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Alphabets used by Turkic languages

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Turkish alphabet
notation of the Turkish language by means of a modified Latin alphabet
Azerbaijani Latin alphabet
Latin-script alphabet used for writing the Azerbaijani language
Ottoman Turkish alphabet
Arabic-script alphabet used to write Ottoman Turkish
Yañalif
The New Turkic Alphabet, known in Turkic languages as Yañalif (Tatar: / , / ; ), is the first Latin alphabet used during the Latinisation in the Soviet Union in the 1930s for the Turkic languages. It replaced the Arabic script-based alphabets like Yaña imlâ used for Tatar in 1928, and was replaced by the Cyrillic alphabet in 1938–1940. After their respective independence in 1991, several former Soviet states in Central Asia switched back to Latin script, with slight modifications to the original Yañalif.
Kazakh alphabet
any of the alphabets used for the Kazakh language
Turkmen alphabet
alphabetic systems used for writing Turkmen, including Latin, Cyrillic, and Perso-Arabic
Uyghur Arabic alphabet
Perso-Arabic-based alphabet used for writing the Uyghur language
Common Turkic alphabet
project for a single Latin alphabet for all Turkic languages
Kyrgyz alphabets
alphabets used to write the Kyrgyz language
Uyghur alphabets
multiple alphabets of Uyghur language
Tatar alphabet
writing system
Uzbek alphabet
Latin-script alphabet
Crimean Tatar alphabet
alphabet of the Crimean Tatar language
Bashkir alphabet
alphabet of the Bashkir language
Gagauz alphabet
Writing systems for the Gagauz language
Sakha scripts
scripts used to write the Yakut language
İske imlâ alphabet
variant of the Arabic script used for the Tatar language before 1920
Uyghur Latin alphabet
Latin-based alphabet for the Uyghur language
Uyghur Cyrillic alphabet
uyghur-language alphabet used in post-Soviet states
Uyghur New Script
former writing system for Uyghur
Yaña imlâ alphabet
Arabic-based orthography for Tatar
Armeno-Turkish alphabet
Armenian script sometimes used for Turkish until 1928