Kazakh Language Learning Resources
Kazakh Language Learning Resources
Kazakh Language Learning Resources
Learning Resources
UCLA, Slavic 188A
Textbooks
Colloquial Kazakh, by Zaure Bataeva. Published by Routledge, this is the best-produced modern
textbook on Kazakh in English. The audio tracks used throughout the textbook are available
online.
Kazakh Language Manual, by Michael Hancock. Designed for Peace Corps volunteers. The first
section of this book is focused on building competency in real-world situations, while the
extensive appendix is a very in-depth grammar resource.
Kazakh Notes, by David Pratten. An Australian fellow who lived in Kazakhstan for many years put
together this short guide that introduces readers to the basics of Kazakh. Its lo-fi design can be
charming, but also makes the material less user-friendly. The book’s real innovation is Pratten’s
clever system for remembering which endings to use where.
Kazakh Language Made Easy, by N. Kubaeva. Phrasebook and grammar, in Russian, Kazakh and
English. Dated design but the illustrations can be useful.
Kazakh Language: Grammar, Texts, Vocabulary, by Aijan Akhmetova. A beginner’s textbook with
fairly limited scope and basic design.
Beginning Kazakh, by Ablahat Ibrahim. This language learning courseware, published by the
University of Arizona Critical Languages Program, came out in 1999 on CD-Roms! Now it’s
licensed to the online language learning site Language Canvas. Only available for purchase.
Til Alemi - Intermediate and advanced learners can find dozens of books here, including state-
issued Kazakh textbooks, but all materials are in Kazakh - so you’ve got to know some Kazakh
before you use them, or be very patient!
Kazak, by Kara David Somfai. Based off of research with Kazakhs in China.
Kazakh and Karakalpak, by Mark Kirchner, in “The Turkic languages,” edited by Lars Johanson
and Eva A. Csato.
A Learner's Dictionary of Kazakh Idioms, by Akmaral Mukan. Only available for purchase, at an
absurd price, so try to find it in a library. Samples pages available here.
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Dutta’s Little Dictionary, by Niki Dutta - “This short 11-page trilingual dictionary was written by
Peace Corps worker Niki Dutta in 2005, and has common words sorted by type (noun, verb,
adverb) and listed in three languages.”
Dictionaries
Sozdik.kz - Far and away the best Kazakh-Russian dictionary online. If you don’t know Russian,
you can copy and paste the Russian translations into Multitran.ru. Sozdik has more entries than
most other dictionaries, and has useful auto-complete and auto-suggestion functions that makes
it easier to find the word you need.
Kazakh-English Dictionary, by Christopher Baker - The first dictionary to directly work from
Kazakh to English, this project funded by the US State Department is unfortunately incomplete,
with a poor UI and only part of the content available online.
Learning Cyrillic
There are no stand-alone resources for learning Kazakh Cyrillic, so the best thing you can do is
learn the Russian alphabet and then just memorize the extra 9 letters that are in Kazakh. Note
that you should learn the cursive version too, even if you don’t plan to write things out longhand,
because cursive letters are used to make italic script in Russian and Kazakh.
Russian Cyrillic in 3 Hours, by Mark (?). I’ve heard rave reviews about this app for iOS and
Android, which is really just a series of fun videos explaining Cyrillic using signs you can see on
Russian streets.
YouTube
There are only two teachers who’ve put up videos on YouTube in English, but there is a world of
Kazakh-language material you can explore once you’ve built up some vocabulary. See my
separate Guide to Kazakh-language YouTube Channels.
Kazakh Language with Zhannur - 50 videos, with more vocab than grammar, from a diehard fan
of Dimash Kudaibergenov. New content weekly.
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Maksat Imangazi - 24 lessons, with more grammar, posted 7 years ago so no new content.
Apps
Quizlet - Flashcard app, where other users have uploaded some Kazakh vocabulary sets
Sites
iTalki - Find Kazakh tutors who teach online.
Mango Languages - Language-learning web app with a very useful color-coded technique for
introducing grammar. Also available for iOS and Android.
Clozemaster - Language-learning web app using cloze tests (sentence completion exercises),
with some material in Kazakh.
Glossika - Language-learning web app with a focus on developing listening skills. At around $35
a month, it’s on the pricier side.
Instagram
@noqat.kz - Well-designed content focusing on Kazakh linguistics. Content mostly in Kazakh and
Russian.
@qazsoz_ - Account introducing obscure words from the Kazakh language. Also on Telegram.
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@janasozdik - A “Kazakh urban dictionary” introducing contemporary neologisms.
@voca6ulary - Teaches English idioms using Kazakh, so can use it to learn Kazakh equivalents.
Russian-language sites
Vlast.kz, @vlast.kz - News on government, finance, urbanism from young journalists
Buro 24/7, @buro.kazakhstan - The hippest portal on fashion, culture, food and architecture
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English-language sites
Eurasianet.org, @eurasianet - One of the only news portals dedicated to Central Asia
RFE/RL Kazakhstan, @azattyk.kz - Radio Free Europe’s coverage is slickly-produced and well-
reported
Calvert Journal, @calvertjournal - Hip site on former Soviet space, with occasional pieces on KZ
Instagram
@shapalaque - Satirical comics about Kazakhstan (Russian)
Additional Readings on
Kazakhstan
Introduction
Christopher Robbins. Apples are From Kazakhstan. (Book)
Tim Cope. On the Trail of Genghis Khan: An Epic Journey Through the Land of the Nomads.
(Book)
History
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Nomads and Networks: The Ancient Art and Culture of Kazakhstan. Edited by Karen Sydney
Rubinson. (Book)
Into the Kazakh Steppe: John Castle's Mission to Khan Abulkhayir (1736). Edited by Beatrice
Teissier. (Book)
Sarah Cameron. The Hungry Steppe: Famine, Violence, and the Making of Soviet Kazakhstan.
(Book)
Michaela Pohl. The 'planet of one hundred languages": Ethnic relations and Soviet identity in the
Virgin Lands. (Article)
Matt Payne. The Forget of the Kazakh Proletariat? The Turksib, Nativization, and Industrialization
during Stalin's First Five-Year Plan. (Article).
Politics
Joanna Lillis. Dark Shadows: Inside the Secret World of Kazakhstan. (Book)
Sebastien Peyrouse. The Kazakh Neopatrimonial Regime: Balancing Uncertainties Among the
"Family," Oligarchs and Technocrats. (Article)
Nargis Kassenova. China's Silk Road and Kazakhstan's Bright Path: Linking Dreams of Prosperity.
(Article)
Ethnicity
Cynthia Ann Werner, Celia Emmelhainz & Holly Barcus. Privileged Exclusion in Post-Soviet
Kazakhstan: Ethnic Return Migration, Citizenship, and the Politics of (Not) Belonging. (Article)
Religion
Eva-Marie Dubuisson and Anna Genina. Claiming an ancestral homeland: Kazakh pilgrimage and
migration in Inner Asia. (Article)
Paolo Sartori, Niccolo Pianciola. Islam, Society and States across the Qazaq Steppe. (Book)
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Music
Eva-marie Dubuisson. Dialogic Authority: Kazakh Aitys Poets and Their Patrons. (Article)
Jennifer C. Post. Performing Transition in Mongolia: Repatriation and Loss in the Music of Kazakh
Mobile Pastoralists. (Article)
Rico Isaacs. Film and Identity in Kazakhstan: Soviet and Post-Soviet Culture in Central Asia. (Book)
Urbanism
Catherine Alexander. Soviet and Post-Soviet Planning in Almaty, Kazakhstan. (Article)
Alima Bissenova. The Master Plan of Astana: Between the "Art of Government" and the "Art of
Being Global." (Article)
Food
McLean, Julia. Steppe, Seed, & Supper: An Ethnoarchaeological Approach to Plant Foodways in
Kazakhstan. (Article)
Spengler, Robert N. Fruit from the Sands: The Silk Road Origins of the Foods We Eat. (Book)
Gabriel McGuire. Cultural histories of kumiss: tuberculosis, heritage and national health in post-
Soviet Kazakhstan. (Article)
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