Crimean Tatar alphabet
For the modern Crimean Tatar language, the Latin and the Cyrillic alphabets are used. The Latin script dominates on the Internet and the Cyrillic script in printed productions. Historically, the Arabic script was also used.
History
The Arabic Script
Crimean Tatars used the Arabic script from 16th century to 1928 when it was replaced with the Latin alphabet based on Yañalif. The Crimean variant contained a couple of modified Arabic letters.
Isolated | Final | Medial | Initial | Name | Modern Latin |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
ﺍ | ﺎ | — | elif | a, â | |
ﺀ | — | hemze | - | ||
ﺏ | ﺐ | ﺒ | ﺑ | be | b, p (word-finally) |
ﭖ | ﭗ | ﭙ | ﭘ | pe | p |
ﺕ | ﺖ | ﺘ | ﺗ | te | t |
ﺙ | ﺚ | ﺜ | ﺛ | se | s |
ﺝ | ﺞ | ﺠ | ﺟ | cim | c |
ﭺ | ﭻ | ﭽ | ﭼ | çim | ç |
ﺡ | ﺢ | ﺤ | ﺣ | ha | - |
ﺥ | ﺦ | ﺨ | ﺧ | hı | h |
ﺩ | ﺪ | — | dal | d | |
ﺫ | ﺬ | — | zel | z | |
ﺭ | ﺮ | — | re | r | |
ﺯ | ﺰ | — | ze | z | |
ﮊ | ﮋ | — | je | j | |
ﺱ | ﺲ | ﺴ | ﺳ | sin | s |
ﺵ | ﺶ | ﺸ | ﺷ | şin | ş |
ﺹ | ﺺ | ﺼ | ﺻ | sad | s |
ﺽ | ﺾ | ﻀ | ﺿ | dad | d, z |
ﻁ | ﻂ | ﻄ | ﻃ | tı | t |
ﻅ | ﻆ | ﻈ | ﻇ | zı | z |
ﻉ | ﻊ | ﻌ | ﻋ | ayn | - |
ﻍ | ﻎ | ﻐ | ﻏ | ğayn | ğ |
ﻑ | ﻒ | ﻔ | ﻓ | fe | f |
ﻕ | ﻖ | ﻘ | ﻗ | qaf | q |
ﻙ | ﻚ | ﻜ | ﻛ | kef (kef-i arabiy) |
k (g, ñ)1 |
ﮒ | ﮓ | ﮕ | ﮔ | gef (kef-i farsiy) |
g |
ﯓ | ﯔ | ﯖ | ﯕ | nef (kef-i nuniy, sağır kef) |
ñ |
ﻝ | ﻞ | ﻠ | ﻟ | lâm | l |
ﻡ | ﻢ | ﻤ | ﻣ | mim | m |
ﻥ | ﻦ | ﻨ | ﻧ | nun | n |
ﻭ | ﻮ | — | vav | v, o, ö, u, ü | |
ﻩ | ﻪ | ﻬ | ﻫ | he | -, e, a |
ﻻ | ﻼ | — | lâm-elif | la, lâ | |
ﻯ | ﻰ | ﻴ | ﻳ | ye | y, ı, i |
1 — The letter ﻙ (kef) was often used in place of ﮒ and ﯓ.
The Latin Alphabet
In 1928 during Latinisation in USSR The Crimean Tatar Arabic alphabet was replaced by the Latin alphabet based on the Yañalif script. This alphabet contained a number of differences from the modern variant. Particularly, in letters Ь ь, Ƣ ƣ, N̡ ᶇ, Ɵ ɵ, X x, Ƶ ƶ, I i instead of modern  â, Ğ ğ, I ı, İ i, Ñ ñ, Ö ö, and Ü ü.
Alphabet of 1928 | Alphabet of 1997 | Alphabet of 1928 | Alphabet of 1997 | Alphabet of 1928 | Alphabet of 1997 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
A a | A a | Ь ь | I ı | R r | R r |
B ʙ | B b | K k | K k | S s | S s |
C c | Ç ç | Q q | Q q | Ş ş | Ş ş |
Ç ç | C c | Ƣ ƣ | Ğ ğ | T t | T t |
D d | D d | L l | L l | U u | U u |
E e | E e | M m | M m | Y y | Ü ü |
F f | F f | N n | N n | V v | V v |
G g | G g | N̡ ᶇ | Ñ ñ | X x | H h |
H h | H h | O o | O o | Z z | Z z |
I i | İ i | Ɵ ɵ | Ö ö | Ƶ ƶ | J j |
J j | Y y | P p | P p |
Modern alphabets
Latin
Modern Latin alphabet for Crimean Tatar was introduced in 1990s. It is based on Turkish alphabet with three special letters — Q, Ñ, Â. Its official use in Crimea was accepted in 1997 by Crimean Parliament.
A a | Â â* | B b | C c | Ç ç | D d | E e | F f | G g |
Ğ ğ | H h | I ı | İ i | J j | K k | L l | M m | |
N n | Ñ ñ | O o | Ö ö | P p | Q q | R r | S s | |
Ş ş | T t | U u | Ü ü | V v | Y y | Z z |
- ﹡Ââ is not recognized as separate letter. It is used to show softness of a consonant followed by Aa.
Cyrillic
Cyrillic for Crimean Tatar was introduced in 1938 as part of Cyrillization of languages in Soviet Union. It is based on Russian alphabet with no special letters. From 1938 to 1990s that was the only alphabet used for Crimean Tatar.
А а | Б б | В в | Г г | Гъ гъ* | Д д | Е е | Ё ё |
Ж ж | З з | И и | Й й | К к | Къ къ* | Л л | М м |
Н н | Нъ нъ* | О о | П п | Р р | С с | Т т | У у |
Ф ф | Х х | Ц ц | Ч ч | Дж дж* | Ш ш | Щ щ | Ъ ъ |
Ы ы | Ь ь | Э э | Ю ю | Я я |
- ﹡ Гъ (ğ), къ (q), нъ (ñ) and дж (c) are separate letters of the alphabet (digraphs).
Cyrillic to Latin transliteration
Cyrillic | Latin | Notes |
---|---|---|
А а | A a | |
Б б | B b | |
В в | V v | |
Г г | G g | |
Гъ гъ | Ğ ğ | |
Д д | D d | |
Е е | E e | following a consonant |
Ye ye | word-initially, following a vowel or ь | |
Ё ё | Ö ö | following a consonant |
Yö yö | word-initially in "soft" words | |
Yo yo | word-initially in "hard" words; following a vowel, ь or ъ | |
Ж ж | J j | |
З з | Z z | |
И и | İ i | |
Й й | Y y | |
К к | K k | |
Къ къ | Q q | |
Л л | L l | |
М м | M m | |
Н н | N n | |
Нъ нъ | Ñ ñ | |
О о | Ö ö | if о is the first letter in a "soft" word |
O o | in other cases | |
П п | P p | |
Р р | R r | |
С с | S s | |
Т т | T t | |
У у | Ü ü | if у is the first letter in a "soft" word |
U u | in other cases | |
Ф ф | F f | |
Х х | H h | |
Ц ц | Ts ts | |
Ч ч | Ç ç | |
Дж дж | C c | |
Ш ш | Ş ş | |
Щ щ | Şç şç | |
ъ | — | is not a separate letter in Cyrillic |
Ы ы | I ı | |
ь | — | no special signs for softness |
Э э | E e | |
Ю ю | Ü ü | following a consonant |
Yü yü | word-initially, following a vowel or ь in "soft" words | |
Yu yu | word-initially, following a vowel or ь in "hard" words | |
Я я | Â â | following a consonant |
Ya ya | word-initially, following a vowel or ь |
References
- Кай И.С. Руководство для обучения крымско-татарскому языку по новому алфавиту — Симферополь, 1928.
- Alem-i-Medeniye