lexical features are extant in the modern Yellow Uyghur, Lop Nur Uyghur[5] and Khalaj (all of which are endangered); Khalaj, for instance, has (surprisingly) retained a considerable number of archaic Old Turkic words[6] despite forming a language island[7] within Central Iran and being heavily influenced by Persian.[8] Old Uyghur is not a direct ancestor of the modern Uyghur language,[9][10] but rather the Western Yugur language; the contemporaneous ancestor of Modern Uyghur was the Chagatai literary language.[11]

East Old Turkic is attested in a number of scripts, including the Old Turkic script, the Old Uyghur alphabet, the Brahmi script, and the Manichaean script. The Turkic runiform alphabet of Orkhon Turkic was deciphered by Vilhelm Thomsen in 1893.

Phonology

More information Front, Back ...
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Vowel roundness is assimilated through the word through vowel harmony. Some vowels were considered to occur only in the initial syllable, but they were later found to be in suffixes.[12] Length is distinctive for all vowels; while most of its daughter languages have lost the distinction, many of these preserve it in the case of /e/ with a height distinction, where the long phoneme developed into a more closed vowel than the short counterpart.

More information Labial, Dental ...
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Old Turkic is highly restrictive in which consonants words can begin with: words can begin with /b/, /t/, /tʃ/, /k/, /q/, /s/, /ɫ/ and /j/, but they do not usually begin with /p/, /d/, /g/, /ɢ/, /l/, /ɾ/, /n/, /ɲ/, /ŋ/, /m/, /ʃ/, or /z/. The only exceptions are 𐰤𐰀 (ne, "what, which") and its derivatives, and some early assimilations of word-initial /b/ to /m/ preceding a nasal in a word such as 𐰢𐰤 (men, "I").

Writing systems

The Old Turkic script (also known variously as Göktürk script, Orkhon script, Orkhon-Yenisey script) is the alphabet used by the Göktürks and other early Turkic khanates during the 8th to 10th centuries to record the Old Turkic language.[13]

The script is named after the Orkhon Valley in Mongolia where early 8th-century inscriptions were discovered in an 1889 expedition by Nikolai Yadrintsev.[14]

This writing system was later used within the Uyghur Khaganate.[15] Additionally, a Yenisei variant is known from 9th-century Yenisei Kirghiz inscriptions, and it has likely cousins in the Talas Valley of Turkestan and the Old Hungarian alphabet of the 10th century. Words were usually written from right to left. Variants of the script were found in Mongolia and Xinjiang in the east and the Balkans in the west. The preserved inscriptions were dated between the 8th and 10th centuries.

Grammar

Cases

There are approximately 12 case morphemes in Old Turkic (treating 3 types of accusatives as one); the table below lists Old Turkic cases following Marcel Erdal’s classification (some phonemes of suffixes written in capital letters denote archiphonemes which sometimes are dropped or changed as per (East) Old Turkic phonotactics):

More information Case Suffixes, Examples ...
Case Suffixes Examples Translation
Nominative ∅ (unmarked) köñül- heart
Genitive -niñ/-nıñ Tämürniñ Tämür’s
Accusative I (Pronominal Accusative) -nı bun'ı this
Accusative II (Nominal Accusative) -Ig/-Ug[a] qızlarığ, Qarluq girls, Karluk
Accusative III[17] -(I)n oglımın my son’s
Dative -ka[b] ordoqa to palace
Directive / Allative[c] -gArU[d] əvgərü towards home
Locative -tA/-dA ä

əv, suvluqta

in house, in vessel
Directive-Locative / Partitive-Locative -rA asra[e], bara[f] below, at/towards/on head
Ablative -dIn/-tIn -dAn qañtın from father
Equative-Lative -çA[g][h] tükəğüçə up to/till end
Instrumental -In/-Un okun with arrow
Comitative[i] -lXgU[j] -lUgUn[k] iniliğü together with young brother
Similative -lAyU yultuzlayu like star(s)
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  1. This Old Turkic accusative suffix is retained in Modern Turkish in the form of -jXg.[16] Karakhanid also employs this suffix.
  2. Khalaj is the only modern Turkic language to have retained this archaic case suffix, which fact has led Mahmud al-Kashgari to regard the suffix as a distinctive marker of Arghu language (i.e. Khalaj). Most of the remaining Turkic languages usually have -GA.[18]
  3. Old Turkic possessed an opposition between dative -ka and allative -gArU/-kArU cases, the latter perhaps derived secondarily from the former at the pre-Old Turkic stage. The dative case has been preserved intact in all the modern Siberian Turkic languages. On the other hand, the old allative has lost its case function, being preserved in a lexicalized manner in only a small number of adverbial expressions - for example, Uzbek ichkari ‘towards inside’. However, Tuvan and Khakas have reintroduced the formal opposition into their respective case systems.
  4. Rare in Buddhist Uyghur and Karakhanid.[19]
  5. In directive-locative sense.
  6. In partitive-locative sense.
  7. Today this Old Turkic suffix is preserved as a case form in Altay and Shor.
  8. Though Khalaj retains this suffix as a case form (like Altay and Shor), it denotes locative case; which, at first glance, is aberrant.[20]
  9. Out of all Turkic languages, today this case is preserved only in Sakha (i.e. Yakut).
  10. In Orkhon Turkic. This ancient suffix is already rare by the time of Orkhon Turkic and the usage of this case with pronouns is not attested in the whole of Old Turkic.[21].
  11. In Manichaean Uyghur

Grammatical number

Old Turkic (like Modern Turkic) had 2 grammatical numbers: singular and plural. However, Old Turkic also formed collective nouns (a category related to plurals) by a separate suffix -(A)gU(n) e.g. tayağunuñuz ‘your colts’.[22] Unlike Modern Turkic, Old Turkic had 3 types of suffixes to denote plural:[23]

  • -(X)t
  • -An
  • -lAr

Suffixes except for -lAr is limitedly used for only a few words. In some descriptions, -(X)t and -An may also be treated as collective markers.[24] -(X)t is used for titles of non-Turkic origin, e.g. tarxattarxan 'free man' <Soghdian, tégittégin 'prince' (of unknown origin). -s is a similar suffix, e.g. ïšbara-s 'lords' <Sanskrit īśvara. -An is used for person, e.g. ərən 'men, warriors' ←är 'man', oğlanoğul 'son'.

Today, all Modern Turkic languages (except for Chuvash) use exclusively the suffix of the -lAr type for plural.

Verb

Finite verb forms in Old Turkic (i.e. verbs to which a tense suffix is added) always conjugate for person and number of the subject by corresponding suffixes save for the 3rd person, in which case person suffix is absent. This grammatical configuration is preserved in the majority of Modern Turkic languages, except for some such as Yellow Uyghur in which verbs no longer agree with the person of the subject.

Tense

Old Turkic had a complex system of tenses,[25] which could be divided into six simple[26] and derived tenses, the latter formed by adding special (auxiliary) verbs to the simple tenses.

More information Tense, Positive ...
Old Turkic simple tenses according to M. Erdal's classification
Tense Positive Negative
Imperfect Aorist -Ur -mAz
Preterite (Simple Past) -dI
Perfect Participle -mış -mAdOk[a]
Future -daçı -mAčI
Vivid Past -yOq -mAyOk
Imminent Future -gAlır
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  1. Today, this form is preserved by two distinct branches of Turkic: Oghuz and the "Lena Group" of Turkic[27] (Sakha and Dolgan, in the form -батах).

Hapax legomena

Some suffixes are attested as being attached to only one word and no other instance of attachment is to be found. Similarly, some words are attested only once in the entire extant Old Turkic corpus.

Denominal

The following have been classified by Gerard Clauson as denominal noun suffixes.

More information Suffix, Usages ...
Suffix Usages Translation
-ça ança thus, like that
-ke siğirke
yipke
sinew
string/thread
-la/-le ayla
tünle
körkle
thus, like that
yesterday, night, north
beautiful
-suq/-sük bağırsuq (internal) organs
-ra/-re içre inside, within
-ya/-ye bérye
yırya
here
north
-çıl/-çil igčil sickly
-ğïl/-gil üçgil
qırğıl
triangular
grey haired
-nti ékkinti second
-dam/-dem teñridem god-like
tırtı:/-türti ičtirti
inside, within
-qı:/-ki aşnuqı
üzeki
ebdeki
former
(being) on or above
being in the house
-an/-en/-un oğlan
eren
children
men, gentlemen
-ğu:/-gü ençgü
tuzğu
buğrağu
tranquil, at peace
food given to a traveller as a gift
being like a camel stud, aggressive
-a:ğu:/-e:ğü: üçeğü
içeğü
three together
being inside human body, internal organ
-dañ/-duñ otuñ
izdeñ
firewood
track, trace
-ar/-er birer
azar
one each
a few
-layu:/-leyü börileyü like a wolf
-daš/-deš qarındaş
yerdeş
kinsman
compatriot
-mïš/-miš altmış
yetmiş
sixty
seventy
-gey küçgey violent
-çaq/-çek and -çuq/-çük ığırçaq spindle-whorl
-q/-k (after vowels and -r)
-aq/-ek (the normal forms)
-ïq/-ik/-uq/-ük (rare forms)
ortuq partner
-daq/-dek and(?) -duq/-dük bağırdaq
beligdek
burunduq
wrap
terrifying
nose ring
-ğuq/-gük çamğuq objectionable
-maq/-mek kögüzmek breastplate
-muq/-a:muq solamuk left-handed (pejorative?)
-naq baqanaq "frog in a horse's hoof" (from baqa frog)
-duruq/-dürük boyunduruq yoke
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Deverbal

The following have been classified by Gerard Clauson as deverbal suffixes.

More information Suffix, Usages ...
Suffix Usages Translation
-a/-e/-ı:/-i/-u/-ü oprı
adrı
keçe
egri
köni
ötrü
hollow,valley
branched,forked
evening, night
crooked
straight, upright, lawful
then, so
-ğa/-ge kısğa
öge
bilge
kölige
tilge
short
wise
wise
shadow
slice
-ğma/-gme tanığma riddle, denial
-çı/-çi otaçı:
okıçı
healer
priest, preacher
-ğuçı/-güçi ayğuçı
bitigüçi
councilor
scribe
-dı/-di üdründi
öğdi
alkadı
sökti
chosen,parted,separated,scattered
praised
praised
bran
-tı/-ti arıtı
uzatı
tüketi
completely, clean
lengthily
completely
-du eğdu
umdu
süktü
curved knife
desire, covetousness
campaigning
-ğu:/-gü bilegü
kedgü
oğlağü
whetstone
clothing
gently nurtured
-ingü bilingü
etingü
yeringü
salıñu
being in the know
being prepared
disgusted
sling
-ğa:ç/-geç kışgaç pincers
-ğuç/-güç biçgüç scissors
-maç/-meç tutmaç "saved" noodle dish
-ğut/-güt alpağut
bayağut
warrior
merchant
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