A Comparative Study of Existing Laws in the Use of Tatar and English Language in the Society

Main Article Content

Ruzilya Talgatovna Sharafutdinova
Nailya Gabdelkhamitovna Mingazova
Vitaly Glebovich Subich

Abstract

An official language is a language that is legally chosen in a country or a region of the country that has the ability to establish specific laws for that region. Every country has its own official language, which is usually mentioned in the constitution of countries. This article deals with the comparative analysis of izafet constructions of Tatar (Turkic branch of the Altai language family) with non-izafet genitive constructions of English (Germanic branch of Indo-European language family) through the prism of Arabic idafa (Semitic branch of the Afro-Asiatic language family). Close comparison between Tatar and English evidently demonstrates asymmetric parallels in genitive constructions. The type of the ties in the Tatar genitive constructions is the one of the izafet (which is explained on the foundations of the Arabic idafa), while the English genitive is not marked by the izafet. In this regard, the English genitive constructions may be studied as correspondences to the Tatar izafet. Hence, the paper reveals the universal and unique features in the morphological domain of the phenomenon in question in the languages in question. 

Article Details

How to Cite
Sharafutdinova, R. T. ., Mingazova, N. G. ., & Subich, V. G. . (2022). A Comparative Study of Existing Laws in the Use of Tatar and English Language in the Society . BiLD Law Journal, 7(3s), 121–125. Retrieved from https://bildbd.com/index.php/blj/article/view/414
Section
Articles

Most read articles by the same author(s)