Linguistically, Turkish is not closely related to French or Arabic, however because of close collaboration between the Turks and the French and the Arabs, there are a lot of "loan words" in Turkish from French and Arabic.
Linguistically Turkish is very closely related to Turkmen and related languages spoken in Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan, Tajikistan and etc. Turkish is also closely related to Finnish insofar as it is to any agglutinative language (languages in which meanings are changed or added to by adding endings to verbs and nouns).
Turkish is not Indo-European like French, and Arabic is from the Semitic language grouping, also not Indo-European. Moreover, only 6% and 5% of the Turkish words are borrowed from Arabic and French, respectively.
Turkish grammar is incidentally similar to Japanese. Turkish is also distantly related to Finnish and Hungarian, all being members of the Ural-Altaic language family. However, Turkish has more in common with Azerbaijani, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Tatar, Turkmen, Uighur and Uzbek, which are from the Altaic branch.
In common with other nations conquered/influenced by Islam, Turkish has some Arabic loan words, although a considerable number were replaced with Turkic words after WWI and the fall of the Ottoman regime. Besides, Turkish does not have any guttural sounds, so it does not sound like Arabic at all. There are still many loanwords from French.
Turkish is probably most similar to the Transcaucasian languages (Kazakh, Uzbek, Turkmen, etc.). It also has numerous loanwords from Arabic, French, and English, but is not related to any of them.
The most close language is Azeri language.
Azerbaijani, which is similar to Turkish.
COBOL
The Turkish Language Association (TΓΌrk Dil Kurumu) was created on July 12, 1932. Its primary purpose is to regulate and develop the Turkish language.
Turkish people speak Turkish, which is a Turkic language. It is the official language of Turkey and is spoken by the majority of the population.
No. Turkish is an Altaic Language. Kurdish is an Indo-European Language. Kurdish is much closer to Farsi (the language of Iran) than Arabic or Turkish.
fd
November mean "Kasım" in Turkish.
peace is Barış in Turkish language
Here's how it would be spelled in English. Toorkche. But in the Turkish language, it's spelled Turkce. The 'u' in it has the two dots over it, though, and the 'c' has a vertical line through the bottom. "türkçe" = Turkish language
Turkish
'I'm' and 'I' are the same word in the Turkish language. It's 'Ben'. Yes, it's pronounced exactly like the name. To be more precise there is not "to be" in Turkish language.