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Pages in category "Turkish YouTubers" The following 17 pages are in this category, out of 17 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. İlayda Akdoğan; B.
Osman or Usman is the Turkish, Persian, and Urdu transliteration of the Arabic masculine given name Uthman.. In England, however, Osman is an English surname whose history dates back to the wave of migration that followed the Norman conquest of England in 1066, though it is pronounced with a long "o".
The surname (soyad, literally "lineage name" or "family name") is an ancestry-based name following a person's given names, used for addressing people or the family. [11] The surname (soyadı) is a single word according to Turkish law such as Akay or Özdemir. It is not gender-specific and has no gender-dependent modifications.
Uğur Güneş (born 1987), Turkish film and television actor; Uğur Güneş (born 1993), Turkish volleyball player; Uğur Gürses, Turkish financial columnist; Uğur Işıkal (born 1985), Turkish footballer; Uğur İbrahimhakkıoğlu (born 1964), Turkish judge; Uğur İnceman (born 1981), Turkish-German footballer; Uğur Kapısız (born 1987 ...
In addition to his native language, Turkish, he learnt Arabic, Hebrew, Persian, Latin, and Greek. [5] Elizabeth I (1533–1603), Queen of England and Ireland. She is thought to have known English, Welsh, French, Spanish, Italian, Latin, Greek, and some German. [6] Athanasius Kircher (1602–1680), German Jesuit scholar. He was said to know ...
Thereafter, Arabization policies saw the names of Turkish villages in Syria renamed with Arabic names and some Turkmen lands were nationalized and resettled with Arabs near the Turkish border. [254] A mass exodus of Syrian Turkmen took place between 1945 and 1953, many of which settled in southern Turkey. [ 255 ]
This is a list of notable Turkish people, or the Turks, (Turkish: Türkler), who are an ethnic group primarily living in the republic of Turkey and in the former lands of the Ottoman Empire where Turkish minorities have been established. They include people of Turkish descent born in other countries whose roots are in those countries.
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 ]