If you are trying to spell the bird, which is often enjoyed as part of a Christmas Day meal, the spelling is turkey.
If you are trying to spell the country, then the spelling is Turkey (notice the capital T).
1st part-----tur--- as in turn without the n, sounds like dur da dur but with a t
2nd part-----key----as in kiwi without the wi at the end, sounds like kee
If you mean the bird it's turkey, but the country has a capital letter: Turkey.
There are two, because we can pronounce it as "tur-key".
Poll-t, as in poultry meaning chicken. Poult is a baby turkey.
In German you write "die Türkei." It is pronounced basically as written, with the stress on "-kei."
een (Pronounce: eyn) twee (Pronounce: twey) drie (Pronounce: dree) vier (Pronounce: veer) vijf (Pronounce: vive) zes (Pronounce: zes) zeven (Pronounce: zeyven acht (Pronounce: acht) negen (Pronounce:neygen) tien (Pronounce: teen)
pronounced 'geh-jay-kondoo,'Robert Neuwerth (who spent considerable time in Turkey writing about gecekondu):This is why squatter housing in Turkey is called gecekondu (pronounced 'geh-jay-kondoo,'the word is a combination of gece, "night" in Turkish, plus kondurmak, "to happen" or"appear"), meaning "it happened at night."
turkey turkey turkey turkey turkey
That is Turkey. :)
You pronounce maui mow-E
Since you wrote it with lower-case, I assume you mean the animal. ターキー /taa kii/ and 七面鳥 /shi chi men chou/ are the words for it in Japanese.
You pronounce it like this "Say ha" that is how you pronounce Ceja.
pronounce as "der" - pronounce the "r" only slightly
You pronounce it as Page.