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单词 Kyrgyz
释义

Definition of Kyrgyz in English:

Kyrgyz

(also Kirghiz)
noun ˈkəːɡɪzkɪəˈɡiːz
  • 1A member of an indigenous people of central Asia, living chiefly in Kyrgyzstan.

    吉尔吉斯人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • And the interdependence of the Kirghiz and Wakhi has increased, alongside trade with the rest of Afghanistan.
    • There are approximately 2.5 million Kyrgyz living throughout the former Soviet Union, about 88 percent of them in Kyrgyzstan.
    • To local Kyrgyz and Russians, the spectacle of beefy US soldiers opens a new perspective.
    • In fact, the Kirghiz were one of the first groups of Afghan refugees to seek a haven in that country.
    • The Russian takeover instigated numerous revolts against tsarist authority, and many Kyrgyz opted to move into the Pamir mountains or to Afghanistan.
    • The Kyrgyz protests have centered on the towns of Osh and Jalalabad in the south, where ethnic Kyrgyz, Uzbeks, and Tajiks have clashed in the past.
    • The ancient Kyrgyz were part of strong nomadic tribal unions, which proved to be a serious distress to China.
    • Here at the first round of the elections on 27 February a majority of voters chose ‘Against all candidates’, demonstrating the deep mistrust of ordinary Kyrgyz for all the ruling class factions.
  • 2mass noun The Turkic language of the Kyrgyz, with approximately 2 million speakers.

    吉尔吉斯语

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The N.D.I. alone operates 20 centers that provide news summaries in Russian, Kyrgyz and Uzbek.
    • There is also some international vocabulary which came into Kyrgyz mostly by way of Russian.
    • It is related to such languages as Turkish, Kazak, Kyrgyz, Turkmen, and Uzbek.
    • Kyrgyzstan has two official languages: Kyrgyz and Russian.
    • Kyrghyz or Kirghiz is a Turkic language with about 1.5 million speakers in Kyrghyzstan and China.
    • In particular, Kyrgyz uses what's called ‘labial harmony.’
    • There aren't many people outside Kyrgyzstan who speak Kyrgyz, but that's immaterial here.
    • It is still commonly used as the language of business, and many ethnic Russians cannot speak Kyrgyz.
    • Beginning in 1991, all material about the Republic has been entered into the electronic catalog in Kyrgyz and Russian.
adjective ˈkəːɡɪzkɪəˈɡiːz
  • Relating to the Kyrgyz or their language.

    (与)吉尔吉斯人(有关)的;(与)吉尔吉斯语(有关)的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The two had been handed over by Kyrgyz authorities in July 2002, shortly after the incident.
    • Mr Akayev signed a resignation letter on Monday at the Kyrgyz embassy in Moscow.
    • Firefights will claim up to 48 Kyrgyz soldiers, 12 antirebel Uzbek soldiers, and 75 rebels.
    • A few weeks later, just after my Outside story went to press, there was startling news from Kyrgyzstan: Sharipov survived the fall and was captured by Kyrgyz soldiers.
    • That word comes to us from a Kyrgyz official in Moscow.
    • ‘His works gave us a great push to talk about national identity, about sovereignty,’ says Ms. Sydykova, a newspaper editor in the Kyrgyz capital of Bishkek.
    • Rebel snipers had 30 Kyrgyz soldiers pinned in a crossfire in a narrow canyon.
    • The poorly equipped Kyrgyz army was barely able to repel the attackers.
    • These legends are adapted and invented by Aitmatov with inspiration from the great Kirghiz epic poem, ‘The Manas’.
    • Today, the Wakhan has reverted to what it's been for much of its history: a primitive pastoral hinterland, home to about 7,000 Wakhi and Kirghiz people, scattered throughout some 40 small villages and camps.
    • In 1990 Kyrgyz reformers picked a physicist essentially out of obscurity to run their country.
    • Minutes later Kyrgyz soldiers are thrusting cans of sardines and canteens of water into their hands.
    • Dressed in ill-fitting Kyrgyz army fatigues - their clothes are in tatters and they have lost all their gear - the climbers appear on Kyrgyzstan's state-run TV.
    • The valley is too high for farming - 12,000 feet - hence the eastern Wakhan is inhabited primarily by Kirghiz nomads.
    • Rakitin earlier said that several Kyrgyz citizens who witnessed the killings testified that the gunman was tall and had red hair, a description that bears little resemblance to Ivankov.
    • We had a ‘Week of Kirghiz films’ in Kirghizstan where, at the initiative of a single award-winning filmmaker, Akthan Abdikalikor, three films were shown in 25 villages and three cities.
    • ‘Every family reads him and then rereads him, his books taught us to be braver,’ says Kyrgyz human-rights activist Natalia Ablova.
    • Earlier, he furtively signaled that he will try to kill the rebels if he can, and that there are 15 Kyrgyz soldiers in the valley and 17 rebels.
    • He was among more than 500 people crammed into a small refugee camp inside Kyrgyz territory but just 150 meters from the Uzbek border.
    • Within minutes two Kyrgyz soldiers are felled.

Origin

The name in Kyrgyz.

Definition of Kyrgyz in US English:

Kyrgyz

(also Kirghiz)
nounkirˈɡiz
  • 1A member of an indigenous people of central Asia, living chiefly in Kyrgyzstan.

    吉尔吉斯人

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The Kyrgyz protests have centered on the towns of Osh and Jalalabad in the south, where ethnic Kyrgyz, Uzbeks, and Tajiks have clashed in the past.
    • In fact, the Kirghiz were one of the first groups of Afghan refugees to seek a haven in that country.
    • Here at the first round of the elections on 27 February a majority of voters chose ‘Against all candidates’, demonstrating the deep mistrust of ordinary Kyrgyz for all the ruling class factions.
    • The ancient Kyrgyz were part of strong nomadic tribal unions, which proved to be a serious distress to China.
    • The Russian takeover instigated numerous revolts against tsarist authority, and many Kyrgyz opted to move into the Pamir mountains or to Afghanistan.
    • There are approximately 2.5 million Kyrgyz living throughout the former Soviet Union, about 88 percent of them in Kyrgyzstan.
    • And the interdependence of the Kirghiz and Wakhi has increased, alongside trade with the rest of Afghanistan.
    • To local Kyrgyz and Russians, the spectacle of beefy US soldiers opens a new perspective.
  • 2The Turkic language of the Kyrgyz, with approximately 2 million speakers.

    吉尔吉斯语

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Beginning in 1991, all material about the Republic has been entered into the electronic catalog in Kyrgyz and Russian.
    • In particular, Kyrgyz uses what's called ‘labial harmony.’
    • It is related to such languages as Turkish, Kazak, Kyrgyz, Turkmen, and Uzbek.
    • It is still commonly used as the language of business, and many ethnic Russians cannot speak Kyrgyz.
    • Kyrgyzstan has two official languages: Kyrgyz and Russian.
    • The N.D.I. alone operates 20 centers that provide news summaries in Russian, Kyrgyz and Uzbek.
    • Kyrghyz or Kirghiz is a Turkic language with about 1.5 million speakers in Kyrghyzstan and China.
    • There aren't many people outside Kyrgyzstan who speak Kyrgyz, but that's immaterial here.
    • There is also some international vocabulary which came into Kyrgyz mostly by way of Russian.
adjectivekirˈɡiz
  • Relating to the Kyrgyz or their language.

    (与)吉尔吉斯人(有关)的;(与)吉尔吉斯语(有关)的

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Firefights will claim up to 48 Kyrgyz soldiers, 12 antirebel Uzbek soldiers, and 75 rebels.
    • A few weeks later, just after my Outside story went to press, there was startling news from Kyrgyzstan: Sharipov survived the fall and was captured by Kyrgyz soldiers.
    • The two had been handed over by Kyrgyz authorities in July 2002, shortly after the incident.
    • The poorly equipped Kyrgyz army was barely able to repel the attackers.
    • He was among more than 500 people crammed into a small refugee camp inside Kyrgyz territory but just 150 meters from the Uzbek border.
    • We had a ‘Week of Kirghiz films’ in Kirghizstan where, at the initiative of a single award-winning filmmaker, Akthan Abdikalikor, three films were shown in 25 villages and three cities.
    • The valley is too high for farming - 12,000 feet - hence the eastern Wakhan is inhabited primarily by Kirghiz nomads.
    • In 1990 Kyrgyz reformers picked a physicist essentially out of obscurity to run their country.
    • Within minutes two Kyrgyz soldiers are felled.
    • These legends are adapted and invented by Aitmatov with inspiration from the great Kirghiz epic poem, ‘The Manas’.
    • Earlier, he furtively signaled that he will try to kill the rebels if he can, and that there are 15 Kyrgyz soldiers in the valley and 17 rebels.
    • Mr Akayev signed a resignation letter on Monday at the Kyrgyz embassy in Moscow.
    • Today, the Wakhan has reverted to what it's been for much of its history: a primitive pastoral hinterland, home to about 7,000 Wakhi and Kirghiz people, scattered throughout some 40 small villages and camps.
    • That word comes to us from a Kyrgyz official in Moscow.
    • Dressed in ill-fitting Kyrgyz army fatigues - their clothes are in tatters and they have lost all their gear - the climbers appear on Kyrgyzstan's state-run TV.
    • ‘His works gave us a great push to talk about national identity, about sovereignty,’ says Ms. Sydykova, a newspaper editor in the Kyrgyz capital of Bishkek.
    • Rakitin earlier said that several Kyrgyz citizens who witnessed the killings testified that the gunman was tall and had red hair, a description that bears little resemblance to Ivankov.
    • Minutes later Kyrgyz soldiers are thrusting cans of sardines and canteens of water into their hands.
    • Rebel snipers had 30 Kyrgyz soldiers pinned in a crossfire in a narrow canyon.
    • ‘Every family reads him and then rereads him, his books taught us to be braver,’ says Kyrgyz human-rights activist Natalia Ablova.

Origin

The name in Kyrgyz.

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更新时间:2024/9/21 17:53:29