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.
kurdish mother tonge.arabic,english,turkish,persian,french and russian
The official language of Turkey is Turkish. Turkish is spoken by the majority of the population. Additionally, there are several minority languages spoken in Turkey, including Kurdish, Arabic, and Zaza.
Azerbaijani, Turkmen, Qashqai, Gagauz, and Balkan Gagauz Turkish are all similar to Turkish
because in the past Turkish people thought there was better then kurdish people with kurdish people didnt like soo they fell out
There is no such place called kurdistan.The reason is kurdish terorrist in turkey attacked Turkish people in the east that's why Turkish army is killing Kurdish terorrists other reason is Kurdish people want to live in Turkey. There is no such place called kurdistan.The reason is kurdish terorrist in turkey attacked Turkish people in the east that's why Turkish army is killing Kurdish terorrists other reason is Kurdish people want to live in Turkey. There is no such place called kurdistan.The reason is kurdish terorrist in turkey attacked Turkish people in the east that's why Turkish army is killing Kurdish terorrists other reason is Kurdish people want to live in Turkey.
The dominant language among the Kurdish population is the Kurdish language which has two main dialects, Kurmanji (more dominant in Turkish and Syrian Kurdistan) and Sorani (more dominant in Iraqi and Iranian Kurdistan). There are also the languages of Zazaki and Gorani, which are spoken by Kurds, but are not linguistically considered to be Kurdish languages.As Iraqi Kurdistan is only recognized as an autonomous region that has the ability to determine official languages, it has recognized Kurdish (both Kurmanji and Sorani dialects), Arabic (MSA/Fusha), and, in some places, Turkmeni as official languages.Kurdistan has two dominant dialects of Kurdish, Kurmanji, which is dominant in Turkish and Syrian Kurdistan, and Sorani, which is dominant in Iraqi and Iranian Kurdistan, with some overlap in Iraq between the dialects. As such, Iraqi Kurdistan, the only one with enough authority to recognize official languages, recognizes both Kurmanji and Sorani as official languages. There are also the languages of Zazaki and Gorani, which are languages spoken by Kurds, but are not linguistically Kurdish languages.Of course, the local national languages are also spoken in Kurdistan, i.e. Turkish, Arabic, and Farsi and Azeri.The dominant language among the Kurdish population is the Kurdish language which has two main dialects, Kurmanji (more dominant in Turkish and Syrian Kurdistan) and Sorani (more dominant in Iraqi and Iranian Kurdistan). There are also the languages of Zazaki and Gorani, which are spoken by Kurds, but are not linguistically considered to be Kurdish languages.As Iraqi Kurdistan is only recognized as an autonomous region that has the ability to determine official languages, it has recognized Kurdish (both Kurmanji and Sorani dialects), Arabic (MSA/Fusha), and, in some places, Turkmeni as official languages.
German: Sohn French: fils Spanish: hijo Turkish: oğul Kurdish: kur Arabic: ibn
It's a big lie.Turkey never persecuted Kurdish
urmia is a Turkish city.
Kurdish languages are not Semitic. They are more closely related to Persian languages.
Turan Erdem has written: 'Ferheng' -- subject(s): Dictionaries, Kurdish, Kurdish language, Turkish language, Turkish
No. The Turkish-Kurdish conflict either (1) predated the United Nations or (2) was considered a domestic Turkish issue and therefore outside of the UN's purview.