Page Type: languageKumyk | Ethnologue

KUM ISO 639-3

Kumyk

Къумукъ‎ (Qumuq) Autonym

A language of Russian Federation

kum
Kumuk, Kumuklar, Kumyki, Qumuqlar
Къумукъ‎ (Qumuq)
426,000 in Russian Federation (2010 census). Ethnic population: 503,000 (2010 census). , 432,000 of these are reported to live in Dagestan. Total users in all countries: 427,600.
Chechnya republic, Gudermes district east to the Grozny region; Dagestan republic: north and east plain; North Ossetia-Alania republic, Mozdok district.
5* (Developing). Provincially recognized language in Dagestan Autonomous Republic (1994, Constitution of Dagestan Autonomous Republic, Article 10).
Turkic, Western, Ponto-Caspian
Khasavyurt, Buinaksk, Khaitag, Podgorniy, Terek. Dialects quite divergent.
Also use Russian [rus]. Used as L2 by Avar [ava], Chechen [che], Dargwa [dar], Lak [lbe], Nogai [nog].
Literacy rate in L1: Higher where majority speak Kumyk. Literacy rate in L2: High in Russian [rus]. Taught in primary schools. Literature. Newspapers. Radio. Dictionary. NT: 2007.
OLAC resources in and about Kumyk
Arabic script, Naskh variant [Arab], used until 1928. Cyrillic script [Cyrl], used since 1937, primary usage. Latin script [Latn], used between 1927–1937 with a resurgence of use in 2015.
In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Kumyk was the lingua franca in most of the northern Caucasus. Kumyk became the official language of the Dagestan Socialist Republic in 1927. Kumyk was spoken by the entire population of Dagestan and was used as a medium of communication with Russians (2021 G. Peler). Muslim.
Kumyk
1,600 in Turkey (2021 Joshua Project). , based on ethnicity.
Canakkale province: Biga district, Akköprü, Aziziye, Doğancı, and Geyikkırı villages.
Khasav-Yurt, Buinak, Khaidak.
6b (Threatened)
Non-indigenous. Muslim.
View other languages of Turkey
Location: Chechnya republic, Gudermes district east to the Grozny region; Dagestan republic: north and east plain; North Ossetia-Alania republic, Mozdok district.