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Mongolian Voice Over Service

Based on our cutting edge facilities and studio, Sytra is able to provide global clients with the top quality voice over service. The professional Mongolian voice over artists, veteran audio engineers, and directors, here at Sytra, work together to produce state-of-the-art Mongolian voice over.

Sytra only use qualified and native Mongolian voice talents. With a large group of talented Mongolian voice over artists, including celebrities, actors/actress, presenters and radio/TV announcers, we are able to handle any Mongolian voice over work.

MongolianLanguage and Phonology

The Mongolian language (Mongɣul kele, cyrillic: Монгол хэл, Mongol khel) is the best-known member of the Mongolic language family and the primary language of most of the residents of Mongolia, where it is officially written with the Cyrillic alphabet. It is also spoken in some of the surrounding areas in northern China, the MongolianFar East and Kyrgyzstan. The majority of speakers in Mongolia speak the Khalkha (or Halh) dialect, while those in China speak the Chahar, Oyirad, and Barghu-Buryat dialect groups.

Mongolian is a Mongolic language. The Altaic theory proposes that the Mongolic family is a member of the larger Altaic family, which would also include the Turkic and Tungusic languages. Related languages include Kalmyk spoken near the Caspian Sea and Buryat of East Siberia, as well as a number of minor languages in China along with the Nikudari and Mogholi languages of Afghanistan.

One major feature of Mongolian phonology is vowel harmony. Mongolian divides vowels into two groups. For historical reasons, these have traditionally been labelled as "front vowels" (e, u, o) and "back vowels, "(a,ʊ,ɔ). However, Svantesson et al have analyzed the groups as what they term instead "non-pharyngeal" (formerly "front") and "pharyngeal" (formerly "back"). There is also one neutral vowel, /i/, which does not belong to either group.

Another major feature of Mongolian phonology is the distinction between long and short forms of vowels. This is expressed in word-initial syllables as a straightforward difference in length. In word-internal and word-final syllables, long vowels are not as long and short vowels are short to the point where, in many non-initial syllables, there is phonemically speaking no vowel at all. For example, <hojor> 'two', <ažil> 'work', and <saarmag> 'neutral' are, phonemically, /xɔjr/, /atʃɮ/, and /saːrmɡ/ respectively. 

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