From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 |
Bukhori language is part of WikiProject Central Asia, a project to improve all Central Asia-related articles. This includes but is not limited to Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Xinjiang, Tibet and Central Asian portions of Iran and Russia, region-specific topics, and anything else related to Central Asia. If you would like to help improve this and other Central Asia-related articles, please join the project. All interested editors are welcome. |
| Stub |
This article has been rated as stub-Class on the Project's quality scale. |
| Mid |
This article has been rated as mid-importance on the Project's importance scale. |
|
|
|
After rating the article, please provide a short summary on the article's ratings summary page to explain your ratings and/or identify the strengths and weaknesses. |
the bukharan jews...
i don't know much about them or their language so far. i listened to some bukharan jewish music over the internet at least once.
if i understand the geography correctly, the area that the bukharan jews are most associated with is predominantly turkic.
the thing to understand about turks is that they aren't one single ethnic group- there are various turkic ethnic groups. Gringo300 03:15, 26 Apr 2005 (UTC)
- That's not really newsflash-worthy, and in this case, irrelevant. The area is historically part of the persian empire, which is reflected by the presence of Tajik and Bukhori. Bukhori is related to Dzhidi and Juhuri, not to Uzbek or Turkmen or Khyrghyz. Tomer TALK 03:33, Apr 26, 2005 (UTC)