Something in the timbre of the voice suggests to me an African language but I also wonder if it might not be some from the Caucasus.Hmmmm.
This sounds like a Turkic language to me, not Turkish, but rather something from the Caucasus or Central Asia. I am not too sure, though.
Gonna take a wild swing and say “something from India”.
Unmistakably Turkic from the “kolayda”
Kolayda is also Persian…
Here’s a clue – it’s a Turkic language.
Yes, Turkic, but divergent (from an Istanbul perspective). My – uneducated – guess is a language from China, something related to Uyghur, or the like. Alternatively, it is from the former Soviet Union (but I miss the Russian timbre in the background) …
The language is Äynu (Äynú / ئهﻳنوُ), a Turkic language spoke in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in the northwest of China.
Something in the timbre of the voice suggests to me an African language but I also wonder if it might not be some from the Caucasus.Hmmmm.
This sounds like a Turkic language to me, not Turkish, but rather something from the Caucasus or Central Asia. I am not too sure, though.
Gonna take a wild swing and say “something from India”.
Unmistakably Turkic from the “kolayda”
Kolayda is also Persian…
Here’s a clue – it’s a Turkic language.
Yes, Turkic, but divergent (from an Istanbul perspective). My – uneducated – guess is a language from China, something related to Uyghur, or the like. Alternatively, it is from the former Soviet Union (but I miss the Russian timbre in the background) …
The language is Äynu (Äynú / ئهﻳنوُ), a Turkic language spoke in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in the northwest of China.
The recording comes from YouTube