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Ibrahim Muti'i : ウィキペディア英語版 | Ibrahim Muti'i Ibrahim Muti'i (May 1920 – January 13, 2010) ((ウイグル語: ئىبراھىم مۇتىئى); ) was a well-known linguist from Xinjiang, China.〔William Clark, 2011: 203〕 He is best known for his research on Uyghur language and culture. He is considered to have been one of the top scholars of his generation in Uyghur.〔Ibrahim, tursunbeg el. 2011:2〕 ==Early life== Muti'i was born in May 1920, in ''Lükchün'', a small village outside Turpan in eastern Xinjiang. He was orphaned at an early age. His father, a tailor, died when he was only two years old. His mother died when he was seven.〔William Clark, 2011: 205〕 His family sent him to Urumqi to enroll in a primary school in 1928, which he did while living with his elder brother. In 1935, at the age of fifteen, Ibrahim Muti'i received a scholarship for a two-year course of study in law at the University of Central Asia in Tashkent, in the Soviet Union. During this time, he not only learned Uzbek and Russian, but also studied Old Turkic. He had a chance to read original research material about the Uyghur people. He returned to China from Soviet Union after graduating in with a law degree in 1937 and taught Uyghur literature, language, and linguistic methodology at Xinjiang Normal University. In 1940 he was imprisoned by the Chinese warlord Sheng Shicai, along with many other well-known, well-educated young Uyghur dissidents who Sheng Shicai thought would spread independent ideas and threaten his authority. Muti'i was released in 1945.
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