Volga Tatar language: Difference between revisions

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'''Volga Tatar'''—or simply ''Tatar''—is a [[Turkic language]] spoken mainly in [[Tatarstan]] and nearby [[Russian republic]]s and ''[[oblast]]s,'' by about seven million [[Volga Tatar people]].<ref>Agnes Kefeli, "[http://www.princeton.edu/~turkish/aatt/tatar.htm Tatar: The Language of the Largest Minority in Russia]," website of the American Association of Teachers of Turkic (accessed November 5, 2008).</ref>  Variants are spoken from [[Finland]] and across [[Russia]] and former [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] republics.  There are three dialects: Western, Central, and Eastern.  [[Crimean Tatar language|Crimean Tatar]] is considered not a dialect but a different language.
'''Volga Tatar'''—or simply ''Tatar''—is a [[Turkic language]] spoken mainly in [[Tatarstan]] and nearby [[Russian republic]]s and ''[[oblast]]s,'' by about seven million [[Volga Tatar people]].<ref>Agnes Kefeli, "[http://www.princeton.edu/~turkish/aatt/tatar.htm Tatar: The Language of the Largest Minority in Russia]," website of the American Association of Teachers of Turkic (accessed November 5, 2008).</ref>  Variants are spoken from [[Finland]] and across [[Russia]] and former [[Soviet Union|Soviet]] republics.  There are three dialects: Western, Central, and Eastern.  [[Crimean Tatar language|Crimean Tatar]] is considered not a dialect but a different language.
==Notes==
<references/>

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Volga Tatar—or simply Tatar—is a Turkic language spoken mainly in Tatarstan and nearby Russian republics and oblasts, by about seven million Volga Tatar people.[1] Variants are spoken from Finland and across Russia and former Soviet republics. There are three dialects: Western, Central, and Eastern. Crimean Tatar is considered not a dialect but a different language.

Notes

  1. Agnes Kefeli, "Tatar: The Language of the Largest Minority in Russia," website of the American Association of Teachers of Turkic (accessed November 5, 2008).