Yakut-gí ("яку́тский язы́к" (tsū-tshing— саха тыла); Iakut-gú, saha-gú) sī Sakha Kiōng-hô-kok ê chi̍t ê giân-gí.

Iakut-gú
Saha-gú
саха тыла sakha tïla
Hoat-im [saχa tɯla]
Goân-chū kok-ka Russia
Sú-iōng tē-khu Yakutia, Magadan Oblast, Amur Oblast, Krasnoyarsk Krai (Evenkiysky District)
Bîn-cho̍k Yakuts
bú-gí sú-iōng-chiá 450,000[1] (2010 census)
Gí-hē
Turkic
Bûn-jī hē-thóng Cyrillic (formerly Latin and Cyrillic-based)
Koaⁿ-hong tē-ūi
Koaⁿ-hong gí-giân

 Russia

Gí-giân tāi-bé
ISO 639-2 sah
ISO 639-3 sah
Glottolog yaku1245
ELP Yakut
  Sakha language
Yakut is classified as Vulnerable by the UNESCO Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger
Che bûn-chiong pau-hâm IPA hû-hō. Nā-sī bô siong-koan ê jī-hêng chi-oān, lí khó-lêng ē khoàⁿ tio̍h būn-hō, hng-kheng ia̍h-sī khî-thaⁿ hû-hō, bô-hoat-tō͘ chèng-siông hián-sī Unicode jī-goân. Chhiáⁿ lí khoàⁿ Help:IPA.

Tsù-kái

siu-kái
  1. [1] Archived 2021-01-27 at the Wayback Machine., Russian census 2010

Guā-pōo liân-kiat

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Content in Yakut

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