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  2. Languages of Turkey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_Turkey

    The languages of Turkey, apart from the official language Turkish, include the widespread Kurdish, and a number of less common minority languages.Four minority languages are officially recognized in the Republic of Turkey by the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne and the Turkey-Bulgaria Friendship Treaty (Türkiye ve Bulgaristan Arasındaki Dostluk Antlaşması) of 18 October 1925: Armenian, [3] [4] [5 ...

  3. Arabs in Turkey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arabs_in_Turkey

    Languages; ArabicTurkish [9] ... yet some speak Arabic in addition to Turkish. ... in 1992 there were 500,000 people with Arabic as their mother tongue in Turkey

  4. Languages of the Ottoman Empire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Languages_of_the_Ottoman...

    In villages where two or more populations lived together, the inhabitants would often speak each other's languages. In cosmopolitan cities, people often spoke their family languages, and many non-ethnic Turks spoke Turkish as a second language. [citation needed] Educated Ottoman Turks spoke Arabic and Persian, as these were the main non-Turkish ...

  5. Turkish people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_people

    Historically, Ottoman Turkish was the official language and lingua franca throughout the Ottoman territories and the Ottoman Turkish alphabet used the Perso-Arabic script. However, Turkish intellectuals sought to simplify the written language during the rise of Turkish nationalism in the nineteenth century. [300]

  6. List of countries and territories where Arabic is an official ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_and...

    Along with the religion of Islam, the Arabic language, Arabic number system and Arab customs spread throughout the entire Arab caliphate. The caliphs of the Arab dynasty established the first schools inside the empire which taught Arabic language and Islamic studies for all pupils in all areas within the caliphate. The result was (in those ...

  7. Turkic languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkic_languages

    Map showing countries and autonomous subdivisions where a language belonging to the Turkic language family has official status. Turkic languages are null-subject languages, have vowel harmony (with the notable exception of Uzbek due to strong Persian-Tajik influence), converbs, extensive agglutination by means of suffixes and postpositions, and lack of grammatical articles, noun classes, and ...

  8. Turkish language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_language

    The literary and official language during the Ottoman Empire period (c. 1299 –1922) is termed Ottoman Turkish, which was a mixture of Turkish, Persian, and Arabic that differed considerably and was largely unintelligible to the period's everyday Turkish.

  9. Turkic peoples - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkic_peoples

    Some 170 million people have a Turkic language as their native language; [103] an additional 20 million people speak a Turkic language as a second language. The Turkic language with the greatest number of speakers is Turkish proper, or Anatolian Turkish, the speakers of which account for about 40% of all Turkic speakers. [104]