Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Turkish Cyrillic (Түркче) The Turkish Cyrillic alphabet was invented by Ethan Hunt. He invented it in class when he was pondering about Turkic languages. He wondered why Turkish wasn't like the rest of the Turkic languages: it is not written in the Cyrillic script. While Ethan was thinking about this, he decided to create the Turkish ...

  2. The earliest known Turkic alphabet is the Orkhon script, also known as the Old Turkic alphabet, the first surviving evidence of which dates from the 7th century. In general, Turkic languages have been written in a number of different alphabets including Uyghur, Cyrillic, Arabic, Greek, Latin, and some other Asiatic writing systems.

  3. The Turkish alphabet is used for writing, speaking and reading in Turkish. This alphabet is modified from the Latin alphabet . There are 29 letters in the Turkish alphabet of Turkey. The English letters, "Q", "W" and "X" are not in Turkish alphabet. Seven Turkish letters (Ç, Ğ, I, İ, Ö, Ş, and Ü) are in the Turkish alphabet.

    Letter
    Letter
    Ipa
    English Approximation
    A
    a
    /a/
    As a in father
    B
    b
    /b/
    As b in bat
    C
    c
    /dʒ/
    As j in job
    Ç
    ç
    /tʃ/
    As ch in chat
  4. The first few of these alphabets were developed by Orthodox missionaries for the Finnic and Turkic peoples of Idel-Ural ( Mari, Udmurt, Mordva, Chuvash, and Kerashen Tatars) in the 1870s. Later, such alphabets were created for some of the Siberian and Caucasus peoples who had recently converted to Christianity.

  5. Instructions. To type directly with the computer keyboard: Type c=, g=, s= to have ç, ğ, ş. Type o=, u= to have ö, ü. Type i=, I= to add or delete the point: ı, İ. Copy [Ctrl]+ [C] & Paste [Ctrl]+ [V] → Turkish conversion capital <> small letters. → Ottoman Turkish keyboard (Arabic script)

  6. Turkish is an official language in Turkey, Northern Cyprus, and Cyprus. It is recognised as a minority language in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Greece, Iraq, Kosovo, North Macedonia and Romania.

  7. Since December 24, 2012, the common Turkic alphabet has been officially used as a means of transliterating the Tatar Cyrillic alphabet. [4]