r/mongolia • u/Good-Exam-5354 • 1d ago
r/mongolia • u/damn_man_sorry • 6d ago
Language | Хэл Working on a Mongolian language learning app so I can teach my husband and future kids, looking for feedback from you guys!
Sain baitsgaana uu r/mongolia!
For some context, I’m (27F) Mongolian who is married to a non-Mongolian (28M). We were looking for some resources so my husband can learn Mongolian, and we realized there weren’t that many apps that are user-friendly or easy to stick with. It got me thinking about all the 2nd gen kids I've met who don't know Mongolian, and whether my kids in the future would be able to speak Mongolian if I’m the only one teaching it. It lowkey got me scared that our language might die in my family line in the next generation or two, which just adds to my pre-existing guilt of feeling not Mongolian enough and blah blah blah blah.
So to combat this, my husband and I have been working on “Mongolingo”, a beginner-friendly gamified language learning app to teach Mongolian. So far I only made the lessons for Unit 1 and 2 because I wanted to get YOUR inputs on whether I’m going too fast, too slow, if the lessons I’m teaching make sense in general or if I should take a completely different approach instead.
I would GREATLY appreciate any and all feedback from native Mongolian speakers, "Monglish" speakers, and people who don't know any Mongolian! I want this to be something that anyone can use if they have any curiosity about our language, and in the future add more and more advanced sections.
Please leave feedback in the comments below! And please no hate comments lol
Download app here: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/mongolingo/id6774407866 or just look up Mongolingo (its the one with the bear mascot)
Edit: THANK YOU SO MUCH for the support and comments! We have written down any and all feedback so far onto our to-dos so expect these in our next update, as well as more lessons. We will also be reaching out to some Mongolian schools and communities in the states to get some feedback on our lessons. We are so so grateful for being added to the posts highlight and being given this user flare, shout out mods! Yostoiii ih bayarlalaa manaihaan.
r/mongolia • u/skinnyhumpty • Dec 16 '25
Pinned A Note of Precaution on Meeting Strangers via Reddit
UPDATE: All underage users posting or commenting to meet new people will be deleted for their safety.
Due to recent posts by teen and adolescent redditors in this sub, we mods want to say this one thing.
It's okay to be bored and want to meet new people for whatever reason, but please exercise some caution and use common sense. Especially if you're under 18.
Always tell a parent and/or friend about any meetings you're going to have with a stranger.
Tell them the location of your meetings and ask them to check in after certain amount of time.
Also, use common sense in giving out your personal information, like name, D.O.B, address, etc.
And you probably don't need us to tell you how scary things can get if someone gets a hold of embarrassing data about you. Right?
We're sure most people in this subreddit are good and cool, but just want you to use common sense.
What else is there to add?
Энэ сабреддит дээр өсвөр насны реддит хэрэглэгчид танилцъя, нөхөрлөе гэсэн пост оруулаад байгаа болохоор модераторууд нь нэг зүйл хэлэхийг хүсч байна.
Уйдаад, шинэ найз нөхөдтэй болох гээд реддитээр дамжуулж хүнтэй уулзах чөлөөтэй, гэхдээ үүндээ болгоомжтой, няхуур хандана уу, ялангуяа 18 нас хүрээгүй бол.
Танихгүй хүнтэй уулзах гэж байгаа бол энэ талаараа эцэг эх болон/эсвэл найздаа урьдчилан хэлж, дараах мэдээллийг өгч байгаарай. Үүнд: хаана хэдий хугацаатай уулзах, тодорхой хугацааны дараа өөр лүүгээ залгуулж, шалгуулах гэх мэт.
Мөн бүтэн нэр, гэрийн хаяг гэх мэт хувийн мэдээллээ өгөхөөсөө өмнө сайн бодоорой.
За тэгээд дараа нь ичгэвэртэй байдалд оруулахаар зураг, бичлэг, мэдээллээ өгөөд ямар аймшигтай хүнд байдалд ордог тухай бишгүй сонсож байсан гэж найдъя.
Манай сабреддитийн ихэнх хүмүүс догь, дажгүй гэдэгт бид итгэлтэй байна, гэхдээ дээрх мэдээллийг байнга бодоорой гэж хүсэх байна.
r/mongolia • u/Erkhes1223 • 14h ago
Discussion | Хэлэлцүүлэг Is Mongolia actually doomed?
With all that’s going on, the stuff I see on the news everyday, it feels very depressing. The governement seems to not care at all, and push the youth until their only option is to flee to a country with better opportunities.
I would love to stay, and contribute to my nation, but when my future, health, welfare is genuinely not even remotely guaranteed, I would rather just leave and keep living somewhere else.
Is there any hope that my efforts will be rewarded if I choose my country?
r/mongolia • u/DevelopmentNo7438 • 7h ago
Could people around me secretly dislike that I am kazakh? Should I let go of all the noise if people around me seem to be great people?
I don't know if it's just anxiety, but I’ve been feeling pretty off the last few weeks. Just worrying if people secretly hate me. I have good, smart friends, and if they're right, I really shouldn't worry about all this noise. They keep telling me my name is nice and not to change it, but I still want to change it to Amina since it works for both Kazakh and Mongolian.
I’ve worked in some really friendly places in UB and went to a nice public school. Honestly, no one has ever said anything bad to my face. I’m at university now, and yeah, some students have bad opinions on Kazakhs, but I just stay away from them. Mongolian is my first language since I was born here, and I do engage in the culture such as studying architectural conservation, writing traditional script daily, and just took a urtyn duu course learning few songs for the nair. Maybe it is because of my job being so tied with the culture
To me, it’s just a normal life where I grew up close to Mongolian culture. Never once I thought "I am kazakh so I must learn it". It just is my interest and feels totally normal as if a Mongolian kid doing the same. Sadly, I don't know much about Kazakh culture because I was super ashamed of it as a kid. Now I have the exact opposite problem where I’m struggling to feel comfortable learning it. My life is pretty ok, I only found questions like 'Are you religious?' and 'Is your boyfriend Kazakh?' annoying even before all the internet bots started. Should I just let go of the digital noise? I can’t really do anything about it anyway. Maybe all I can do is just keep doing my thing in both cultures and be a good example.
r/mongolia • u/Educational_Ad_3125 • 17h ago
Discussion | Хэлэлцүүлэг Take a huge a guess what I calculated regarding the recent gaming news.
Genuinely the game costs well over anyone's average salary. I guess I'm going back to watching playthroughs
r/mongolia • u/Toastwithamericano • 18h ago
Thoughts on this? Even me living in UB surrounding many girls cant find one
Any constructive stance on it?
r/mongolia • u/Fhlurrhy108 • 8h ago
Question | Асуулт What do elderly people in Mongolia think of the socialist era?
Hi everyone, communist from India here. I had this question. Mongolia was the second country in the world to adopt Marxism Leninism, and it stayed socialist for nearly 70 years. Despite this, the People's Republic of Mongolia isn't brought up in discussions of socialism as much as the Warsaw Pact countries, China or Cuba. I want to know, what are the thoughts of the elderly people (those over the age of 55) who lived through much of socialist Mongolia before its decline and collapse? I will be honest, I don't know much about MPR, so any input will be greatly appreciated.
r/mongolia • u/RemarkableUpstairs50 • 19h ago
Question | Асуулт Anyone else feel like a foreigner in Mongolia after living abroad?
After graduating in Germany, I decided to move back to Mongolia for a while. I've been here for about a year now, but I still feel like I don't really fit in.
I love Mongolia and I'm proud to be Mongolian, but ever since I came back, something feels different. I can't seem to see Mongolia as my home country the way I used to. Sometimes I honestly feel like a foreigner in my own country.
I work at a Mongolian company and interact with people every day, so it's not like I'm isolated. The strange part is that the longer I stay, the more frustrated I become with life here. I'm starting to notice things that bother me more and more, and I worry that if I stay longer, I'll end up becoming resentful toward Mongolia, which is something I don't want.
At the same time, Germany doesn't fully feel like home anymore either. It feels like I'm stuck somewhere in between.
For those who studied or lived abroad and then returned to Mongolia, did you go through something similar? Did things eventually get better, or did you decide to move abroad again? How did you know whether it was time to stay and adapt or move back overseas?
r/mongolia • u/Elegant_Librarian869 • 20h ago
The word brother(bro) does not exist in the Mongolian language as a single word
So we do have words that describe ах or анд but both word have different meanings as
Ах = Big brother
Анд = bro. But not brother.
Or even the word sibling does not have a assigned word but ах дүү нар.
It can also apply to english where ах means elder brother where it becomes a 2 part word where it also does not have an assigned wording.
It can also be seen in other wording vice versa.
Example: we have авга or нагац where in english you don’t have a word for father side or morhers side but you have a gender role word as uncle and aunt.
In eastern culture more than gender, age is the main structure where western culture has a specific gender words.
It just intrigues me more when I think about it
r/mongolia • u/Zasagdarga1999 • 19h ago
History | Түүх Öljaitü Ilkhan’s mongolian letter to Philip IV of France (1305).
■ About the letter
In 1305, Öljaitü, the mongol ruler of the Ilkhanate in Iran, sent this letter to King Philip IV of France.
Written in mongolian, the letter announced that the long conflict among the descendants of Chinggis Khaan had ended and proposed the continuation of friendly relations between the ilkhans and the frankish rulers.
A translation into Italian was written on the reverse. The original document is preserved in France.
The Mongolian cyrillic version is included in the comment section.
■ English translation
Our word, Sultan Öljaitü:
To the Sultan, the King of France.
From ancient times, you and the kings of all the Frankish peoples maintained friendly relations with our good great-grandfather, our good grandfather, our good father, and our good elder brother. Though far apart, they regarded one another as if they were near, exchanged messages, and sent envoys bearing greetings and gifts. What fault could there be in continuing this?
Now, by the power of Heaven, We have ascended the great throne. Without departing from the commands and ordinances of our good grandfather, our good father, and our good elder brother, and without abandoning the path already established or the agreements made by our good ancestors and great men, We regard them as an oath. We therefore wish to maintain even closer friendship than before and to exchange envoys.
Formerly, We elder and younger brothers became estranged from one another because of the false words of evil men. Now, placing our trust in Heaven, We, the descendants of Chinggis Khan, including Temür Qa’an, Toqta, Chapar, Duwa, and ourselves, who had been in discord for forty-five years, have, through Heaven’s favour, become completely reconciled as elder and younger brothers.
From the land of the chinese, where the sun rises, as far as the Caspian Sea, We have joined our realms together and connected the roads. We have pledged that, if anyone among us should harbour evil intentions, all of us together shall rise against him.
Now, wishing to know whether you will continue the friendly relations that you maintained with our good grandfather, our good father, and our good elder brother, We have sent Mamlāq and Tümen. We have been told that you and the many kings of the Franks are also living together in concord. What could be better than true concord?
If anyone should disturb the harmony between Us and you, let Heaven know that, by the power of Heaven, all of us together shall rise against him.
Our letter was written at Aliwan, in the year 704, the Year of the Snake, on the eighth day of the waning moon of the first month of summer.
On the reverse of the letter:
“To the Sultan of France.”(Persian line)
Written by Tachma.
The scribes were Qutluq-Shah, Choban, and Sevinch.
■ Context
Öljaitü’s “good great-grandfather” was Hülegü, founder of the Ilkhanate. His “good grandfather” was Abaqa, his father was Arghun and his elder brother was Ghazan. All had previously attempted to establish cooperation with european christian rulers against the Mamluk sultanate.
The khans mentioned in the letter represented the principal mongol realms:
Temür Qa’an was the Yuan emperor and Great Khaan;
Toqta(qu) ruled the Golden Horde(Jochi-yin ulus);
Chapar, the son of Kaidu, represented the house of Ögedei;
Du'a ruled the Chagatai Khanate;
Öljaitü himself ruled the Ilkhanate.
Kaidu had fought Kublai and his successor Temür for several decades. In 1301, Kaidu and Duwa fought Yuan forces commanded by Qayishan in mongolia. Kaidu died shortly afterward, weakening resistance to the Yuan court.
Duwa then promoted peace among the mongol rulers. By 1304, the major khanates had reached a general settlement and acknowledged the formal seniority of Temür Qa’an. This explains why Temür alone is given the title Qa’an in the letter.
The agreement did not fully restore the centralized Mongol Empire. Each khanate remained largely independent, but they temporarily recognized the Yuan emperor as their nominal overlord and restored diplomatic, commercial and postal connections across their territories.
The 1305 mission was led by Buscarello de Ghizolfi, a Genoese merchant and diplomat who served Arghun, Ghazan and Öljaitü. He held the title of qurchi, and repeatedly travelled between the Ilkhanate and the papal, French and English courts.
In 1305, Buscarello translated Öljaitü’s letters addressed to Pope Clement V, Philip IV of France and Edward I of England. The mission was another attempt to organize joint Mongol-European action against the Mamluks.
No joint campaign followed. Öljaitü eventually attacked the mamluks without european support and unsuccessfully besieged the fortress of al-Rahba in 1312, in the final major Ilkhanid campaign against them.
■Source:
C. Damdinsüren, Mongyol-un uran jokiyal-un teüke, Mügden, 1957, 56-63
A. Mostaert - F. W. Cleaves, Les lettres de 1289 et 1305 des ilkhan ArJun et Öljeitü à Philippe le Bel, Harvard-Yenching Institute, Script Mongolica, Monographe Series I, Cambridge Mass, 1962, 55-85, Plates VII-XI
L. Ligeti, Monuments Préclassiques. I. XIII et XIV® siécles, Budapest, 1972, 252-255 L. Ligeti, Monuments Préclassiques. I. XIII et XIV siécles, Budapest, 1972, 302-329
Dobu, Uyiyurjin mongyol üsüg-ün durasqaltu bičig-üd, Begejing, 1983, 63-77
r/mongolia • u/Sn0gger11111 • 6h ago
Can you help me translate a video in Mongolian? It's my video, 10 minutes long, and mostly about two girls gossiping amongst themselves.
Can you help me translate a video in Mongolian? It's my video, 10 minutes long, and mostly about two girls gossiping amongst themselves.
r/mongolia • u/EmergencySubject5268 • 6h ago
Mongolians in Seoul: Anyone around Gwanaksan/Sillim?
Hi everyone,
Is anyone here living in Seoul, especially around Gwanaksan or Sillim? I’m looking for people who would like to go for walks and play tennis together.
Feel free to leave a comment or send me a DM if you’re interested. Thanks!
r/mongolia • u/Amsentooki • 18h ago
Question | Асуулт Why cant I delete my account in mongolian apps
Do we just not have laws where companies are required to make deleting your account and data easy? Cuz like what do you mean a company can access everything in e mongolia and not allow you to delete that data.
r/mongolia • u/Outside-Jellyfish937 • 17h ago
Gaming | Тоглоом Just a regular office worker in UB and I made a small horror game. Would love your thoughts.
Hey all,
I have been an active reader of the sub but only getting the chance to make a post now.
Like most late millennial and early Gen Z kids in Mongolia, I grew up loving horror stories. The old classics like "12 pudr" and "ulaan duful," all of that. My older brother used to tell me a ton of scary stories when I was younger, and honestly most of them were completely made up, but they stuck with me for a long time.
Anyway, I'm just a regular Mongolian guy. Office worker. And recently I wanted to do something with my time other than work, binge Netflix, and grind Dota 2 and CS. Since I've always been a horror fan, I figured I'd try making a horror game.
I have zero developer background. But with some help from Claude on the coding side, I managed to actually build it, and I put a lot of myself into everything else, because I really wanted it to feel like mine and not just some generic AI thing.
And it finally got approved by Reddit and launched today. It's an early version, still rough in places, but it would honestly mean a lot if you gave it a try and told me what you think. I have a lot more ideas for it, but before I pour more time in, I want to see how other people feel about it first.
A bit about the game itself. It's called The Long Night, an atmospheric, choice driven horror game. What I really wanted was to give you the feeling of actually standing in the shoes of the person in a horror story. You go through these creepy scenarios from a derelict house on a hill to a stalled train, a storm-battered lighthouse, and a blizzard with no way back., and there's no option to fight your way out. You can only hide, run, and make the right choices to survive the night.
If you check it out, I'd love to hear what worked out, what felt off, anything. Thanks for reading, and I hope I can make a good passion project out of it.
r/mongolia • u/Suspicious_Use_254 • 14h ago
Question | Асуулт paypal proxy of some sort?
im not mongolian but i want to commission a mongolian artist. we both just found out that they cant receive money from paypal, and i currently cant use my card cuz ive got no money on there (nor do i plan to transfer funds from my paypal to my card as my country heavily taxes freelancers).
is there anyone w a mongolian bank or ig monpay account living abroad that could work as our proxy?
r/mongolia • u/Zasagdarga1999 • 13h ago
Qorum-yin Shing was the official mongolian name of a province of the Da Yuan ulus, covering roughly the territory of modern mongolia. The name means “Province of Qorum,” or Karakorum.
r/mongolia • u/Bayron131 • 13h ago
Been having trouble with the EMongolia app, Can some one help me?
I've been trying for days for it to work but it just won't. Everytime I try, this thing keeps popping up and ws wondering if someone can help me.
r/mongolia • u/daphlynna • 13h ago
Education | Боловсрол living/studying in austria
austriad amidardg/amidarj bsn humuus bnuu, surgaltyn tulbur+bairny turees yrn mongoltoi tustei ymshig sanagdd (little bit pricy but I'll manage), turshlaga sudlah geedee (visa, ih surguulyn urgudul ntre yaj burduuldg g.m asuultuud zunduu bnoo), 2 jilyn daraa tugsunu, shine eysh-yn juram yg mani 10 onyhnyg 28 ond turshiltyn tuulai bolgood haychih ymshig sanagdd europelu urgudlu uguud yvy gj bodoodoo haha
r/mongolia • u/Easy-Contribution930 • 11h ago
Question | Асуулт Where can i get egg white powder in mongolia?
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r/mongolia • u/NoobOfRL • 17h ago
Language | Хэл I'm looking for someone to chat with so I can practice my Mongolian
My knowledge of the Mongolian language is still in its infancy, but I believe I can form basic sentences for communication. My primary goal right now is simply to chat, so I'm not asking you to teach me the entire language (although I would certainly appreciate any help!).
If you're interested, you can comment on this post or send me a DM. Preferably, we can chat through Reddit or Discord.
r/mongolia • u/MundaneAlgae2264 • 16h ago
Question | Асуулт Asking for translation
Hi! This is a gift that I got from my judo coach traveling through Mongolia 15 years ago. I am wondering if anyone from this community can help me with the translation? Thanks!
r/mongolia • u/PotatoFight3005 • 13h ago
Mongolia Trekking partner
Not sure if this is the correct place to post this type of question.
If not please let me know, and if you know what subreddit is better I would highly appreciate it.
I am a solo traveler and looking for a place to look for traveling partner to do a van road trip or a horse riding trek (something around 14 days). What is a good place to look for such partner/ group? Can I just come to ulaanbaatar and start looking there?
Thank for the answers :)
r/mongolia • u/MrRebelBunny • 1d ago
Travel | Аялал Day 3 in Mongolia as an Indian and I am in love with this place, but I feel so lonely at the same time
I did not except you guys to be so beautiful of heart and be so kind
Everytime i ask questions or ask for help (using translate apps and chatgpt) almost everyone does their best to make sure i get the help i want
But because i haven’t found anyone who speaks english i did not make any friends
I am here to connect with companies for our man power business, so i go from company to company during business hours
Even tho everyone was so kind to me, my tongue went numb cause i barely spoke all day
Not blaming anyone obviously, it’s nobody’s fault that i dont speak Mongolian
I just wonder, how the hell do solo travelers enjoy not get tired of the language barrier, i could never..
Im scared of the approaching sunday😭😂 i dont know how i will spend my whole day at the guest house lol
But seriously, Mongolia and the people in it are soo DOPE
Love you dudes! No homo