How to learn the Kazakh language

How to learn the Kazakh language

1. My guess is, if you’re wanting to learn Kazakh, it’s because you’re 1) a grad student in search of obscure research, 2) a professor who got a job in Kazakhstan, 3) an aid worker or teacher, 5) a diplomat, in which case you already have expert help, 6) someone who got married to a Kazakh, 7) a trailing spouse, who got married to someone who ended up in Kazakhstan, 8) a tourist, or 9) insanely good at and fascinated with languages.

Now I can’t speak to the polyglot, but I can offer a few tips for everyone else. As a brief introduction, Kazakh is currently written in Cyrillic (like Russian) but is an agglutinative (“sticky-ending”) languagewhere all the endings pile together onto the ends of words. For instance, here’s an online article about a new restaurant in Pittsburgh that serves delicous Afghani and Venezuelan food (…why am I not in Pittsburgh??). The tagline for the article reads:

Питтсбург қаласындағы «Жанжал асханасы» деп аталатын ресторан Куба, Иран, Ауғанстан мен Венесуэланың ұлттық тағамдарын пісіріп, бұл елдерді жаңа қырынан танытқысы келеді.

To flip that roughly into latin letters, so you can read it:

Pittsburg qalasyndagy <Janjal askanasy> dep atalatyn restoran Kuba, Iran, Aughanstan, men Venesuelanyn ulttyq tagamdaryn pisirip, bul elderdi jana qyrynan tanytqysy keledi.

A ‘direct’ translation would go something like:

Pittsburgh city-at “conflict cafe” said named-was restaurant Cuba, Iran, Afghanistan, and Venezuela’s national foods-to cook, this countries-to new side-from introduce-to is wanting.

Well, that’s pretty terrible. So a full translation might be:

Pittsburgh’s “Conflict Kitchen” restaurant fixes national foods from Cuba, Iran, Afghanistan, and Venezuela, introducing a new side of these countries.

Besides how amazing this food sounds, my point is: look at all those word bits! More or less, red = belonging; purple = where it’s at/from, orange = adjectives, light blue = passive, active, or reflexive, green = verb tenses, gray = plurals, dark blue = accusative or genitive cases. And often you can see two or three endings on a single word. Beautiful.

I love Kazakh for this reason – not just because the base words are great (above, pisiru = to cook, janjal = conflict, qala = city, tagam = food, jana = new), but because adding all the endings and watching how they interact is like studying a puzzle.

Lacking Afghan food, I’ll just go straight for a Kazakh freezer… meat!

So should you want to join me in this puzzling (and trust me, I’m often puzzled…), I’ll note below some tips and resources I’ve found useful for Kazakh learners at all stages:

1) Play around

First, learn your alphabet. Kazakh may change to the latin alphabet in the future, but as of now, it’s still in Cyrillic. Download the alphabet PDF from Indiana University, and then Niki Dutta’s great list of the 500 most essential words in Kazakh, Russian and English. If you actually plan to live in Kazakhstan, it wouldn’t hurt learn both Kazakh and Russian.

Next, try puzzling through some posts at the new Kazakh Language blog. Not sure where this blog popped up from, but it’s got song and story translations, carefully broken down for the English-origin language learner. For instance, this post takes a Youtube vid of Dinara Sultan’s song Sen (“You”) and adds the lyrics in Cyrillic and Latin letters, then the English meaning, and then a breakdown of what each word means. Not a bad way to learn!

2) Get a Tutor

If you’re really interested, look for a tutor. Perhaps there are Kazakhs in your city on study or business. But if not, sharedtalk.com offers free language exchange. There are always young Kazakhs looking topractice their English, and they’ll be delighted to teach you some Kazakh in return! Message until you find someone you like, and then you can try Skyping for more audio practice.

2) Take a Class

If you’re serious, classes are very helpful. In Kazakhstan, try KIMEP in Almaty or the Eurasian National University in Astana. A handful of American universities also teach Kazakh, including U Wisconsin, U Michigan, Indiana U, U Washington, and UT Austin. Indiana University has a strong summer program in the US, and American Councils puts you right in Kazakhstan for a summer. It will run a few thousand dollars, but you can often get full scholarships if you’re a grad student, or planning to start grad school soon.

“She says we’re obligated to get married to a Kazakh, because we speak Kazakh?”

3) Buy some Materials

The classic textbooks in English are the 2009 Kazakh Language Manual from the Peace Corps, edited by Michael Hancock (find the 1995 version freely here), and the green Kazakh Language Made Easy, by Iraida Kubaeva. However, both are somewhat hard to locate outside of Kazakhstan. University of Arizona sells CD lessons at three levels. Radio Free Europe’s Azattyq.org is good for listening to news, and Youtube has music videos.

More and more publishers are starting to add Kazakh to their language series, with varying results. Try Colloquial Kazakh by Zaure Batayeva, or download audio flashcards from BYKI online or via iPhone.  Search “Kazakh” on FlashcardExchange to find my many free flashcard sets, and then pull them into Flashcards Deluxe Android / Apple app for practice while you’re waiting in the airport. This has worked great for my vocab, but I’m now open to suggestions on how to improve my grammar!

4) Read a Book

Once you’ve started, Kazakhstan’s online libraries kitap.kz and adebiportal.kz have free ebooks in Kazakh. An “I love reading!” series offers easy readers translated from English — with such culturally-relevant (?) tales such as Sharks, Ships, Musical Instruments, and Vikings. [Updated link: you can find many of them here: http://adebiportal.kz/kz/authors/book/1185].

If ‘Snakes on a Plane’ is a thing, ‘Sharks on the Steppe’ is totally legitimate…

5) Translate It

What if you need to translate some reading materials? You can find phrase lists and scans of print dictionaries online, and those are great for set words and phrases. But they’re less useful for sorting out colloquial wording. The online dictionary above gives only one English word for each Kazakh one one. So my personal strategy is to enter Kazakh words into the http://sozdik.kz/ dictionary and then copy the long list of meanings and sample uses in Russian. I then paste into Google Translate so that all the Russian flips to English. A terrible method for exact translation, but it gives the most comprehensive sense of difficult or complex words.

Another great resource for mid-level learners is Akmaral Mukan’s $70 Learner’s Dictionary of Kazakh Idioms. I’ve been begging for this for ages, but my Kazakh teacher-friend are often more focused on getting locals fluent in Kazakh before training foreigners! But luckily for us, Mukan has lived in America but spent years collecting and testing idiomatic phrases and example sentences in Kazakh, then translating for the English learner. If you’re serious about Kazakh, this is a great book to use for digging deeper.

6) And in the Future

Well, it’s not available yet, but I dream of someday getting paid to work with local linguists on building roots lists as well as frequency lists for learning Kazakh. I tried starting my own roots list a little while ago, but I’d like to see a detailed database with Kazakh-English words, searchable by presumed root, synonyms, type of word, commonality, and topic. Ideally you could query and then download personalized word lists for study. If anyone’s working on this, let me know! And for more about what’s possible with online dictionaries today, watch lexicographer (dictionary-builder) Erin McKean’s TED talk about the possibilities of interactive online dictionaries. She responded personally to my queries about what kind of database programs are best for building an interactive multilingual dictionary, so I think she’s the best (!!! :-D).

I’d also like to see frequency lists in the same database. You can currently buy mass-produced topical vocab lists, although I prefer the free Kaztest ebooks on til.gov.kz above. But either way, vocab lists tend to range from the inane to the absurdly specific. They’re often focused on obscure nouns, rather than those common verb combinations that everyone uses but no one translates. I’d like to see something like Brown’s 10,000-word Russian Learner’s Dictionary, but again interactive and with the possibility to download word lists. This would be  more useful than memorizing lists of words like асқатық (condiments) and ұшақтың құйрығы (airplane’s tail), that I *cough* have definitely not done…

My only other wish is for more texts on mid- to advanced-level grammatical concepts, as everyone keeps remaking introductory Kazakh-English textbooks in different formats. But once you’ve got the basics, where do you go from there? Hopefully to Kazakhstan, to try out your әдемі (beautiful) қазақ тілі (Kazakh language) skills!

Ammonia.. why did I learn the world for ammonia?

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