мәңгүрт

Kazakh

Alternative scripts
Arabic ماڭگۇرت
Cyrillic мәңгүрт
Latin mäñgürt

Etymology

From Russian манкурт (mankurt). This term was introduced by the Kyrgyz author Chinghiz Aitmatov in his 1980 novel The Day Lasts More Than a Hundred Years, and originally denoted a "prisoner of war who was turned into a slave by having his heads wrapped in camel skin", which supposedly resulted in that "...A mankurt did not recognise his name, family or tribe — a mankurt did not recognise himself as a human being." (For citations and more, see w:Mankurt.)

However, this term quickly caught on in the sense of "a person deprived of cultural and ethnic identity" and became popular in the languages of Central Asia and Eastern Europe.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /mæŋˈɡʉɾt/

Noun

мәңгүрт • (mäñgürt)

  1. (neologism) mankurt (a person with a lost or degraded cultural and ethnic identity and/or awareness about his/her ancestry, especially because of being affected by a dominant culture)

Declension

Declension of мәңгүрт
singular plural
nominative мәңгүрт (mäñgürt) мәңгүрттер (mäñgürtter)
genitive мәңгүрттің (mäñgürttıñ) мәңгүрттердің (mäñgürtterdıñ)
dative мәңгүртке (mäñgürtke) мәңгүрттерге (mäñgürtterge)
accusative мәңгүртті (mäñgürttı) мәңгүрттерді (mäñgürtterdı)
locative мәңгүртте (mäñgürtte) мәңгүрттерде (mäñgürtterde)
ablative мәңгүрттен (mäñgürtten) мәңгүрттерден (mäñgürtterden)
instrumental мәңгүртпен (mäñgürtpen) мәңгүрттермен (mäñgürttermen)