Soyot - Wikipedia The Soyot language is Turkic, and closely corresponds with the Tofalar language; [2] most Soyot spoke Buryat during Russian rule, but following the collapse of the Soviet Union, there has been an active effort to revitalize the formerly extinct Soyot language
Reindeer Herding in the Eastern Sayan- A Story of the Soyot When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, the Soyot population suddenly spoke out The revival of Soyot identity was practically instantaneous, and after several years the Soyot reappeared as a separate ethnic group
Soyot alphabet, pronunciation and language - Omniglot Soyot is a Turkic language spoken in the Oka area of the Republic of Buryatia in the east of Russia, and also in the Darkhad Valley in Khövsgöl Province of Mongolia
Endangered Languages of Siberia - The Soyot Language - RAS The writing of Soyot is Cyrillic-based as well as the writing of the languages of other Turkic peoples of the former USSR For specific Soyot phonemes the letters with diacritical signs were adopted Letters қ, ғ, ҷ, һ, ң, ө, ү, ә, i were added to the Russian alphabet
Soyot Explained The Soyot language is a member of the Turkic family, and is closely related to the Tofa language; the Soyot language has many Buryat and medieval and contemporary Mongol loanwords
Soyot - Wikiwand The Soyot are an ethnic group of Samoyedic and Turkic origin who live mainly in the Oka region in the Okinsky District in Buryatia, Russia They share much of t
The Soyot language - atlaskmns. ru It is sometimes called the Soyot-Tsaatan language (since Soyot is close to the language of the Tsaatan spoke in Mongolia), but the term “Soyot” is used far more frequently
«It seemed as though the language would vanish as well» These mountains used to be the border between Turkic and Mongolian lands, and since then Buryatia has been home to the Soyot, a small community who speak a Turkic type language
Russia – Sojot ǀ Turkic ǀ Central Asian - DNA Consultants The Soyot people were once part of a cluster of peoples that eventually split into three groups Several thousand years ago, the ancestors of Soyot occupied the territory of the Eastern Sayan