No. Turks are a distinct ethnicity.
Some groups in the Middle East who identify as Muslim but do not belong to the Arabic ethnicity include Kurds, Persians (Iranians), Turks, and Pashtuns.
All citizens of Turkey have Turkish Nationality. There is a dispute in Turkey as to whether or not being Turkish (nationality) and being a Turk (ethnicity) are interchangeable with the government and the majority Turks saying that they are and minorities like Kurds saying that they are Turkish, but not Turks.
yes they are turks
obviously Turks
It does not depend on your Ethnicity. ethnicity is not a barrier.
Armenians were often referred to by the Turks as "Gavur," which means "infidel" or "non-believer." This term was used derogatorily to signify their Christian faith in contrast to the predominantly Muslim Turkish population. Additionally, Armenians were sometimes called "Ermeni," which is the Turkish term for their ethnicity. These names reflected the cultural and religious tensions between the two groups throughout history.
The capital of Turks and Caicos is Cockburn Town, and it is located on Grand Turks island.
The capital of Turks and Caicos is Cockburn Town and is located on Grand Turks Island.
Within somebody's life, the answer is usually, yes. A person cannot change from being ethnically Yoruba (Nigeria) to being ethnically Thai. However, there are some circumstances where ethnicity is contingent on historical circumstances and not some fixed DNA counter.A perfect example of changing ethnicities would be in the creation of the Turk ethnicity in Anatolia and the Balkans. By the time of Suleiman the Magnificent to the present day, the majority of Turks in Turkey and the surrounding countries had no or minimal ethnic connection to the Turks of Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Kazakhstan, where their Turkic conquerors, the Seljuks and Ottomans, came from. They were actually the indigenous people of Anatolia and the Balkans, many of whom had previously identified as Byzantine Greeks, but who converted to Islam. It was this conversion to Islam that made them Turks. They were also not linguistically homogeneous. Roughly half of the Turks in Anatolia and the Balkans prior to 1900 did not speak Turkish at all. They spoke Greek, Serbo-Croatian, or Bulgarian since those were the languages of the regions where they were from. The process of indigenous Anatolians and Balkans-peoples converting to Islam and, therefore, becoming ethnically Turkish, was called "Turkification".
A Turks Islander.......
why did the Turks go to Galliploi