Mishar Tatar or Western Tatar (ÃÂøÃÂÃÂÃÂ, Mià Âär / Mià ÂÃÂr, ÃÂøÃÂÃÂàâðÃÂðÃÂ, Mià Âär / Mià ÂÃÂr Tatar, úéýñðÃÂÃÂàÃÂðÃÂðÃÂ, könbatÃ±à  tatar) is a dialect of Tatar spoken by Mishar Tatars, mainly in Penza, Ulyanovsk, Orenburg, Nizhny Novgorod, Samara, Volgograd, and Saratov oblasts of Russia, in Tatarstan, Bashkortostan, Chuvashia and Mordovia, and also in Finland and Estonia.
Some linguists (Radlov, Samoylovich) think that Mishar belongs to the Kipchak-Cuman group of languages rather than to the Kipchak-Bulgar group. Especially the regional dialect of Sergachsky district (Nizhny Novgorod) is said to be faithfully close to the ancient Kipchak language. Increased contacts with Kazan Tatars have lessened these differences.
Mishar is the dialect spoken by the Tatar minority of Finland. The origins of the Tatar community living in Finland rest upon the merchants coming from the villages of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast (then-Governorate).
Mishar Tatar Dialect is not a "corrupted version of Tatar, as thought by some, but rather an independently developed dialect with unique phonological and morphological features, influenced by ancient Kipchak tribes, Oghuz, and Finno-Ugric elements".
Compared to Standard Tatar (Kazan), Mishar speakers use velar g and k instead of the uvular àand q, both c and ç are affricates ([ÃÂ] and [ÃÂ] in Kazan) and [a] stays unrounded. In some words where there is letter c (ÃÂ), Mishars pronounce it as y [j] (cäy âÂÂ> yäy, "summer"). Sometimes [v] replaces [j] in Mishar, like söyü âÂÂ> sevü, "to love"). Noticeable vocabulary differences also exist, like "sunflower", which is könbaÃÂÃ±à  in Kazan Tatar, but aybagar in the Mishar Dialect. "Dog" is et in Kazan and kñçñk / koçok in Mishar.
Ancient features, absent from the Kazan Dialect, are present in Mishar Tatar, like ul kilä ("he/she/it comes"), ul kiläder. Other affix differences can include kilgälä, kilgäklä, "come occasionally"; barasñm kilä, barma kelim / bargñm keli, "i want to go". Monophthongization of diphthongs exists also (köy, kü, "melody"; qoyrñq, kurik, "tail").
Based on written Mishar Tatar used by the Finnish Tatars, the first front vowel of a word may appear as a back vowel. This results in forms such as mohtäräm instead of Möxtäräm (âÂÂrespectedâÂÂ), hazer instead of xäzer (âÂÂnowâÂÂ), and rahmät instead of räxmät (âÂÂthank youâÂÂ). The same pattern also occurs in personal names, for example MohammädâÂÂMöxämmät and HalimäâÂÂXälimä.
Mishar Tatar dialects (ÃÂéùûÃÂÃÂûõÃÂ) are according to Makhmutova two (Ch and Ts) or according to Gabdulkhay Akhatov three (Ch, Ts and mixed) groups.
In the Western (Mià Âär) dialect àis pronounced (southern or Lambir Mià Âärs) and as [ts] (northern Mià Âärs or Nizhgars). C is pronounced . There are no differences between v and w, q and k, g and àin the Mià Âär dialect. The Cyrillic alphabet doesn't have special letters for q, àand w, so Mià Âär speakers have no difficulty reading Tatar written in Cyrillic.
Classification of Mishar Tatar dialects: