TURKISH LANGUAGE


Meaning of TURKISH LANGUAGE in English

Turkish Trke, or Trkiye Trkesi, the major member of the Turkic language family, which is a subfamily of the Altaic languages. Turkish is spoken in Turkey, Cyprus, and elsewhere in Europe and the Middle East. With Gagauz, Azeri (Azerbaijani), Turkmen, and Khorasan Turkic, it forms the southwestern, or Oguz, branch of the Turkic languages. Modern Turkish is the descendant of Ottoman Turkish and its predecessor, so-called Old Anatolian Turkish, which was introduced into Anatolia by the Seljuq Turks in the late 11th century AD. Old Turkish gradually absorbed a great many Arabic and Persian words and even grammatical forms and was written in Arabic script. After the founding of the Turkish republic in 1923, the Arabic script was replaced by the Latin alphabet (1928). The reform of the language was initiated and supported by the Turkish republican government. In spite of disputes and resistance, the movement contributed greatly to purifying the Turkish vocabulary of foreign elements. An essentially new literary language emerged, and the older one soon became obsolete. From the point of view of linguistic development, four periods of Turkish may be differentiated: Old (Anatolian and Ottoman) Turkish, 13th16th century; Middle (Ottoman) Turkish, 17th18th century; Newer (Ottoman) Turkish, 19th century; and Modern Turkish, 20th century. Turkish morphology is subject to sound harmony, of which palatal and labial vowel harmony is the most salient feature. Palatal harmony is based on a distinction between front vowels (e, i, , ) and back vowels (a, i, o, u). As a rule, all the vowels of a word belong to the same class (back or front)e.g., sargi bandage,' sergi exhibition'and the vowels of suffixes vary according to the class of vowels in the primary steme.g., ev-de in the house,' but oda-da in the room.' In morphology Turkish is marked by its tendency to expand the primary stem with different suffixes, of which many designate grammatical notions. Thus parasizliklarindan because of their poverty' is composed of para money,' -siz -less,' -lik -ness,' -lar = plural, i(n) = possessive, -dan = ablative from, due to.' Syntactically, Turkish, like other Turkic languages, tends to use constructions with verbal nouns, participles, and converbs in cases where English would use constructions with subordinative conjunctions or relative pronounse.g., gelecegini biliyorum I know that (s)he will come' (literally come--its-[accusative] know--I'), otelde kalan dostumuz our friend who is staying in the hotel' (literally hotel-in staying friend-our'), and glerek girdi (s)he entered laughing' (literally laughing enter--(s)he').

Britannica English vocabulary.      Английский словарь Британика.