VIDEO SOURCE:
YOUTUBE CHANNEL: Learn Turkish with turkishclass101.com
Heartful thanks for the creator of the video for allowing us to present it to our audience
Brief history of Turkish language:
Turkish language, Turkish Türkçe or Türkiye Türkçesi, the significant individual from the Turkic language family inside the Altaic language bunch. Turkish is spoken in Turkey, Cyprus, and somewhere else in Europe and the Middle East. With Gagauz, Azerbaijani (here and there called Azeri), Turkmen, and Khorāsān Turkic, it frames the southwestern, or Oğuz, part of the Turkic dialects.
Current Turkish is the relative of Ottoman Turkish and its archetype, alleged Old Anatolian Turkish, which was brought into Anatolia by the Seljuq Turks in the late eleventh century CE. Old Turkish steadily retained a considerable number of Arabic and Persian words and surprisingly linguistic structures and was written in Arabic content. After the establishing of the Turkish republic in 1923, the Arabic content was supplanted by the Latin letters in order (1928). The change of the language was started and upheld by the Turkish conservative government. Disregarding questions and obstruction, the development contributed extraordinarily to sanitizing the Turkish jargon of unfamiliar components. A basically new abstract language arose, and the more seasoned one before long got old.
According to the perspective of phonetic turn of events, four times of Turkish might be separated: Old (Anatolian and Ottoman) Turkish, thirteenth sixteenth century; Middle (Ottoman) Turkish, seventeenth eighteenth century; Newer (Ottoman) Turkish, nineteenth century; and Modern Turkish, twentieth century.
Turkish morphology is liable to sound agreement, of which palatal and labial vowel amicability is the most striking component. Palatal agreement depends on a qualification between front vowels (e, I, ö, ü) and back vowels (a, ı, o, u). When in doubt, every one of the vowels of a word have a place with a similar class (back or front)— e.g., sargı 'wrap,' sergi 'presentation'— and the vowels of additions shift as indicated by the class of vowels in the essential stem—e.g., ev-de 'in the house' yet oda-da 'in the room.' In morphology Turkish is set apart by its propensity to grow the essential stem with various postfixes, of which many assign syntactic thoughts. In this manner parasızlıklarından 'due to their destitution' is made out of para 'cash,' - sız '- less,' - lık '- ness,' - lar = plural, ı(n) = possessive, - dan = ablative 'from, due to.'