How to say “Good night” in Northern Uzbek

The most common way to say “good night” in Northern Uzbek. Tap to copy or hear it pronounced.

Xayrli tun

In a sentence

English

Good night, how are you?

Northern Uzbek

Xayrli tun, Qandaysiz?

Translate more text into Northern UzbekNorthern Uzbek dictionary

Frequently asked

How do you say "Good night" in Northern Uzbek?

"Good night" in Northern Uzbek is "Xayrli tun". This is the most common everyday rendering; depending on context, formal/informal or dialectal variants may apply.

How is "Xayrli tun" written in Northern Uzbek?

"Xayrli tun" is the standard written form in Northern Uzbek, rendered left-to-right.

How do you pronounce "Xayrli tun" in Northern Uzbek?

Tap the speaker icon on this page to hear "Xayrli tun" pronounced by a native-style synthetic voice. For practice, repeat the phrase out loud immediately after listening — the rhythm and stress are usually what trips learners up, not the individual sounds.

What does "Xayrli tun" mean in English?

"Xayrli tun" is the Northern Uzbek way of saying "Good night" in English. It's used in everyday conversation in roughly the same situations as the English original.

Are there formal or informal ways to say "Good night" in Northern Uzbek?

Many languages — including Northern Uzbek — distinguish formal and informal registers, and may also vary by speaker gender, plurality, or regional dialect. "Xayrli tun" is the most broadly understood form; for register-specific variants, use the full translator above with your exact sentence.

Where is Northern Uzbek spoken?

Northern Uzbek is spoken by an estimated 27 million people worldwide. Use the language page to translate full text and explore where the language is used.

Is there a free Northern Uzbek dictionary?

Yes — Polytranslator provides a free Northern Uzbek dictionary with word-by-word translations and example usage. Click the dictionary link on this page to look up individual words from "Xayrli tun" or any other Northern Uzbek text.

Other common phrases in Northern Uzbek

Good night” in other languages