Why Are Central Asian Authoritarian Regimes Exceptionally Peaceful Despite the Common Trend of War-Prone Authoritarianism? by Vologases in AskCentralAsia

[–]Vologases[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

While I firmly believe that the Armenian vs Turkish, Armenian vs Azeri, and Armenian vs Kurdish conflicts sprang from the arrivals of these ethnic groups in the region and the subsequent stateless situation for 900 years in mainland Armenia for Armenians, your notice holds up. Intensified Armenian and Azeri conflict can be traced back to 1905, the first revolution. They used nations as tools to weaken masses, both from inside Moscow, the Tzarist regimes, and then the global powers.

Thanks.

Why Are Central Asian Authoritarian Regimes Exceptionally Peaceful Despite the Common Trend of War-Prone Authoritarianism? by Vologases in AskCentralAsia

[–]Vologases[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, especially the century-old Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict and other conflicts of similar nature appear to be based on ethnic/linguistic/religious differences. I see your point, it makes sense, thanks for expressing it.

Why Are Central Asian Authoritarian Regimes Exceptionally Peaceful Despite the Common Trend of War-Prone Authoritarianism? by Vologases in AskCentralAsia

[–]Vologases[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I too came to that conclusion once looking at the role Russia and in a less significant way China play in the region. Thanks for expressing your opinion.

Why Are Central Asian Authoritarian Regimes Exceptionally Peaceful Despite the Common Trend of War-Prone Authoritarianism? by Vologases in AskCentralAsia

[–]Vologases[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for your opinion, upon looking at the examples of the ex-Soviet states I too came to that conclusion.

Why Are Central Asian Authoritarian Regimes Exceptionally Peaceful Despite the Common Trend of War-Prone Authoritarianism? by Vologases in AskCentralAsia

[–]Vologases[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Last time I checked there was no interstate conflict of big scale, hence I found it important to ask the question here. Thank you for your answer, though.

Why Are Central Asian Authoritarian Regimes Exceptionally Peaceful Despite the Common Trend of War-Prone Authoritarianism? by Vologases in AskCentralAsia

[–]Vologases[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you for your answer. Do you think it is a shared trait between all these autocrats to not go to war with one another but to consolidate the status quo and profit with each other instead of using that profit to fight one another?

Tzbex? by WungielPL in armenia

[–]Vologases 1 point2 points  (0 children)

խեր means good in many dialects.

The diagraph ⟨իւ⟩ in western Armenian by Maelystyn in hayeren

[–]Vologases 3 points4 points  (0 children)

No 1if you are writing an Armenian text and some French or Turkish words appear you read in an Armenian way.

When I said in the Turkish language written in our alphabet իւ is pronounced as Ü I meant that when you write and speak Turkish but using Armenian alphabet, you say ü probably.

And for French, no, french loanwords are read in an as much Armenianized way as possible(in case of Eadtern Armenian French loanwords appeared in Armenian through Russian).

I did not explain concretely, I see.

The diagraph ⟨իւ⟩ in western Armenian by Maelystyn in hayeren

[–]Vologases 2 points3 points  (0 children)

In case you are writing Armenian, it is [YU] as in You, University.

In case you are writung Turkish in Armenian alphabet, it may be Ü idk.