Turkish belongs to the Turkic language family, which is a group of languages spoken primarily in regions of Central Asia, Eastern Europe, and Siberia. The Turkic family includes languages such as Azerbaijani, Uzbek, Kazakh, and Tatar. These languages share common linguistic features and a historical lineage, but they can vary significantly in terms of vocabulary and grammar. Turkish itself is the most widely spoken language in this family.
Languages that are similar to Turkish include Azerbaijani, Turkmen, and Uzbek, as they all belong to the Turkic language family. Other languages with some similarities to Turkish due to historical and cultural influences include Persian, Arabic, and Kurdish.
Most European languages belong to the Indo-European language family.
The vast majority of European languages belong to the Indo-European language family, although most of the languages along the Baltic (Finnish, Estonian...) and Hungarian belong to the Uralic language family.
The northern portion of Western Europe is predominately Protestant and contains languages that belong to the Germanic family. The southern portion of Western Europe is predominately Catholic and contains languages that belong to the Romance family.
Georgian belongs to the Caucasian family of languages.
Farsi (Persian) and Turkish are not closely related languages, as they belong to different language families. Farsi is an Indo-European language, while Turkish is part of the Turkic language family. They have different grammatical structures, vocabulary, and sound systems.
The Scandinavian languages belong to the North Germanic branch of the Indo-European family of languages. This branch also includes languages like Icelandic, Faroese, and Danish.
Armenian is the national language. It is in the Indo-European family.
Most of the languages of the world do not belong on the European language tree, such as all of the indigenous languages of Asia Africa, Australia and the Americas. This would include Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Hebrew, Arabic, Cherokee, Navaho, etc. There are also some European languages that are not on the European language tree, such as Hungarian and Basque.
Turkish (which is Turkic), and Finnish, Estonian, Basque and Hungarian, which are loosely defined as Finno-Ugrian.Basque
No, Semitic languages are not part of the Indo-European language family. Semitic languages belong to a separate language family that includes languages such as Arabic, Hebrew, and Amharic.
It belongs to the Indo-European family of languages.