From an intensive one-to-one Uzbek language course at our London training centre to an in-company Uzbek course at your offices, Communicaid can provide you and your organisation with a language course that meets your needs. With training centres in London, Paris, Frankfurt and New York providing countrywide coverage and partner organisations worldwide, Communicaid is uniquely placed to be your local, national and international training partner for Uzbek courses.
Why an Uzbek course in London with Communicaid? Our Uzbek courses are highly personalised and designed to improve your Uzbek language and communication skills, whether your focus be business, financial, diplomatic, military, legal or social. Upon completion of a Communicaid Uzbek course, you will have the confidence to communicate in Uzbek with colleagues, clients and suppliers.
Location: In addition to our Uzbek courses in London, we are also able to provide Uzbek language training courses worldwide via our training centres and global partners.
Benefits
A Communicaid Uzbek language course will provide you with the ability to:
- Speak Uzbek with confidence
- Interact more confidently when visiting a Uzbek-speaking region or dealing with Uzbek
speakers
- Build rapport and strengthen relationships with Uzbek-speaking colleagues and clients
through a show of interest in the Uzbek language and culture
- Demonstrate goodwill and facilitate international communication at both a personal and
organisational level
Who should attend
A Communicaid Uzbek language course is suitable for:
- Doing business with Uzbek-speaking countries
- Anyone planning to relocate to a Uzbek-speaking region and wishing to attend an Uzbek
course in order to prepare in advance for their assignment
- Business professionals conducting business regularly with Uzbek speakers who wish to build
rapport and strengthen relationships by attending an Uzbek course
- Government and non-governmental agency representatives working in a Uzbek-speaking
region who need to be able to communicate at all levels
Course content
The content and format of your Uzbek language course will depend on your profession, proficiency in Uzbek and objectives. Whether beginner, survival, intermediate or advanced, key areas covered in all our Uzbek courses include:
- Spoken fluency
- Listening skills
- Pronunciation and accent
- Reading skills
- Telephone skills in Uzbek
- Email skills in Uzbek
- Sector-specific terminology
- Presentation & negotiation skills
Approach
Communicaid’s Uzbek courses are available seven days a week, 365 days a year. Language training takes place between 08:00 and 20:00 although courses are also available outside of these hours upon request.
Suitable tailored and published Uzbek course materials will be used throughout, with recommendations on self-study material and extra reading made at the beginning and during your Uzbek course.
We offer a variety of training formats for your Uzbek course – from intensive, weeklong courses to extensive, modular lessons. Appropriate formats will be discussed during your diagnostic consultancy (please click here to read more about our approach).
Uzbek course trainer
All Communicaid Uzbek trainers are native speakers with at least 3 years’ professional Uzbek training experience. In addition to relevant academic and linguistic qualifications and experience, many of our Uzbek trainers also possess considerable exposure and expertise in the professional world.
Your Uzbek language trainer will be assigned to you following the results of your diagnostic consultancy according to your objectives and areas of focus. Detailed below is a sample profile of a member of our Uzbek training team.
GR
GR started her career in 1994 as a journalist of the monthly magazine “Yoush kuch” in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. Since 199, GR has been working as a freelance reporter for Uzbek Service, Central Asian and Caucasus Section, BBC World Service. In addition, she combines her journalistic career with Uzbek language training.
O‘zbek, Ўзбек – Facts about the Uzbek language
Uzbek is the official language of Uzbekistan. Figures of native Uzbek speakers are estimated at around 21 million. Outside of Uzbekistan, Uzbek speakers can be found in surrounding central Asian countries such as Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan as well as Russia and Afghanistan.
Uzbek is a Turkic language of the Altaic family of languages. It is most closely to other Turkic languages used in Central Asia, such Turkmen, Tajik and Russian and Belarusian. There are many Uzbek dialects that vary from region. Modern standard Uzbek which was declared Uzbekistan’s official language in 1989 is based on the Tashkent dialect.
Uzbek was originally written in Arabic script which was subsequently superseded by a Latin script in the mid 1920s. Under the Soviet regime, the Cyrillic script was enforced which continues to be used to this day, despite an official reintroduction of a Latin alphabet. |