Uzbek to Dhivehi Translation

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Common Phrases From Uzbek to Dhivehi

UzbekDhivehi
rahmatޝުކުރިއްޔާ
Iltimosޕްލީޒް
Kechirasizމަޢާފަށް އެދެން
Salomއައްސަލާމް ޢަލައިކުމް
Xayr. Salomat bo'lingވަރަށް ސަލާން
Haއާނ
Yo'qނޫން
Qalaysiz?ހާލު ކިހިނެތް?
Kechirasizވަގުތުކޮޅެއްދީ
Bilmadimއަހަންނަކަށް ނޭނގެ
Tushundimއަހަންނަށް ފަހުމް ވޭ
Men ham shunday fikrdamanއަޅުގަނޑަށް ހީވަނީ އެހެން
Balkiފަހަރެއްގަ
Ko'rishgunchaފަހުން ފެންނާނެ ކަމަށް އުންމީދުކުރަން
Qayg'urmoq; o'zini ehtiyot qilmoqއަޅާލުން
Nima gaplar?ކޮންކަމެއް އޮތީ?
Hech qisi yo'qއަޅާނުލާ
Albattaޔަޤީނެއްނު
Hoziroqހަމަ އެވަގުތު
Qani ketdikހިނގާ ދާން

Interesting information about Uzbek Language

Uzbek is a Turkic language spoken by approximately 30 million people primarily in Uzbekistan, where it serves as the official state language. It also has significant numbers of speakers in neighboring countries such as Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Turkmenistan. The modern standard form of Uzbek is based on the dialects spoken around Samarkand and Tashkent. The script used to write Uzbek underwent several changes throughout history; currently it employs a modified version of Cyrillic alphabet since 1940s but there are ongoing efforts to adopt Latin script instead. Uzbek vocabulary draws from various sources including Persian, Arabic and Russian due to historical influences while its grammar follows agglutinative patterns with complex verb conjugation systems. Overall,Uzbek holds great cultural significance within Central Asia region

Know About Dhivehi Language

Dhivehi, also known as Maldivian, is the official language of the Republic of Maldives. It belongs to the Indo-Aryan family and shares similarities with Sinhala spoken in Sri Lanka. Dhivehi has its own unique script called Thaana which consists of 24 letters derived from Arabic numerals. With around 350,000 native speakers primarily residing in the Maldives archipelago, it serves as their mother tongue for everyday communication and writing purposes. Historically influenced by various languages including Sanskrit and Tamil due to trade relations across South Asia over centuries; however today's Dhivehi vocabulary predominantly comprises loanwords from English following British colonial influence during early-20th century.

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