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Tajikistan

*Food: shashlik

*Language: Tajik

*Locker room

*Independence: September 9, 1991

*Currency: Tajikistani somoni

*Tourist place: national museum, dushanbe,


iskanderkul

*meaning of the name of the country: country of


the Tajiks
1)comida
ingredients

• ½ kg of lamb meat
•1 onion
•3 garlic cloves
• 100 ml of red wine vinegar
• 100 ml of dry red wine
• ½ bunch of parsley
• ½ teaspoon ground coriander
• ½ teaspoon of salt
• ½ teaspoon ground black pepper
• 300 ml of vegetable oil

Preparación de shashlik a la barbacoa

We will start by cutting the lamb meat into cubes


of approximately 5 centimeters. Cut the onion into
slices and chop the garlic cloves.
We put these ingredients in a large bowl together
with the red wine vinegar, the dry red wine, the
ground coriander, the chopped parsley, the salt,
the pepper and the vegetable oil. Mix well and
make sure that the meat is completely covered by
the liquid.
Cover the container with plastic wrap and let it
rest for 24 hours inside the refrigerator.
2)lenguage

Tajik

Tajik is an Iranian language on the same branch as


Persian. Both Tajik and Persian have a high
degree of mutual understanding. Tajik is spoken
by more than four million people and is the
official language of Tajikistan, although it is also
spoken in neighboring countries.

Some of words in tajik


hello-salom
Goodbye – xajr
See you later - to didor
Fare thee well – barori kor
I can go to your house – ojo man metavonam ba
xonai sumo ravam
Yesterday I went to play FIFA with Juan and I
beat him – ore, man bo xuan ba fifa bozi kardam
va uro zadam.
3) locker room

Traditional Tajik men's clothing consists of


trousers, a shirt, a chapan robe, a belt, and a
turban or cap, the quality of each item being
indicative of the man's wealth and social status.

Traditional Tajik women's clothing consists of a


dress, trousers, gown and headdress, although in
earlier centuries the burqa was also compulsory.

4)independence.
Tajikistan became an independent nation in 1991.
A civil war raged almost immediately after
independence, lasting from 1992 to 1997.

5)currency.
The somoni is the official currency of Tajikistan.
The somoni is divided into 100 dirams. The name
of the coin comes from the founder of the Tajik
state, the Samanid Ismail Samani. On October 30,
2000, the somoni replaced the Tajik ruble as the
country's monetary unit with an exchange rate of
1,000 rubles = 1 TJS.
.
6) tourist places.

National Museum
dushanbe
iskanderkul
7)significado de tajikistan.

"Tayikistán" significa 'país de los tayikos'. Según una


interpretación popular, el término "tayiko" es una referencia
geográfica a la cima (taŷ) de la cordillera del Pamir.

8) geography
Tajikistan is landlocked and the smallest country
in Central Asia.
It has numerous mountain ranges and mountain
ranges, including the Tian Shan and Pamir
Mountains. More than 50% of the country is
above 3,000 meters above the level
from sea. Its territory extends over the limits of
the Pamir plateau, with
heights above 7,000 meters, a part of the Amu
Daria river and the chain
from Zeravshan. To the north, the Pamir system
culminates in Communism (or
Ismoil Somoni), 7,495 meters high, above the
valleys covered with glaciers, whose surface
occupies more than 8,000 km². To the south, there
are high
plateaus that exceed 4,000 meters of altitude, from
where chains emerge
mountains that reach 6,000 meters

9) Politic situation
Tajikistan proclaimed its independence from the
Soviet Union on September 9, 1991. A civil war
then began that pitted several
tribal factions, coalesced around the former
communist leadership,
on the one hand, and an alliance of Islamist and
democratic forces on the other.
The conflict ended with the peace agreement that,
after mediation by the United Nations, Russia and
Iran, was signed in 1997 between Mr. Emomali
Rahmon,
president since 1994 and the opposition parties.
The tragic balance of
those six years of civil war was about 100,000
dead and 1.2 million
of refugees.

10) one data


Tajikistan is among the countries with the greatest
potential for hydroelectric power in the world, and
most of the electric power generated in Tajikistan is
hydroelectric. Some of the fast-flowing mountain
streams have been exploited as hydroelectric power
sources.

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