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Turkey
Language
The Turkish language is not an Indo-European language. It
belongs to the Altay branch of the Ural-Altay linguistic
family. The languages of this family are called Altaic
because they are believed to have originated in the high
lands around the Altay Mountains of Central Asia. More
than 90 percent of all contemporaryspeakers of Altaic
languages speak a Turkish language. The peoples of this
region led a nomadic life. Turks, too, for centuries
being nomads, took their language along whereever they
moved. The Turkish language now stretches from the
Mongolian lands and China to the present day Turkey. The
far eastern border of the language now is where once the
Turkish people have ,originated from. The Turkish
language at present is being heavily spoken in the
following countries and regions: Turkey, Northern Cyprus,
Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, Ozbekistan, Turkistan,
Kazakistan, Kirgizistan, Tajikistan and so on.
The language being spoken in Turkey now is accepted to be the
standard Turkish and it is the descendant of Ottoman
Turkish and its predecessor, so-called Old Anatolian
Turkish, which was introduced into Anatolia by the Seljuk
Turks in the late 11th ,century AD. It basically differs
from that of other Turkic origin groups in dialects and
accents.
In the period of the Ottomans, many loanwords penetrated into
Turkish, and their influence on the present day Turkish
spoken in Turkey can be easily traced. As you can find in
the Ataturk section to clean Turkish from foreign words,
Mustafa Kemal, Ataturk made changes in the language and
adopted a Latin based alphabet instead of ,Arabic script
in 1928. Now the Turkish alphabet has 29 letters, 8 of
which are vowels and 21 are consonants. The Turkish
language is written phonetically which means every letter
is uttered while reading.
Accordingly, the Turkish alphabet is designed for the easiest
phonetic description: For instance, to describe the sound
of "ch" as in "chalk", in Turkish alphabet there is the
letter of "c" with a cedilla, a dot under the letter "c".
The same applies for "sh" sound as in "shore". In Turkish
you simply put a cedilla under the letter "s" and that
new letter is one of the 29 letters of the Turkish
alphabet. The reason why we do not put these ,mletters
right here on this section is that your browser might not
support Turkish mcharacters and you may find totally
irrelevant letters if not signs instead.
There is one other interesting letter in Turkish and it is
the so-called "the soft g" . This symbol is created by
adding a cedilla this time to the top of the letter "g".
The reason why it is called "the soft g" is the fact that
you prolong the preceding vowel when there is a "soft g",
in a way softening the utterance. To give you an example
and let's kill two words, (ooppss) birds with one stone
here; every foreigner, at least at the beginning, find it
very difficult to say "thank you" in Turkish, "tesekkur
ederim". Instead, there is a more friendly and easier
way, that is, by saying "sagol", and the " g" here is a
"soft g" and it is described with a cedilla dot on its
top. So, you read it as " saaol" by prolonging the "a "
sound , making it as if it were double. "Saaol",
"Thanks".
Turkish is an agglutinative language, meaning a fairly large
number of affixes in Turkish may be added to the root;
each affix has one meaning or grammatical function and
retains its form more or less unaffected by the morphemes
surrounding it. This term is ,traditionally used in the
typological classification of languages. Turkish,
Finnish, and
Japanese are among the languages that form words by
agglutination.To put it more simply, there are suffixes
added to the stem of the words to generate new words or
even sentences. Take the example "
Cekoslavakyalilastiramadiklarimizdanmisiniz?." If we
should translate this one word sentence ( 43 letters)
into English, it means " Are you one of those that we
could not have possibly turned into a Checkoslavakian?"
If we should have a closer look at the suffixes forming
the sentence, we can find the following:

Cekoslavakya= Checkoslavakia,
li= from
las= reflexive suffix
tir= causative suffix
a= ability
ma= negation
di= past tense
k= first person plural
lar= plural
i= harmony suffix
miz= first person plural
dan= from
mi= question suffix
siniz= second person plural
One other descriptive feature of the Turkish language is
the Vowel and Consonant Harmony: According to this
principle rule front vowels (e, i, ) and back vowels (a,
i, o, u) go together with one another and do not make
combinations with the other category. For example; "erik"
plum, and "ucak" airplane.
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