Hello Nara, and Uchralt! I'm currently working on a thesis related to Mongolian script and its resilience in the modern world. Your insights could be incredibly valuable for my research. Could we possibly connect via email or another platform that's convenient for you to discuss this further? Looking forward to the possibility of collaborating! Thank you, Enkhjin Shinebayar :)
@Mongolian.Script5 ай бұрын
🎉
@crzyzhaa3 ай бұрын
awesome channel~!
@Mongolian.Script3 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@iaoys5 ай бұрын
Hi Uncle, do you know which mongol tribes were from weichang autonomous city? My grandfather's family is from there. I think it was kharchin or khorchin. I'm not sure if you can help me know the answer. Hope to see you post more, I'm learning from your videos.
@Mongolian.Script5 ай бұрын
Hi, thanks for the message. Great to know you are leaving Mongolian Script with us. Both of us are getting very busy these days and have no time to update new content. I will do some research about Weichang and let you know if I find any information. Best.
@RovexHDАй бұрын
Do Mongolians in Mongolia learn the traditional script including the Cyrillic one ?
@Mongolian.ScriptАй бұрын
Good question. Cyrillic is the main writing system in Mongolia and also learning traditional Mongolian Scrip. Mongols in Inner Mongolia only learn traditional Mongolian Script.
@RovexHDАй бұрын
@@Mongolian.Script I see. So apparently, a new law came in on the status of the Mongolian written language. Will Cyrillic be replaced fully by the traditional writing system?
@hoolidii7 күн бұрын
@@RovexHD actually we do learn starting from middle school. it used to elementary school. And it is considered to be mandatory lesson. And in order to graduate from high school we do give native script exams. And as a Mongolian i do think we should switch to it. The main problem is after high school people don't really use it on the daily basis, which i only understood after graduating. I used to think why these adults don't care. But in reality they do know, It's just need to be used in aspects of daily basis. I am in 3nd year of my uni still i feel like i have forgotten for example, I read slower. I mean, I live in foreign country and sometimes even Cyrillic feels strange. Which I really think i shouldn't be that way for both and I think I should read and focus more. However there are people like my mom who learned it as a elementary student and taught the native script first. And they seem to have pretty good fundamental base of using it compared to me who learned starting from middle school. I wish that at that time they really should have changed it. It was early 1990s. We were in tough place as a country after the revolution. No body had the budget for book, uniform when everything was shutting down and people were starving. Still i don't think that was a exception. And we officially changed to Cyrillic in 1946. So, it was not that long i would say. (as a nation wise tho) Before that we tried everything to avoiding the Cyrillic and tried many different scripts like Latin, Soyombo and Square scripts. But they didn't worked out that great. Also the soviets were pushing it. But that doesn't mean the script wasn't taught at all. My great-grandpa was student in 1940s to 50s, and he was fluent in script. But i do think Cyrillic is convenient for digital stuffs like writing on computers. And the Mongolian script keyboard went through a lot of evolution but i still there are flaws like the letters keep changing to wrong form. It is so much better than 10 years ago. Plus, not every site is friendly to vertical script. I am kind of a perfectionist so it bugs me that changes into the wrong form. Anyways, after I discovered about Russian Mongols like Buryat and Kalmyks i was trilled about their dialects, even though I am also an Oirat. In Mongolia Khalkha is official dialect, so as correct way of spelling would be in Khalkha. So i have never written in Oirat dialect in Cyrillic. That's why i was so happy that Kalmyks write like how they speak. And do enjoy how Cyrillic has emphasized the dialects pronunciations. Whereas in Mongol script it's all the same, so unless you are speaking to the person from other dialect i can not see their differences. But also in a way that is what is cause the gap between all the Mongols, which i don't like it. Oh, but i know that many people in Kalmykia use todo/clear script, too. (Anyways sorry for the rant.)
@arttemka25369 ай бұрын
Happy new year my buddy's🎄🔥💯♥️ Та хоёрдоо шинэ оны мэнд хүргэе. Энэ 24 ондоо та хоёртоо эрүүл энх, аз хийморьтой байхыг хүсье