2001, C. Edmund Bosworth, editor, A Century of British Orientalists, 1902-2001, page 97:
This dictionary for Chaghatay Turkish (although it also contains much material for what the author calls 'Rūmī', i.e. south-western Turkish, above all, Ottoman) is the Sanglakh of an obscure eighteenth-century compiler
2003, Ekmeleddin İhsanoğlu, Culture and Learning in Islam, page 256:
M.A. Òerbak considers Chaghatay Turkish a period of Uzbek.
2011, Talat S. Halman, Jayne L. Warner, A Millennium of Turkish Literature, page 6:
[...] these works include stories of the battles the Turks fought against the Chinese, a variety of legends, and numerous specimens of verse (found mostly in Chinese translation) written in Uyghur Turkish.
2011, Elif Batuman, The Possessed:
And my uncle always shouted: “Uzbek Turkish is very close to our Turkish language!”
2022, Dominic Lieven, In the Shadow of the Gods: The Emperor in World History:
It was Navai who through his poetry almost single-handedly turned his native Chaghatay Turkish into a literary language.
1896, Alonzo Reed, Brainerd Kellogg, Higher Lessons in English: A work on English Grammar and composition[1], 1st edition, Outlook Verlag GmbH, published 2023, →ISBN, page 557:
When a question was asked, would put on a mysterious look. Shake his head. Smoke in silence. Observe, at length, he had doubts. Presided at the council, in state. Swayed a Turkish pipe instead of a scepter. Known to sit with eyes closed ...[…]
1962, Gerard Clauson, Turkish and Mongolian Studies, page 37:
[...] in Mongolian and some Turkish languages
1982, András Róna-Tas, Chuvash Studies, page 119:
Old Turkish began with the separation, formation and consolidation of the independent Turkish languages.
2007, László Károly, Turcology in Turkey: selected papers, page 458:
This is openly a characteristics of Chaghatay and other Eastern Turkish languages and dialects.
2019, Pamela Kyle Crossley, Hammer and Anvil:
In the Timurid empire, the Chaghatay Turkish language, which became the standard of the Timurid court, was part of the eastern branch of Turkic languages.