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  2. Name of Turkey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Name_of_Turkey

    The Ottoman Empire was commonly referred to as Turkey or the Turkish Empire among its contemporaries. The word ultimately originates from the autonym Türk, first recorded in the Bugut inscription (as in its plural form türküt) and the Hüis Tolgoi Inscription (as türǖg) of the 6th century, and later, in the Orkhon inscriptions and the ...

  3. Place name changes in Turkey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Place_name_changes_in_Turkey

    Place name changes in Turkey have been undertaken, periodically, in bulk from 1913 to the present by successive Turkish governments. Thousands of names within the Turkish Republic or its predecessor the Ottoman Empire have been changed from their popular or historic alternatives in favour of recognizably Turkish names, as part of Turkification ...

  4. Place name origins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Place_name_origins

    At its most severe, the name may be completely replaced. However, often the name may be recycled and altered in some way. Typically, this will be in one of the above ways; as the meaning of place-name is forgotten, it becomes changed to a name suitable for the new language.

  5. Turkish language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turkish_language

    The Turkish Language Association was influenced by the ideology of linguistic purism: indeed one of its primary tasks was the replacement of loanwords and of foreign grammatical constructions with equivalents of Turkish origin. [g] These changes, together with the adoption of the new Turkish alphabet in 1928, shaped the modern Turkish language ...

  6. Names of Istanbul - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Names_of_Istanbul

    According to Pliny the Elder Byzantium was first known as Lygos. [1] The origin and meaning of the name are unknown. Zsolt suggested it was etymologically identitical to the Greek name for the Ligures and derived from the Anatolian ethnonym Ligyes, [2] a tribe that was part of Xerxes' army [3] and appeared to have been neighbors to the Paphlagonians. [4]

  7. Geographical renaming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geographical_renaming

    The city changed its name to "Eastpointe" after a vote in 1992; the name change had been proposed to reduce its association with the adjacent city of Detroit (a move that offended many Detroit residents), and the "-pointe" is intended to associate the city with the exclusive communities of the Grosse Pointes.

  8. So, why is Turkey in NATO, anyway? A look at the country's ...

    www.aol.com/news/why-turkey-nato-anyway-look...

    Turkey still looks to its NATO membership for "prestige, gravitas and panache," said Sinan Ciddi, a Turkey specialist at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies and a professor at the U.S ...

  9. List of Spanish words of Turkic origin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Spanish_words_of...

    It is further divided into words that come from Kazakh, Kyrgyz Tatar, and Turkish. Some of these words existed in Latin as loanwords from other languages. Some of these words have alternate etymologies and may also appear on a list of Spanish words from a different language, especially including Arabic and Persian languages.