Oghuz

Etymology
From, from , a term for a tribal military division, perhaps in origin an early plural of (arrows in early Turkic culture were used as symbolizing such tribes or divisions in ceremonial or ritual contexts).

Noun

 * 1) A group of south-western Turkic people, including the Turks and Turkmens

Translations

 * Arabic: غُزّ, أُغُزّ, أُوغُوز, أُغُوز
 * Aragonese: oguzes
 * Armenian: օղուզ
 * Azerbaijani: Oğuz Türkləri
 * Bashkir: Уғыҙ, Уғыҙҙар
 * Bulgarian: огуз
 * Catalan: oghuz
 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: 烏古斯人
 * Dutch: Oguzen
 * Finnish: eteläturkkilaiset kansat
 * French:
 * German: Oghusen
 * Hebrew: אוע'וז
 * Hungarian: úzok
 * Indonesian: Oghuz, Oguz
 * Japanese: オグズ
 * Kazakh: оғыз
 * Kyrgyz: огуз, огуздар
 * Marathi: ओघुझ
 * Norwegian: oghuz-tyrkere
 * Ottoman Turkish: اغوز
 * Persian: اغوز
 * Polish: oguzowie
 * Portuguese: oguz
 * Russian:
 * Serbo-Croatian: Ouzi Turci
 * Swedish: oghuzer
 * Turkish:, , Oğuz Türkleri
 * Ukrainian: огу́зи, гу́зи
 * Uyghur: ئوغۇز, ئوغۇزلار
 * Uzbek: Oʻgʻuzlar

Proper noun

 * 1) A subbranch of the Turkic language family. The three languages with the largest number of speakers are Turkish, Azerbaijani, and Turkmen.