TURKISH LANGUAGE
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Turkish belongs to the Altay branch of the
Ural-Altaic linguistic family, same as Finnish and Hungarian.
It is the westernmost of the Turkic languages spoken across
Central Asia and is generally classified as a member of the
South-West group, also known as the Oguz group. Other Turkic
languages, all of which are closely related, include Azerbaijani
(Azeri), Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Tatar, Turkmen, Uighur, Uzbek, and
many others spoken from the Balkans across Central Asia into
northwestern China and southern Siberia. Turkic languages are
often grouped with Mongolian and Tungusic languages in the Altaic
language family. Strictly speaking, the "Turkish"
languages spoken between Mongolia and Turkey should be called
Turkic languages, and the term "Turkish" should refer
to the language spoken in Turkey alone. It is common practice,
however, to refer to all these languages as Turkish, and differentiate
them with reference to the geographical area, for example, the
Turkish language of Azerbaijan. |
Through the span of history, Turks
have spread over a wide geographical area, taking their language
with them. Turkish speaking people have lived in a wide area stretching
from today's Mongolia to the north coast of the Black Sea, the Balkans,
East Europe, Anatolia, Iraq and a wide area of northern Africa.
Due to the distances involved, various dialects and accents have
emerged. Turkish is also the language spoken at home by people who
live in the areas that were governed by the Ottoman Empire. For
instance, in Bulgaria there are over a million speakers. About 50,000
Turkish speakers live in Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan,
and Azerbaijan. In Cyprus, Turkish is a co-official language (with
Greek) where it is spoken as a first language by 19 percent of the
population, especially in the North (KKTC). Over 1.5 million speakers
are found in Bulgaria, Macedonia, and Greece; over 2.5 million speakers
live in Germany (and other northern European countries) where Turks
have for many years been "guest workers." About 40,000
Turkish speakers live in the United States.
Turkish has several dialects. The Turkish dialects
can be divided into two major groups: Western dialects and Eastern
dialects. Of the major Turkish dialects, Danubian appears to be
the only member of the Western group. The following dialects make
up the Eastern group: Eskisehir, Razgrad, Dinler, Rumelian, Karamanli,
Edirne, Gaziantep, and Urfa. There are some other classifications
that distinguish the following dialect groups: South-western, Central
Anatolia, Eastern, Rumelian, and Kastamonu dialects. Modern standard
Turkish is based on the Istanbul dialect of Anatolian.
The history of the language is divided into three
main groups, old Turkish (from the 7th to the 13th centuries), mid-Turkish
(from the 13th to the 20th) and new Turkish from the 20th century
onwards. During the Ottoman Empire period Arabic and Persian words
invaded the Turkish language and it consequently became mixed with
three different languages. During the Ottoman period which spanned
five centuries, the natural development of Turkish was severely
hampered. Turkish formed the basis for Ottoman Turkish, the written
language of the Ottoman Empire. Ottoman Turkish was basically Turkish
in structure, but with a heavy overlay of Arabic and Persian vocabulary
and an occasional grammatical influence. Ottoman Turkish co-existed
with spoken Turkish, with the latter being considered a "gutter
language" and not worthy of study. Ottoman Turkish, and the
spoken language were both represented with an Arabic script.
Then there was the "new language" movement
started by Kemal Atatürk. In 1928, five years after the proclamation
of the Republic, the Arabic alphabet was replaced by the Latin one,
which in turn speeded up the movement to rid the language of foreign
words. Prior to the reform that introduced the Roman script, Turkish
was written in the Arabic script. Up to the fifteenth century the
Anatolian Turks used the Uighur script to write Turkish. The Turkish
Language Institute (Turk Dil Kurumu) was established in 1932 to
carry out linguistic research and contribute to the natural development
of the language. As a consequence of these efforts, modern Turkish
is a literary and cultural language developing naturally and free
of foreign influences. Today literacy rates in Turkey are over 90%.
Like all of the Turkic languages, Turkish is agglutinative,
that is, grammatical functions are indicated by adding various suffixes
to stems. Separate suffixes on nouns indicate both gender and number,
but there is no grammatical gender. Nouns are declined in three
declensions with six case endings: nominative, genitive, dative,
accusative, locative, and ablative; number is marked by a plural
suffix. Verbs agree with their subjects in case and number, and,
as in nouns, separate identifiable suffixes perform these functions.
The order of elements in a verb form is: verb stem + tense aspect
marker + subject affix. There is no definite article; the number
"one" may be used as an indefinite article.
Subject-Object-Verb word order in Turkish is a typical
Turkic characteristic, but other orders are possible under certain
discourse situations. As a SOV language where objects precede the
verb, Turkish has postpositions rather than prepositions, and relative
clauses that precede the verb.
Turkish has 8 vowels, and 21 consonants. It also
has Turkic vowel harmony in which the vowels of suffixes must harmonize
with the vowels of noun and verb stems; thus, for example, if the
stem has a round vowel then the vowel of the suffix must be round,
and so on. Stress on words pronounced in isolation is on the final
syllable, but in discourse, stress assignment is complicated especially
in the verb.
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