Similarities Between Turkish and Crimean Tatar

Can Turks and Crimean Tatars understand each other? The term "Crimean Tatar" has been in use since the early modern period to refer to the native Turkic population of Crimea. Did you know that up until the 19th century this Turkic group consisted of the majority of the population of Crimea? When the Russian Empire annexed the Crimean Khanate in the late 18th century, the Tatars consisted of 90% of the population. Since then they have faced severe persecution. During World War II, Joseph Stalin ordered their expulsion from Crimea. In a matter of a few days a huge portion of their entire population was forcibly deported to Central Asia by the Soviet secret police in cattle cars. It's estimated that half of them died before they even reached the inhumane labor camps. The majority of the villages and geographic features in Crimea that had Turkic names were given Slavic names shortly after the deportation as part of the Soviet efforts to erase all traces of their presence from Crimea. A decade before the fall of the Soviet Union, their population had dropped to less than 1%, from 90% just two centuries prior. A relatively small percentage of exiled Crimean Tatars returned back after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Today, the language is considered to be severely endangered, and part of the Crimean Tatars' cultural revival consists of efforts in preserving the language and literature. This is why I'm very happy to feature it in this video.
Follow Lenur on Instagram to learn more about the Crimean Tatar language and people: / seyahat_delisi_
Contact me on Instagram if you'd like to participate in a future video: / bahadoralast
Crimean Tatar and Turkish belong to different branches of the Turkic language family. But as mentioned in the video, Crimean Tatar is very unique in the sense that all of its three main dialects belong to different branches of Turkic languages, and the degree of mutual intelligibility with Turkish varies depending on the dialect.
In this video Lenur, Akhtem, Eylül, and Onur will demonstrate to what extent Turkish and Crimean Tatar speakers can understand each other.
The Turkish language, which is also referred to as Istanbul Turkish, is the official language of Turkey (Türkiye) and is the most widely spoken of the Turkic languages, with most of its native speakers living in Western Asia, and significant group of speakers in Germany, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Northern Cyprus, Greece, the Caucasus, and other parts of Europe and Central Asia. Ottoman Turkish, which was a variation of the Turkish spoken today, influenced many parts of Europe during the time that the Ottoman Empire expanded. When the modern Turkish republic was established, one of Atatürk's Reforms consisted of changing the Ottoman Turkish alphabet with a Latin alphabet. Today, Turkish is recognized as a minority language in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Greece, Iraq, Macedonia, and Romania.
The Turkic languages consist of over 35 different documented languages, originating from East Asia. Turkish has the highest number of native speakers out of all Turkic language. There is a high degree of mutual intelligibility among the various Oghuz languages, which include Turkish, Azerbaijani, Turkmen, Qashqai, Gagauz, Balkan Gagauz Turkish and Oghuz-influenced Crimean Tatar.

Пікірлер: 1 000

  • @BahadorAlast
    @BahadorAlast Жыл бұрын

    The term "Crimean Tatar" has been in use since the early modern period to refer to the native Turkic population of Crimea. Did you know that up until the 19th century this Turkic group consisted of the majority of the population of Crimea? When the Russian Empire annexed the Crimean Khanate in the late 18th century, the Tatars consisted of 90% of the population. Since then they have faced severe persecution. During World War II, Joseph Stalin ordered their expulsion from Crimea. In a matter of a few days a huge portion of their entire population was forcibly deported to Central Asia by the Soviet secret police in cattle cars. It's estimated that half of them died before they even reached the inhumane labor camps. The majority of the villages and geographic features in Crimea that had Turkic names were given Slavic names shortly after the deportation as part of the Soviet efforts to erase all traces of their presence from Crimea. A decade before the fall of the Soviet Union, their population had dropped to less than 1%, from 90% just two centuries prior. A relatively small percentage of exiled Crimean Tatars returned back after the collapse of the Soviet Union. Today, the language is considered to be severely endangered, and part of the Crimean Tatars' cultural revival consists of efforts in preserving the language and literature. Hope you enjoy the video! Follow Lenur on Instagram to learn more about the Crimean Tatar language and people: instagram.com/seyahat_delisi_/ Contact me on Instagram if you'd like to participate in a future video: instagram.com/BahadorAlast

  • @persianguy1524

    @persianguy1524

    Жыл бұрын

    Well the Crimean tatars were colonizers themselves who genocided native Greek, slavic and Iranic populations where they settled.

  • @biscolataman

    @biscolataman

    Жыл бұрын

    @@persianguy1524 There has been a Turkic population in and around Crimea since the 300s and was ruled by the Turks for about 1000 years (longer than the Slavs). Onogurs, Bulgars, Pechenegs, Cumans, Kicphaks, Khazars and many other Turkic peoples ruled and inhabited this area for a long time. The Rums (Urums) still exist in the region also whose language got Turkified by Kipchak Khanate before about 700-800 years

  • @biscolataman

    @biscolataman

    Жыл бұрын

    @@persianguy1524 The Eastern Slavs were not massacred, they just came under Turkic rule and intermarried with the Turks. Also, The Iranics (Sarmatians) have already disappeared since the 200s. You have very clearly revealed your racist attitude with empty misinformation.

  • @persianguy1524

    @persianguy1524

    Жыл бұрын

    @@biscolataman The original inhabitance of crimea was Persian and Iranic first, then Greeks settled parts of it then Slavs. Tatars were just colonizers from the altai mountains not natives. Turkics genocided everywhere they went with their mongol kin, from Central Asia, to Europe to Middle East. Turkey a lone has conducted 3 major genocides against Greeks, Assyrians and Armenians in the past 100 years and is conducting one against Kurds right now.

  • @persianguy1524

    @persianguy1524

    Жыл бұрын

    @@biscolataman oh is this one of your 50 other accounts? Absolutely Comical a tork calling someone racist when you guys are the most racist people out there genociding ethnic groups left and right, even to this day. Shameless.

  • @nurlybekkengishlikov6745
    @nurlybekkengishlikov6745 Жыл бұрын

    I understood 90% Crimean Tatars 70% understood Turkish I am Qazaq myself I send greetings to all Turks I send huge greetings to the Crimean Tatars

  • @karaaslan7402

    @karaaslan7402

    Жыл бұрын

    Turkiyennen Qazaqstanğa Esen ve Salem bolsyn bawurum!

  • @user-bm8fw4ep2j

    @user-bm8fw4ep2j

    4 ай бұрын

    Нұрлыбек! Бөпең сүйкімді екен.😚

  • @squarzthebest

    @squarzthebest

    3 ай бұрын

    as a Turkiye Turk. Congratulations my turk brother. we love you

  • @emreduygun

    @emreduygun

    2 ай бұрын

    Cheers❤🎉

  • @markawrely455
    @markawrely455 Жыл бұрын

    In Crimea we have dialects that is absolutely similar to Turkish. Lenur and Ahtem speak in "official" dialect. I am personally speak in turkish similar dialect. And we also have a dialects that will be very difficult for understanding for Turkish people. Actually, my wife speek in kıpçak dialect. As crimean tatar i actually understand turkish, but have some problems with my own "official" dialect))) so... Men yalıboylüyum. Türk hardaşlarımıza çoh selamlar ve sevgililer.

  • @markawrely455

    @markawrely455

    Жыл бұрын

    @@polak-furry-2009 yes

  • Жыл бұрын

    Bizden de selamlar ve sevgiler siz kardeşlerimize :))

  • @markawrely455

    @markawrely455

    Жыл бұрын

    @Sever we also have "evet", but it is "elbet". "Elbet" is "of course". If we just want to say yes, we say "E". "Tabak" it's "tabaq" or "tabah" - same word.

  • @huseynhumbatov9595

    @huseynhumbatov9595

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@cherkozzaCrimea is occupied by Russia, but it is temporary.

  • @zaboybagoi8636

    @zaboybagoi8636

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@Я Russia is American

  • @Nur-nd3ij
    @Nur-nd3ij Жыл бұрын

    As a grandkid of Crimean Tatar grandparents who moved to Romania Constanta than immigrated to Türkiye with help of big leader Atatürk i understand 80 % of sentences. Greetings from Türkiye .

  • @muzafferturhan

    @muzafferturhan

    Жыл бұрын

    Same exact story with my family. 93 harbi.

  • @BGpomakTR

    @BGpomakTR

    Жыл бұрын

    My family too! Köstenceden Eskişehire gelmisler. Atam sagolsun ❤

  • @Nur-nd3ij

    @Nur-nd3ij

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Maxhartmann2024 No, they left directly Crimea after war around 1860 and few generation born in Romania Constanta which is Köstence. After a while Atatürk welcome them to Türkiye. Ok we can thank to both ofcourse.

  • @trak83eros60

    @trak83eros60

    Жыл бұрын

    @lgbttv200 russia expelled them not kemal.

  • @IWillSayMyPeace

    @IWillSayMyPeace

    Жыл бұрын

    @MAYKIL CEKSIN idiot

  • @muberrazeyrek8871
    @muberrazeyrek8871 Жыл бұрын

    Probably the language that all Turkish/Turkic languages ​​could meet is Crimean Tatar. It is the exact language that Kazakh, Uzbek, Uyghur, Azeri and Turkish speakers can understand easily. In fact, I consider if a prototype Turk were to be created, it would probably be a Crimean Tatar in every way. Love them.

  • @cosmokaulitz22

    @cosmokaulitz22

    Жыл бұрын

    I think so. during my univesity studies in Turkey there was a crimean tatar channel I used to wtach. I did not know it was Crimean tatar but "a weird turkish dialect" (I did not know turkish was related to other languages back then) but indeed they are really similar.

  • @dominicd2063

    @dominicd2063

    Жыл бұрын

    True, genetically it's considered Kypchak but it feels like a mixture of Kazakh and Turkish (Kypchak and Oghuz).

  • @recep2939

    @recep2939

    Жыл бұрын

    If I am not mistaken, back in the 19th century, one Crimean guy called as İsmail Gaspıralı (Gasprinsky) published a newspaper called as "Terciman" which could be understood by all of the Turkic languages which at those days Turkic languages could be separated as two schools. One is Western (Ottoman and Safavid or Azerbaijani Turks) and Eastern (Chagatai Turkic which was lingua franca in Central Asian Turks). So your theory is probably really close to truth or reality.

  • @muberrazeyrek8871

    @muberrazeyrek8871

    Жыл бұрын

    @@recep2939 Actually, the basic point of what I'm talking about, the fact that they are ethnically closer to the Kipchak tribe, but at the same time they have a very close relationship with the Oghuz tribe, politically, linguistically and culturally, with the Ottoman influence, makes them an excellent bridge group. Gaspirali was one of the first people to notice this connection and to try sincerely about it. It is a strange coincidence that today is the anniversary of his death. RIP.

  • @recep2939

    @recep2939

    Жыл бұрын

    @@muberrazeyrek8871 ah the play of the fate sometimes can really be suprising. Maybe there's no such a thing as accidents after all. RIP for the legend. I hope we can build something upon or like what he achieved or tried to achieved back in the days.

  • @balporsugu7046
    @balporsugu7046 Жыл бұрын

    Birçoğu bilmiyordur. Osmanlı hanedanında padişahın yerine geçecek erkek şehzade kalmazsa Kırım hanı Osmanlı imparatorluğunun başına geçebilir şeklinde bir yasa vardı.

  • @bidrsk3877

    @bidrsk3877

    Жыл бұрын

    İyiymiş bilmiyordum gerçekten.

  • @destuurhasekihurremsultan4726

    @destuurhasekihurremsultan4726

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bidrsk3877 Üstelik IV. Murad ölmeden kardeşi İbrahim'in öldürülmesini emrediyor. Ama emri dinlemiyorlar. Dinleselerdi taht gerçekten de Tatar'ın olacaktı

  • @Tan-zi4eh

    @Tan-zi4eh

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bidrsk3877 4. Murat, Deli İbrahim'in öldürülmesini ve Kırım Han'ından birinin padişah ilan edilmesini istemiş. Ama Osmanlı soyu yürümez diye öldürmemişler. Deli İbrahim de imparatorluğun ağzına sıçmış. 150 kiloluk bir kadına aşık olmuş ve kadın kendi kilosu kadar (150) altın istemiş. Embesil o kadar altını vermiş de. Keşke Kırım Han'ından biri yönetseydi o zaman Osmanlı'yı. Deli İbrahim'in soyu kurusaydı.

  • @TeknoMoto

    @TeknoMoto

    Жыл бұрын

    1.Giray hanın kızı Ayşe Hafsa Sultan, Osmanlı Padişahı I. Selim'in eşi, Kanuni Sultan Süleyman'ın annesiydi. Hadi tarih bilmiyorsun Muhteşem Yüzyıl da mı seyretmediniz :)

  • @demokratiya345

    @demokratiya345

    5 ай бұрын

    doğru

  • @bishiler
    @bishiler Жыл бұрын

    The bit at 10:25 "Maşallah, göz değmesin tü tü tü..." shows that the shared cultural features between the Turks and the Crimean Tatars are much deeper beyond linguistics.

  • @that_flnger

    @that_flnger

    Жыл бұрын

    In Kyrgyzstan we say "köz tiybesin", that means the same but sometimes we say "b" instead of "m" and "y" instead of "g"

  • @bishiler

    @bishiler

    Жыл бұрын

    @@that_flnger y ←→ ğ ←→ g ←→ k and b ←→ m are pretty common sound shifts in many languages, and particularly so in the Turkic ones. Sometimes considering those (and other) regular sound shifts is all it takes for a Turkish speaker to understand a sentence in another Turkic language, especially in the written form (and of course you have to know how to read the Cyrillic for some of the languages). The spoken version is often an altogether different world, though, even if you can pick up a few words here and there and get a general "sense" of what is being talked about. Regardless, it is interesting that we all have that "eye touching" concept in the culture.

  • @that_flnger

    @that_flnger

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bishiler i agree with you. I can understand some written azerbaijani words but don't understand a word when they speak. These sound shifts are really interesting

  • @nikre
    @nikre Жыл бұрын

    "alma terekten uzaq tüşmez" exists literally the same in turkish, as "armut dibine düşer" for pear.

  • @bahtszturko3016

    @bahtszturko3016

    Жыл бұрын

    I had not been thinking these are the same :D

  • @uzunderee

    @uzunderee

    Жыл бұрын

    They have different meanings. But we have the same for azerbaijani.

  • @Ozgur72

    @Ozgur72

    Жыл бұрын

    "The apple does not fall far from the tree". It is a very common proverb in many languages.

  • @Polo-rn8ly

    @Polo-rn8ly

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Ozgur72 in turkish it is not apple. İt is pear.

  • @nurettinsarul

    @nurettinsarul

    Жыл бұрын

    "Armut dibine düşer." is said in Turkey. Pear falls just in the area under its own tree. 😊

  • @aidarnygmet6497
    @aidarnygmet6497 Жыл бұрын

    I find it interesting how kiyik in crimean tatar means wild animal, while geyik in turkish means deer(kiyik means deer in kazakh too) because the same thing is present in english and german, deer means deer and Tier in germans means animal in general

  • @christopherellis2663

    @christopherellis2663

    Жыл бұрын

    Deer in English, tyr in Danish

  • @yaxshibala

    @yaxshibala

    Жыл бұрын

    I speak German and Turkish fluent and you blow my mind with this fact🤣🤣🤣

  • @bishiler

    @bishiler

    Жыл бұрын

    A great catch there.

  • @seyahatdelisilenurbey

    @seyahatdelisilenurbey

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, that’s a really interesting fact. Also “terek” in Crimean Tatar means “tree” while in some Turkic languages it mean “poplar” 🤓

  • @sickturret3587

    @sickturret3587

    Жыл бұрын

    @@christopherellis2663 wait a minute sir... isn't tyr an ancient god also with you guys (i know southern (south of you of course) germanic people used tiwax/diwas for him. but he was the god of war, i can't see any references between a game animal and a god of war.) are they spelled differently or was it just a coincidence?

  • @halilibrahimkarasu1221
    @halilibrahimkarasu1221 Жыл бұрын

    i really love the energy of the Crimean speaker on the right. So well articulated in both languages. Everyone was great in this episode

  • @sickturret3587

    @sickturret3587

    Жыл бұрын

    abi hatun her şeyi anlıyor zaten de alttan alıyor ayıp olmasın diye.

  • @clishe7395

    @clishe7395

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sickturret3587 türkçe dizi izleyerek şarkı dinleyerek büyüyorlar. Bayağı alttan almışlar, zor sorsalar bile anlıcaklardı onlar.

  • @TurquazCannabiz

    @TurquazCannabiz

    Жыл бұрын

    He is so full of energy and love. All of them are great people.

  • @nicoladibara1936

    @nicoladibara1936

    Жыл бұрын

    I liked the young man very much too. He is just special. Very intelligent and articulate. A great guy. Listening to him is a real pleasure.

  • @BaronAnon
    @BaronAnon Жыл бұрын

    As a Bashkir I could understand some words, because they simply have some regular sound differences; but there are some things that you just have to learn before you understand, I suppose, since Oghuz and Kipchak languages do differ in several aspects, and Crimean Tatar seems to have been influenced by Oghuz quite a bit. Per usual, thanks for great content!

  • @user-nx6ny8pw2u

    @user-nx6ny8pw2u

    Жыл бұрын

    As a Bashkir do you want to see an independent Bashkortostan?

  • @nicomedia62

    @nicomedia62

    Жыл бұрын

    @Beko Although I like Turkey but Turkey is not a powerful country at all, poorest and the most corrupt country in this part of the world, terrible education system and got masses of uneducated pseudo religious public. Turkey is not capable to give anything to the Turkic world. Politically very unstable too, trying to survive between major powers like Russia, USA and EU. I wish Turks followed the Ataturk's way of thinking but unfortunately they chosen to political Islam which is bankrupt the country. You may find this a bit harsh but unfortunately it is the reality.

  • @uzunderee

    @uzunderee

    Жыл бұрын

    @Beko useless nationalism. Turkey has it's own troubles. Anyway, u will grow up and understand the reality.

  • @aceinternational4788

    @aceinternational4788

    Жыл бұрын

    @@user-nx6ny8pw2u why do you always say this crap Bashkorstan is an amazing independent republic of Russia wtf you on about

  • @YasarTopcuTurkey

    @YasarTopcuTurkey

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nicomedia62 you have to grow up.!!!in every sense.you love but you bore and kill like a bear.,Turkey's current political stance is actually a reaction.!!like trump and biden America...political preferences change with elections.!!! but do not forget that Turkey is an honorable state with a long history... grow fast..

  • @user-vp8cf7ti7s
    @user-vp8cf7ti7s Жыл бұрын

    Ас Саляму алейкум барча ТЮРК кардашларга, Татар халкындан Кайнар Салям Татарстан )

  • @mekut3116

    @mekut3116

    Жыл бұрын

    Aleykum selam emmi oğlu

  • @seanfitzgerald2946
    @seanfitzgerald2946 Жыл бұрын

    In Ukraine, the National Corpus of the Crimean Tatar Language (NCCTL) will be created in the format of an online platform as an open library of educational and scientific materials on the Crimean Tatar language. The online platform is designed to become a powerful tool for students, scientists, researchers, practicing teachers, and other interested parties who want to learn the Crimean Tatar language. The organized corpus will contain Crimean Tatar texts of various genres with a wide range of word searches by multiple parameters. In particular, the site will be filled with scientific articles, monographs, artistic, biographical, and other literature, and newspaper journalism. In the long term, the corpus should reach more than 1 million word usages.

  • @ratmir7367

    @ratmir7367

    Жыл бұрын

    Держите в курсе)

  • @adelinalina5783

    @adelinalina5783

    Жыл бұрын

    Ага, а говна на лопате вам не нужно?

  • @recep2939

    @recep2939

    Жыл бұрын

    Ah as a native Turkish person that's a really great news! I hope the site will be open for the whole world rather than only in Ukraine. I would really like to examine and understand our brothers and sisters language further. Ukraine care about Crimeans and their culture way (and I mean WAY) more than Russia that's for sure.

  • @mjv8883

    @mjv8883

    Жыл бұрын

    @@recep2939 ahaha! What about native people of your land?

  • @mjv8883

    @mjv8883

    Жыл бұрын

    @@recep2939 На Украине есть надписи на татарском? Нет! Только в Крыму и России. В Крыму надписи и на украинском тоже есть. Вообще если говорит о татарах, то это бывший кочевой народ, а жителями Крыма изначально были греки, которых турки оккупировали.

  • @albertrynkowski3599
    @albertrynkowski3599 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you Bahador and all the participants! This was exactly the video i was waiting for! İ hope that Crimean Tatars will get more recognition, and first of all: İ hope that everyone in their part of the world will stay safe during these difficult times; Salıknen kalın arkadaşlar!

  • @nikre
    @nikre Жыл бұрын

    translating to english was the harder part in their communication.

  • @aleksinatetka
    @aleksinatetka Жыл бұрын

    I enjoyed this video very much. I'm learning Turkish, that's one thing, and I love comparisons between similar languages, that's another thing. Great job, guys, thank you and thank you Bahador :)

  • @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    Жыл бұрын

    Nadezda Djurovic Hanfendi ben isviçrede yaşiyorum tarih arşiv araştırmacısıyım Türk tarihimize ait avrupadaki ulusal kütuphanelerdeki orijinal kaynaklari latinceden fransızcadan bulup Türkçeye çevirip anlatmak ATATÜRKE VE TÜRK DÜNYAMIZA BORCUMDUR ilginize teşekkür eder saygılarımı sunarım

  • @aleksinatetka

    @aleksinatetka

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar Merci beaucoup pour votre commentaire qui me fait énormément plaisir. En effet, je m'intéresse à la langue et à la culture turques, mais j'ai un peu de mal à mon âge à apprendre la langue, je ne renonce pas, et j'espère pouvoir un jour là maîtriser à un niveau, disons, convenable. Votre travail doit être passionnant et il est digne de respect. Bonne journée à vous !

  • @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    Жыл бұрын

    @@aleksinatetka merci madames voila ma chaine you tube en français HISTOIRE TOURQUE TOURANINNES

  • @bishiler
    @bishiler Жыл бұрын

    The Oghuz element in the Yalıboylu dialect might have been because of the Ottoman settlers along the Crimean coast. I don't know if there ever was a massive immigration northwards, but it seems likely: Crimea is pretty close to Anatolia if arriving by ship, the southern coast has a lovely climate, and the Crimean Khanate and the Ottoman Empire had a pretty close relationship for centuries - so much so that there was an agreement that stipulated a member of the Giray dynasty would become the Ottoman sultan should the Osmanoğlus have failed to procure any eligible candidate to the throne.

  • @ozcanertem4861
    @ozcanertem486111 ай бұрын

    Bahador this time you were right on the spot. I was born and raised in Turkey and my mother's parents were all from Crimea that had to migrate back around 1925. I once had a chance to visit my grandfather's village close to Yalta to chase any living descendents of my ancestors back in 2004. I wish I could find any cousins. Now with your video and guests I really feel like I've found them. So emotional. How close the languages are. Thank you for bringing them along.

  • @tazaoumur
    @tazaoumur Жыл бұрын

    Qazandan qaynar sälâmlär Qırımda häm Türkiyädä yäşägän qärdäşläribizgä 🙋🏻‍♂️

  • @alieren_

    @alieren_

    Жыл бұрын

    Selamlar

  • @nurettinsarul

    @nurettinsarul

    Жыл бұрын

    Aleyküm selam

  • @bzbxzhdb4656
    @bzbxzhdb4656 Жыл бұрын

    This Turkish guy really understand Turkic very well. I couldn't understand as much as him.

  • @user-ed8xb3on8f

    @user-ed8xb3on8f

    Жыл бұрын

    Because he is from east of turkey

  • @yaxshibala
    @yaxshibala Жыл бұрын

    Açqıç = key in Türkmen it is “açar”😂 by the way the guy from Erzurum has a bonus because their dialect is close to azerbaycani dialect and they can understand a lot more of other Turkic languages than a regular Istanbul speaker especially the karluk branch. For example people in Istanbul use to say „geldiğinde” but people from Erzurum and near region would rather use “gelende” which is nearly the same like in kipchak or karluk „kelgende“. Ps. Just while I wrote this they talked about it😂

  • @bishiler

    @bishiler

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, I was amazed when how easily he guessed "mışıq" (or something), but then I realized they call it "pışık" (as far as I can remember from an old friend) in the eastern dialects of Turkish. That would be a "kedi" in the official standard.

  • @OgedayKaan

    @OgedayKaan

    Жыл бұрын

    "açgıç/açar" is a nice word, we should use it in Turkish... In Teke Region (south west Anatolia) we use "görek" word for "lock" and "göreklemek" for "locking" but I don't remember we have a word for "key"...

  • @gorkemgedik7745

    @gorkemgedik7745

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bishiler Rizede pisi/pisik olarak kullanıyoruz ama rizenin her yerinde var mı bilmiyorum

  • @bishiler

    @bishiler

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gorkemgedik7745 "Pisi" Türkçe'nin genelinde de mevcut (kökeni belki bir yansıma sözcük olabilir). Bahsettiğim Erzincan ve belki Erzurum taraflarında kullanılan (ya da öyle hatırladığım) "pışık".

  • @gorkemgedik7745

    @gorkemgedik7745

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bishiler Evet biliyorum ama trde benim bildiğim kediye pisi denmiyor ama çağırıken kullanılıyor bizde direk kediye pisik veya pisi deniyor

  • @TheLightlessMoon
    @TheLightlessMoon Жыл бұрын

    It's very natural to see the asymmetrical intelligibility between Qırımtatar and Turkish. Because as they mentioned, Qırımtatar contains both Oguz (from Ottoman Turkish) and Qipchak (original Tatar) elements. So Qırımtatar people can understand Turkish relatively easier while Turkish people struggle to understand Qırımtatar if the Qipchak elements are more than Oguz ones.

  • @s.keikhosro_5555

    @s.keikhosro_5555

    Жыл бұрын

    These are not turk they're language is they are turkify turkishbas u see Crimea are like European but tatars in east is like chinese.

  • @christopherellis2663

    @christopherellis2663

    Жыл бұрын

    @@s.keikhosro_5555 Türkmen in Anatolia, for example. Qırımtili is also called Gagauz, and is spoken in Lithuania, Poland, Belarus, Romania and Bulgaria. Over the centuries, the Tatar have intermarried with their neighbours.

  • @s.keikhosro_5555

    @s.keikhosro_5555

    Жыл бұрын

    @Nisanur Özyürek why u are disturb

  • @maze2758

    @maze2758

    Жыл бұрын

    It think kumyk and karachay-balkar from north caucasus are also similiar to crimean tatar language

  • @s.keikhosro_5555

    @s.keikhosro_5555

    Жыл бұрын

    @@christopherellis2663 so these kind of tatar is not pure these are turkifed

  • @nejdumanli2556
    @nejdumanli2556 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Bahador, that’s the topic I’ve been waiting for.

  • @user-tq8xh5sr1k
    @user-tq8xh5sr1k Жыл бұрын

    Love Turkey and Turkish culture.❤ From Tajikistan. Ben turkce bir az biliyorum. I hope I wrote it correctly.

  • @sefikunsal

    @sefikunsal

    Жыл бұрын

    "biraz" biliyorum. Like this my friend ❤️ "Ben biraz türkçe konuşuyorum" is the most correct sentence. 😎

  • @user-tq8xh5sr1k

    @user-tq8xh5sr1k

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@sefikunsal Tesekkurler, kardesim! Turkcem o kadar iyi degil, biraz konusuyorum.

  • @semaata1691

    @semaata1691

    Жыл бұрын

    I love tajik music and culture very much 💐 greeting from a turkish girl from Germany

  • @ilyasakhundzada6604
    @ilyasakhundzada6604 Жыл бұрын

    It is really amazing how similiar Crimean Tatar spelling to Azerbaijani, even more close than Turkish

  • @maze2758

    @maze2758

    Жыл бұрын

    so you could also easily understand kumyk and karachay-balkar language from north caucasus?

  • @mrkurdi22

    @mrkurdi22

    Жыл бұрын

    When the Russians took over Arran and Shirvan which was renamed Azerbaijan later on , they brought lots of Tatars from Russia. The original language of Azerbaijan was similar to Talish and Tat language.

  • @ilyasakhundzada6604

    @ilyasakhundzada6604

    Жыл бұрын

    @@maze2758 I dont know yet)))

  • @ilyasakhundzada6604

    @ilyasakhundzada6604

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mrkurdi22 Not at all!

  • @mrkurdi22

    @mrkurdi22

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ilyasakhundzada6604 That’s is why Most original geographic names are Persian. Derbent,, Tabriz, Gence, Baku etc. are all Persian words.

  • @robertofranciscomonsalvesp8080
    @robertofranciscomonsalvesp8080 Жыл бұрын

    I can't say I liked this show... I absolutely enjoyed it. Thanks everyone.

  • @finduko
    @finduko9 ай бұрын

    this made me weep. Bahador, your videos are always great, but this one really touched me. Thank you for all of this, for making people from the same language family connect like this. You're doing a bigger service than you probably realize.

  • @luvley2698
    @luvley2698 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this video! Brilliant participants!

  • @bekzodismoilov281
    @bekzodismoilov281 Жыл бұрын

    I wish l could participate as an Uzbek l would translate first Crimean Tatar’s sentences without thinking 😂

  • @frs-vr3mg

    @frs-vr3mg

    Жыл бұрын

    Ohh you got it too

  • @gourukemu
    @gourukemu Жыл бұрын

    12:35 Açqıç is still present and fully understandable word in Turkish as "açkı" even if you never heard of it before in your life. It basicly has a grammatical meaning of "a stuff that open things" You can use it when you forget the word for key, can opener, pencil sharpener etc. and everyone will understand what are you trying to say to them.

  • @bishiler

    @bishiler

    Жыл бұрын

    The exact Turkish cognate would be "açgıç" (cf "dalgıç"). "Açacak" (cf "giyecek") or "açıcı" (cf "satıcı") would be more natural-sounding derivatives, though.

  • @tyttarentottero

    @tyttarentottero

    8 ай бұрын

    @@bishiler Turkish uses -gi suffix too. Silmek -> silgi sarmak -> sargı sevmek -> sevgi so açmak -> açkı makes complete sense too. That part of the phrase "açqıçnı kıdırta kıdırta" sounded so much like "someone left their house shaking their bare hips... " to me, that it was hard to think of another connotation unfortunately : )

  • @bishiler

    @bishiler

    8 ай бұрын

    @@tyttarentottero Yeap... kıvırta kıvırta. I remember reading an anecdote to this effect on some other online forum, likely Ekşi Sözlük. In that story, a Turkish expat in Kyrgyzstan found out he lost - or perhaps forgot inside - the keys for the company-provided house just at the door. So he reported the incident to whoever responsible in the company, and they sent over a burly Kyrgyz man who asked for, you know, açgıç. Receiving a surprised, or perhaps shocked stare in return, he repeated a few times, incessantly, in the hope of getting understood: açgıç... açgıç... açgıç... sweating down the Turk to every inch of his body for fear of what's going to happen next.

  • @kamalibrahim8022
    @kamalibrahim8022 Жыл бұрын

    This is very interesting especially as the participants share a lot of information on the Crimean Tartars and their dialects

  • @sefikunsal
    @sefikunsal Жыл бұрын

    This is just beautiful. Love you guys ❤️

  • @turkcukayi
    @turkcukayi Жыл бұрын

    Interesting information. Crimea is the homeland of the Kipchak Turkic tribes. The Çobanoğulları Beylik, which ruled my city Kastamonu during the Seljuk period, organized an expedition to the Crimea and defeated the combined Kipchak Russian and Byzantine army. After this war, the migration of Oghuzs to Crimea started. Therefore, Crimean Turkish is a product of the Oghuz and Kipchak combination. While the Oghuzs generally lived in the coastal areas, the Kipchaks lived in the interior. After the Crimean Khanate came under Ottoman rule, this culture and language sharing increased and an unshakable bond was formed between Tatars and Anatolian Oghuzes. The largest Crimean Tatar population in the world is located in Turkey, which is their homeland.

  • @yo2trader539

    @yo2trader539

    Жыл бұрын

    That's really fascinating. I had no idea the Seljuk Turks sent expeditions to Crimea. I always was interested in the fact that there were Tatars in Moldova, Romania, and even Poland. People often talk about the Mongol expansion and Golden Horde, but clearly the Black Sea region was Turkic/Tatar many centuries before that.

  • @zadrot8914

    @zadrot8914

    Жыл бұрын

    As a Qazaq I understand 95% of Crimean Tatar

  • @cjc2

    @cjc2

    Жыл бұрын

    This is very fascinating. My wife’s family has Crimean ancestry and they are from Turkey, near Eskisehir.

  • @turkcukayi

    @turkcukayi

    Жыл бұрын

    @@cjc2 Those on the Eskişehir side are the last to arrive from Crimea. There has been a Kipchak migration to Anatolia since the Seljuk and Byzantine periods. For example, during the time of the Byzantine Emperor Vazatses (1222-1254), over ten thousand Kipchaks were brought from Thrace and settled around the Menderes valley, Phrygia and Kastamonu.

  • @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@turkcukayikardeşim ben isviçrede yaşiyorum tarih arşiv araştirmacisıyım Türk tarihimize ait avrupadaki orijinal kaynakları latinceden fransızcadan bulup Türkceye çevirip anlatmak ATATÜRKE VE TÜRK DÜNYAMIZA BORCUMDUR ilginize teşekkür eder saygilarımı sunarım

  • @ibrahimbastug2896
    @ibrahimbastug2896 Жыл бұрын

    as a person describe himself as a crimean tatar who was born and raised in Turkey and never have spoken tatar language in whole his life, i am very thankfull for this video. it turns out that there was 3 dialects of tatar language that i can only understand one of them.

  • @bulentbulut4965
    @bulentbulut4965 Жыл бұрын

    When I heard Ismail Gaspıralı's name I got goosebumps..

  • @IWillSayMyPeace
    @IWillSayMyPeace Жыл бұрын

    Tatar guys were such a delight to know. Very positive. My mothers side of the family are Crimean tatars. From Bahçesaray. They escaped Stalins purges during the second world war and ended up in the US, etc.

  • @fatmanurozdemir7213
    @fatmanurozdemir7213 Жыл бұрын

    My grandmother used the word oyla. I was born in Oltu district of Erzurum province of Turkey (northeast of Turkey) My grandma always used to call us "Öyle her şeyi alıp oylama". She said it in the sense of not thinking so much.

  • @serkanc1250
    @serkanc1250 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you bahador, i learn a lot of thing from your videos You serve Turkish more than our ministries😀 keep going.

  • @EthemD
    @EthemD Жыл бұрын

    This was so much fun to watch! 🥰 Loved the vibes of the guests haha. Lenur and Aktham were so knowledgable, tüh tüh maşallah 🧿😁 and Eylül and Onur did such a great job finding out the meaning of the sentences. 💪 I have never met a Crimean Tatar, but would love to some day, and try talking with them in Turkish. Many Turkish people have Tatar roots, and so do many Russians. I think it's very admirable how well the language was preserved. Another fantastic video Bahador ağa! 👏 (btw I found out that your name is also bátor in Hungarian, for brave, and also used in the capital of Mongolia, Baatar in Mongolian for hero 😎)

  • @CVery45

    @CVery45

    7 ай бұрын

    show me those Russians who have Tatar roots?

  • @meggieqin8496
    @meggieqin8496 Жыл бұрын

    Crimean Tatars have such an interesting culture and a really sad history , hope to get more informed about them in future

  • @Barvystyk

    @Barvystyk

    Жыл бұрын

    World still tolerate USSR...

  • @destuurhasekihurremsultan4726
    @destuurhasekihurremsultan4726 Жыл бұрын

    There is a (slightly) different usage of "oy" in Turkish than simply "voting". The phrase "kamuoyu" means public opinion

  • @user-jm4ux1zc8h
    @user-jm4ux1zc8h Жыл бұрын

    Salam kardashlar. Salam Tatarstanannan.

  • @umay17

    @umay17

    Жыл бұрын

    Selam 👋

  • @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    Жыл бұрын

    Gardaşım ben isviçede yaşıyorum tarih arşiv araştırmacisıyım Türk tarihimize ait avrupadaki orijinal kaynakları latinceden fransızcadan bulup Türkçeye çevirip anlatmak ATATÜRKE VE TÜRK DÜNYAMIZA BORCUMDUR ilginize teşekkür eder saygilarımi sunarım

  • @mgoksoy
    @mgoksoy Жыл бұрын

    I enjoyed this one very much indeed. I happen to have friends who are originally Crimean Tatars, I had never heard their language spoken. Thank you all

  • @godofchaoskhorne5043
    @godofchaoskhorne5043 Жыл бұрын

    Direk in Turkish means pole or wooden pole. This I imagine is from Derek / Terek. So in Turkish "Direkten" translates to "from the pole" but in Tatar "Terekten" translates to "from the tree" ("ten" being added behind words as "from")

  • @simaygunes7309
    @simaygunes7309 Жыл бұрын

    OH MY GODDDDDD I LOVE TO SEE THISSSS LOVE MY TURKIC SIBLINGS FROM ALL AROUND THE WORLD ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @elvinadzhemilova5639
    @elvinadzhemilova5639 Жыл бұрын

    MashAllah , Bahador. More videos please!

  • @ahmeterdalulutas
    @ahmeterdalulutas Жыл бұрын

    Tatarlar bizi anlıyor ve dillerini ne güzel korumuşlar. Özellikle en sağdaki arkadaş gerçekten dilini cok güzel bir şekilde korumuş ve Türkiye Oğuz dialektiğini de öğrenmiş gibi.

  • @zeynal6000
    @zeynal6000 Жыл бұрын

    Azerbaijani also have Kypchak mixtures it's not pure Oghuz I dare to say. So that's why we understand Crieman Tatars better than Turkish speakers. I heard a Crimean Tatar speaking for the first time on TV, I didn't realize that this is a different language so I was surprised just why news on TV are translating by using a dialect instead of official Azerbaijani. After I realized that OMG this is not Azerbaijani 🤣. Also we understand Karluk branch (Uzbek, Uigur) better. Uzbek is very understandable especially Khorezm dialect. Mutual intelligibility between Azerbaijani and Uzbek is between 70-80% which is significantly higher than with Turkish. Nice video. Try to make Azerbaijani and Uigur, Bahadur. It should be very interesting

  • @DoraEmon-xf8br

    @DoraEmon-xf8br

    Жыл бұрын

    As a foreigner learning Azerbaijani, this is interesting to read! I‘m still from being able to understand even a basic conversation but it’s very nice to see it may help me understand other turkic languages I’m interested in better.

  • @cosmokaulitz22

    @cosmokaulitz22

    Жыл бұрын

    I also experienced the same thing in Turkey some years ago. I was watching a crimean tatar channel and I thought it was turlish. I could understand it somehow but it was a bit challenging-

  • @zeynal6000

    @zeynal6000

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DoraEmon-xf8br wow. Where are you from?

  • @S.Solmazturk
    @S.Solmazturk Жыл бұрын

    Great video. I knew that Crimean Tatar dialects were very close to Istanbul Turkish. After Gagavuz and Azerbaijan Turkish, their language are the closest one. Bahadır, I expect a video with Gagavuz now. The least known Oghuz language in the world.

  • @balporsugu7046

    @balporsugu7046

    Жыл бұрын

    Salar is the least known Oghuz language.

  • @S.Solmazturk

    @S.Solmazturk

    Жыл бұрын

    @@balporsugu7046 You are right. I should have said the second least known.

  • @anarchoalican

    @anarchoalican

    Жыл бұрын

    No, they actually belong to the Kyphchak branch of Turkic languages. There are three dialects and some smaller sub-dialects. Some dialects (i.e., Yalı Boyu) are closer to Anatolian Turkish because of the Ottoman influence. Çöl (Kır) dialect is less influenced by Oghuz features. Most Crimean Tatars in Turkey, Romania, and Bulgaria are speakers of the Çöl dialect. When I speak Çöl dialect to native Turkish speakers, there are often confused about what I am saying (including sentences such as "How are you? Are you ok?" or "It is raining.").

  • @S.Solmazturk

    @S.Solmazturk

    Жыл бұрын

    @@anarchoalican I am mostly talking about middle and southern dialects. I know that northern one is hard to understand for us.

  • @elffd
    @elffd Жыл бұрын

    Harika bi videoydu baya eglendim thank you guys

  • @KissLikeFire
    @KissLikeFire Жыл бұрын

    Loved the video. You should try Kazakh and Crimean Tatar ❤️

  • @yiyshcha8358
    @yiyshcha8358 Жыл бұрын

    I am one of those that Bahador described, my great grandfather had to leave Crimea during imperial Russia era, then his family had a generational journey to what is modern day Turkey. My mother's side is from Crimea but none of them speak Crimean Tatar, and my father is unrelated so I had to learn from scratch. Just like most Crimean diaspora in Turkey, I don't speak Russian so the sources are so limited. I appreciate the effort to create English language content about Crimean Tatar language. I know that it is not possible to have all of us return to the peninsula from Turkey and the rest of the world because all of us settled and married where we went and cannot leave even if the Russian invasion ends, but the least we can do is to speak and teach Crimean Tatar language so that genocide, Russian imperialism and Joseph Stalin doesn't win. Küçüm yetken qadar ögrenem, aytam. Az bilmek iç bilmemekten yahşı. 💙

  • @seyahatdelisilenurbey

    @seyahatdelisilenurbey

    Жыл бұрын

    Aferin, arqadaşım! Küçümiz qadar küreşecekmiz! Zafer bizimdir, İnşalla! Alla bütün işleriñde yardımcı olsun!

  • @CVery45

    @CVery45

    7 ай бұрын

    you can even die, but you will never get to Crimea with such speeches and thoughts, keep your dreams in your sleep nothing more

  • @tsunakbayev
    @tsunakbayev Жыл бұрын

    Qirimtatar is highly close to Kazakh language, i could understand more than half of the texts in Qirimtatar

  • @theanti-imperialist1656

    @theanti-imperialist1656

    Жыл бұрын

    Kazakhs are conducting a major counter-imperialism project

  • @tsunakbayev

    @tsunakbayev

    Жыл бұрын

    @@theanti-imperialist1656 can you explain the content and purpose of this project?

  • @theanti-imperialist1656

    @theanti-imperialist1656

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tsunakbayev yes sir such projects as getting rid of Russian influence

  • @tsunakbayev

    @tsunakbayev

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@theanti-imperialist1656 oh, i totally support this project,because we Kazakhs dont need Russian language and their influence in our country, instead we need to develop our own native language in all possible directions, there are still millions of people that can't speak Kazakh, most of them are of Kazakh ethnicity, this is what is left from USSR, but i hope that time will pass and Kazakh will be spoken by more than 90% of its citizens including non-Kazakh folks

  • @tsunakbayev

    @tsunakbayev

    Жыл бұрын

    @Nisanur Özyürek Actually, Turkish is simillar to Kazakh, the two are mutually understandable mostly

  • @sebahattingundas3406
    @sebahattingundas3406 Жыл бұрын

    Mashallah, my son, you have made a very good program, greetings and respects to all of them there, I am sending greetings from Bursa, Gem, Turkey, with lots of greetings.

  • @sarmadbaloch432
    @sarmadbaloch432 Жыл бұрын

    Well, I don't understand both languages but I watched the video till last second because it was really interesting , I never thought there would be turkmen in Crimea. After reading your pinned post I felt really bad for them that they had to suffer from soviet brutality .. I hope they will preserve their mother tongue for 10 more centuries .

  • @figencebe9287
    @figencebe9287 Жыл бұрын

    this was great … as a Turkish citizen speaking several languages and interested in languages, I was very happy to compare and very excited to understand Crimean Tatar language spoken by these lovely people … the communication, the dialogue between Turkic people of different countries is magic and heartwarming …

  • @marcusaurelius3200
    @marcusaurelius3200 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much from Turkey Bahador. Also loved Lunar and Akhtem, very positive and sincere personalities.

  • @seyahatdelisilenurbey

    @seyahatdelisilenurbey

    Жыл бұрын

    I’m Lenur, not Lunar 🤣

  • @marcusaurelius3200

    @marcusaurelius3200

    Жыл бұрын

    @@seyahatdelisilenurbey Sorry hahaha

  • @seyahatdelisilenurbey

    @seyahatdelisilenurbey

    Жыл бұрын

    @@marcusaurelius3200 it’s ok. Take care 😉

  • @melasguto
    @melasguto Жыл бұрын

    As a Volga Tatar I like this one . We share some similarities in language with the Crimea Tatars. I can get more from the sentence if it written rather then orally. Thank you for another great video.

  • @serkanonder6993
    @serkanonder6993 Жыл бұрын

    Kırımlı kardeşlerimize selamlar. Unutmadık, kalbimizdesiniz.

  • @gpodkolzin
    @gpodkolzin Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for Crimean Tatar!

  • @sevketyuyucu8594
    @sevketyuyucu8594 Жыл бұрын

    Gaspıralı’s dream was that one day all Turks can unite in one (federal) country and common cultural identity (=Turan or Turanism) and acc. Gaspıralı the language is the key for this and he tried to reunite the different Turkish dialects that all Turkish people can understand each other easily. By the way the word “Turkic” is a creation of imperialist circles to divide the Turkish Nation in different pieces (Tatars, Uzbeks, Turkmens, Kırgız, Azeri etc. etc..) that they never come together again. In reality they are all Turks like branches of one tree with a common root. Not to forget: according to famous strategist Brezinsky, Central Asia is the key for world hegemony and who was/is living there: Turks, so they have to be divided in small pieces to swallow them easily one by one. All Turks have to keep this in mind.

  • @BaronAnon

    @BaronAnon

    Жыл бұрын

    You could say the same of Slavic/Germanic/Romance languages

  • @dovregubben5632

    @dovregubben5632

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BaronAnon yeah but people doesnt use turkic just our languages if just use for language it is ok but they call people turkic too. for exp slavic is language but slav is folk like this turkic is language but turk is name of folk for exp in Gokturk's Tablets they call themselves Turk Kaganate but western source begins call them turkic kaganate. if they want determinant of which kaganete they mention beacuse of they dont want mix it up wiht modern turks they can use Gokturks like us.

  • @samspear8772

    @samspear8772

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BaronAnon and many others

  • @yo2trader539

    @yo2trader539

    Жыл бұрын

    It's just like speaking English doesn't make one English. The truth is there is very little Turkic aspects about the people in modern day Turkey. They were not conquered/assimilated by original Turks, but rather by Turkmens (who were already a mixture of Turks and Iranians). The original Turks are genetically near identical to Manchus and Mongols, since they've been living in proximity for thousands of years, if not more. They often inter-married to form tribal alliance and frequently fought over supremacy, which all resulted in shared grammar, common vocabulary and phonetics, culture, music, religion, clothing, cuisine, lifestyle, etc. Obviously, the people near the historic Turkic homeland of Altai mountains and Western Mongolia retain much more of the original Turkic culture. Turkish culture is a fusion of pre-existing indigenous and migrating Turkmen. It's unique and beautiful but not very Turkic.

  • @z.6532

    @z.6532

    Жыл бұрын

    @@yo2trader539 🤡🤡🤡

  • @gloriamccarthy480
    @gloriamccarthy480 Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting and informative.

  • @bamsbeyrek4939
    @bamsbeyrek4939 Жыл бұрын

    Çok eğlendim bu videoda sağ olunuz 👍

  • @16donamirof
    @16donamirof Жыл бұрын

    very good dear Bahador

  • @birgulsevinc4977
    @birgulsevinc4977 Жыл бұрын

    It interested my attention. This topic and talkers are so good. Congratulations.. especially Onur Berat

  • @xllogan4365
    @xllogan4365 Жыл бұрын

    thank you for these videos bro

  • @sevketcoskun2922
    @sevketcoskun2922 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent. Thank you Bahadır dear 🙏🇹🇷

  • @ferdafirat2359
    @ferdafirat2359 Жыл бұрын

    Dear Onur; I congratulate you because of your sincerity

  • @gokcancakmak3739
    @gokcancakmak3739 Жыл бұрын

    omg lenur is just way too good hahahah! as a native turkish speaker myself i just amazed over and over again watching lenur translates EVERY turkish sentences in a second! great work! would love to participate in those videos one day!! specially against lenur ahahhaha

  • @abibullaseit-dzhelil6057
    @abibullaseit-dzhelil6057 Жыл бұрын

    Aferin epiñizge! Hususan qırımtatarca er şey doğru yazılğanını ve añlatılğanını begendim. Pek hoş keldi yapqanıñız. Ardı gür olsun

  • @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    Жыл бұрын

    Abibulla Gardaşim ben isviçrede yaşıyorum tarih arşiv araştırmacisiyım Türk tarihimize ait avrupadaki ulusal kutüphanelerdeki orijinal kaynakları latinceden fransızcadan bulup Türkceye cevirip anlatmak ATATÜRKE VE TÜRK DÜNYAMIZA BORCUMDUR ilginize teşekkur eder saygilarımi sunarım

  • @fletchermunson
    @fletchermunson Жыл бұрын

    The first part in the Kazan Tatar language: 1. Aç mäçene/pesine abaylagan küsä/komak kurkuınnan aptıradı häm/vä tiz-tiz itep tişegenä kerep kitte. 2. Yäşel yafraklı agaçlarnıñ arkasında ozın mögezle ber bolan bardı/buldı. 3. Alma agaçtan yırak töşmäs. 4. İşekneñ aldında ozın çäçle ber kız kötä. The second part: 1. Hucabikä öyennän çıkkanda açkıçnı kıdıra-kıdıra böten äyberne aktarıp itte, ämma ber äyberne dä tabıb bula almadı. Açkıçnı kay cirgä kuyganını uylap busagasına utırdı. 2. Akça çınlap baylık tügelder. Ul, ihtiyacların genä beterüenä aradaş buluı öçen kıymmätleder. Ber çülneñ urtasında, susızlıktan yangan ber keşe öçen berniçä tamçı suık su ber torba altınnan bik tagın/kübräk kıymmätleder. 3. Äy, ulım, satma berkayçan, ilneñ tufraknı, Anañ kebek sine tuklandıra bäräkätle koçagı. Peçän, arpa, aş telämäs, birer siña bu äyberlärne, Mesken oytlı/hurlıklı bulma berkayçan, satıp ana tufraknı. 4. Topkapı (tupkapka) Sarayı Muzeyısı dönyanıñ iñ böyek vä/häm iñ güzäl muzeylarınnıñ berseder. Bu saraynı Fatih Sultan Mehmet Han 1478 yılında yasadı, tözeleş un öç yıl alıp bardı - Osmanlı Sultanları, däülätne dürt yöz yıl bu saraydan idarä ittelär. 1856 yılınnan soñra Dolmanbahçe Sarayında utıra başladılar. Topkapı Sarayı 1924 yılında muzey buldı. Häzer monda äzräk me kübräk me unnan artık bülem bar. Bu muzeynıñ ozınlıgı 370 metr, kiñeşlege dä 220 metr. Här yıl yakınça 1-1,5 million turist monda kilälär (vizit itälär).

  • @thraciensis3589

    @thraciensis3589

    Жыл бұрын

    You translated very beautifully to Kazan Tatar. Thank you for that

  • @SaposaBear
    @SaposaBear Жыл бұрын

    Hey man. Can you do Turkish and Mongolian, Kazakh and Mongolian and so on? Quite a good amount of similarities there.

  • @ademtaklit959
    @ademtaklit959 Жыл бұрын

    I unexpectedly enjoyed watching this video

  • @arkeologokur
    @arkeologokur Жыл бұрын

    it's always give enjoy me seeing turkish languages so close.

  • @dmytrodelen
    @dmytrodelen Жыл бұрын

    As an Ukrainian, I’m so ashamed that our government didn’t pay much attention to Qırımlar culture and problems before 2014. I hope with the de-occupation of Crimea we’ll see the true national autonomy of Crimea that serves the indigenous people and not their russian oppressors

  • @DanielTaddone

    @DanielTaddone

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh, my friend. There will never be a de-occupation in our lifetimes. You know that.

  • @suleymanvaliyev5762

    @suleymanvaliyev5762

    Жыл бұрын

    Ukrayna devleti 1989 da Sürgünden dönek Kırım Tatarları öz evlerine yerleştirmekte tereddüt etti.Halbu ki Her kesin harada hansı şeherde köyde yaşadıkları arşivlerde kayıtlı.kaşke Kırım Tatar halkının acılarını önceden anlasaydılar.

  • @dmytrodelen

    @dmytrodelen

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DanielTaddone before February 24th, I’d agree. But now. It’s VERY difficult, but it’s not unlikely. Also, instead of military action, we might use the turmoil in Russia that is definitely going to happen after their retreat from the rest of Ukraine to free Crimea more or less peacefully

  • @pum_PIX

    @pum_PIX

    Жыл бұрын

    I realised that as well after watching Ayder Muzhdabaiev channel and we have a lot of work to do(education). Qirim serbest olacaq!

  • @abejacobs6345

    @abejacobs6345

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DanielTaddone you are terribly wrong, you putinist

  • @kronosgunlukleri2859
    @kronosgunlukleri2859 Жыл бұрын

    I always felt sorry for Crimean Tatars, I really feel them like some harshly seperated and brutalized part of our nation. I really hope Ukraine won the war soon and our Tatar folk in there could find some kind of independent living space with their own beautiful language and culture.

  • @anonymous3396

    @anonymous3396

    Жыл бұрын

    Crimean Tatar is officially used on all governmental levels in Crimea. Although many Tatars speak more Russian. No force on the earth will take away Crimea from Russia.

  • @anonymous3396

    @anonymous3396

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sirena.9 Half of Turkey lives in fear of the Kurds, their time will come. Wait and see

  • @II-ug8ji

    @II-ug8ji

    Жыл бұрын

    @@anonymous3396 Do we live in fear of Kurds? The world lives in fear of Turks. Russia is afraid of the Turkish minority, you are aware that the prolongation of the war and its deadlock may result in the disintegration of Russia or the unification of the Turkish states by declaring their independence from Russia, right?China is afraid that the Turks will come back, so the USA and the West are afraid that the Turks will regain their former power, you are afraid that the Turks will regain their former power.

  • @II-ug8ji

    @II-ug8ji

    Жыл бұрын

    @@anonymous3396 That's why Russia is playing a double against Turkey On the one hand Turkey is doing business with Turkey's enemies on the other hand, it is logical that it does it at the state level, but everyone knows how Russia is the defender of orthodox Christianity, while Turkey and the Turks are the defenders of the religion of Islam.

  • @II-ug8ji

    @II-ug8ji

    Жыл бұрын

    @@anonymous3396 The world is not 200 years old, since the USSR was destroyed, anything can happen The Turkic nation ruled the world for 1000 years, the fact that we are in this state now does not mean that we are always in this state :D

  • @alittlestoryy
    @alittlestoryy Жыл бұрын

    Hey bahador! Thank you for this amazing job❤ could you please make another video about turkish-gagauz languages? thank you..

  • @batmanxmen5556
    @batmanxmen555610 ай бұрын

    Je suis un tatar de Crimée, et notre Londres, fait partie de la langue turque. C’est normal qui est similaire, c’est la même langue.

  • @bbahadir1
    @bbahadir1 Жыл бұрын

    Tebrikler çocuklar, Kırım Tatarı kardeşlerimize buradan çok selamlar… sizlerin aranızda anlaşmak için İngilizce değil Türkçe konuştuğunuz günleri görmek hepimize nasip olsun.

  • @asanplus

    @asanplus

    Жыл бұрын

    Türk dostlarim, sizge Kirimdan çok çok selamlar

  • @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@asanpluskardeşim ben isviçrede yaşıyorum tarih arşiv araştirmacisıyım Türk tarihimize ait avrupadaki orijinal kaynakları latinceden fransızcadan bulup Türkçeye çevirip anlatmak ATATÜRKE VE TÜRK DÜNYAMIZA BORCUMDUR ilginize teşekkür eder saygilarımı sunarım

  • @Oscar-us6sv
    @Oscar-us6sv Жыл бұрын

    There some crimean tatars live in Turkey. They have their own villages and speak their Tatar language. Since they are originally Kipchaks the turkish dialect differs but it is normal that both influanced eachother since Ottoman heritage and Crimean Tatar kahgans had strong diplomatic connection. Even if something ever happened to ottoman family Crimean Khagan and his family had right to claim the throne. It would be interesting to see if Tatars were ruling empire instead of Ottoman family.

  • @drzekisozer
    @drzekisozer Жыл бұрын

    Özbekistan’da yaşlı bir Kırım Tatarıyla tanışmıştım. Adam neredeyse İstanbul Türkçesiyle konuşuyordu. Ben Türkiye Türkçesi bildiğini sanmıştım. Ama adam hiç Türkiye’ye gelmemişti.

  • @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    Жыл бұрын

    Zeki Bey ben isviçrede yaşiyorum tarih arşiv araştirmacisıyım Türk tarihimize ait avrupadaki orijinal kaynaklari latinceden fransizcadan bulup Türkceye çevirip anlatmak ATATURKE VE TÜRK DÜNYAMIZA BORCUMDUR ilginize teşekkür eder saygılarımı sunarım

  • @otterkarman8740
    @otterkarman87408 ай бұрын

    I was very please of the quite close similarities between Turkish and Crimean Tatar. Yes I found this post easier to understand Crimean Tatar. I can assume the peoples had historical close connections. Liked.

  • @amjan
    @amjan Жыл бұрын

    My favourite language families: 1. Slavic 2. Turkic 3. Romance

  • @Dorukcankc

    @Dorukcankc

    Жыл бұрын

    As a Turkish Altaic (Japanese= Germanic and Nordic Slavic

  • @teapacks
    @teapacks Жыл бұрын

    Selam from Brazil :)

  • @s.keikhosro_5555

    @s.keikhosro_5555

    Жыл бұрын

    These are not turk they're language is they are turkify turkishbas u see Crimea are like European but tatars in east is like chinese.

  • @roksan-aksell6414

    @roksan-aksell6414

    Жыл бұрын

    KRIM TATAR IST TÜRK!!! ICH BIN BALKAN TÜRK!!! WAS LABERST DU FÜR KACKE?

  • @bishiler

    @bishiler

    Жыл бұрын

    @@s.keikhosro_5555 lolwut

  • @umay17
    @umay17 Жыл бұрын

    Baya anlaşılıyor bu kadar anlıyacağımı düşünmüyordum

  • @handecetin4676
    @handecetin467610 ай бұрын

    Proud granddaughter of a Crimean Tatar raised in Turkey here. Moved by this video 🥲. Thank you guys so much! Tatar balaları aruw bolgan (hope i spelled it correctly).

  • @sebahattingundas3406
    @sebahattingundas3406 Жыл бұрын

    Maşallah oğlum çok güzel konuşmuşsun oradaki onlara selam var Gemlikten Bursa’dan🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷❤️❤️❤️❤️🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷

  • @lugovsa
    @lugovsa Жыл бұрын

    I was greatly surprised by the Qirimli guys! They speak the real language, which is a real wonder after more than 50 years in the Middle Asia. When I was a university student, one friend of mine was also a Qirimli girl who had grown up in Uzbekistan, so she spoke much more Uzbek than Qirimci. And here I heard a very rich and authentic language from quite young guys. Great! Respect and congrats to them and to their families!

  • @seyahatdelisilenurbey

    @seyahatdelisilenurbey

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your support 😌

  • @CrimeanTatarBoy

    @CrimeanTatarBoy

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Alex! Interesting that you note our families, as they are the ones whom passed down this language to us. Wishing you the very best!

  • @frs-vr3mg

    @frs-vr3mg

    Жыл бұрын

    Surprisingly it’s not so different it’s sounds like a turko-Kazakh to me but the words are understandable

  • @lugovsa

    @lugovsa

    Жыл бұрын

    @@frs-vr3mg absolutely

  • @zekotuzuc8494
    @zekotuzuc8494 Жыл бұрын

    I'm Turk and my grandmother from my father side moved from Kirim to Eskisehir. the most lived city of Kirim Turks...

  • @Dai_Abdurrahman
    @Dai_Abdurrahman Жыл бұрын

    Thx you very much

  • @omeraliorun3429
    @omeraliorun3429 Жыл бұрын

    Terek antalyada köylerde raf ,ve çıkıntı anlamında kullanılır yorukler bilir, dolabın teregi ...dolabın açık çıkıntılı kısmı rafı, hemen anladım

  • @peymanrazzaghi
    @peymanrazzaghi Жыл бұрын

    In Azerbaijani Turkic: 1. Ac pişiyi ... siçovul qorxusundan titrədi və ... deşiyinə girib getdi. 2. Yaşıl yarpaqlı ağacların irəlisində uzun boynuzlu bir maral (geyik) vardır. • We seldom use "geyik". 3. Alma terekdən uzaq düşməz. * We mostly use "ağac" for tree but we have "terek" in accents too. 4. Qapının önündə bir uzun saçlı qız gözləyir. • We seldom use "bəkləmək". 5. Ev yiyəsi evindən çıxanda açarını bütün şeyini axtar-döndər etdi, ama ... da tapammadı. Açarını haraya qoymasını düşünub "qapının ağızında" oturdu. • Qonaqbay is understandable in our language too, but we don't use it. • We use qıdıra qıdıra in the meaning of "quickly". 6. Para (pul) gerçək zənginlik deyildir. O yalnız (sadəcə) ehtiyacların aradan qaldırılması vasitəsi (arac) olduğu üçün dəyərlidir. Bir çölün ortasında, susuzluqdan yanan bir insan üçün bir neçə damla (damcı) su bir torba altından çox daha dəyərlidir. 7. Aman, oğlum, satma əsla (saqın), əlindəki torpağı, anan kimi səni bəslər bərəkətli qucağı. ot-ələf, arpa, yemək (aş) istəməz, verir sənə bunları, səfil rəzil olma əsla, satıb ana torpağı. 8. Topqapı Sarayı muzeyi dünyanın ən böyük və ən gözəl muzeylərindən biridir. Bu sarayı Fateh Sultan Mehmed Xan 1478 ilində yapdırdı. Tikinti (inşaat) on üç il sürdü. Osmanlı Sultanları, dövləti dört yüz il bu saraydan yönəltdilər 1856 ilindən sonra da Dolmabağça Sarayında oturmağa başladılar. Topqapı Sarayı 1924 ilində muzey oldu. İndi burada kiçikli böyüklü ondan artıq bölüm var. Bu muzeyin uzunluğu 370 metir genişlikdə 220 metirdir. Hər il aşağı yuxarı 1.5 milion turist buranı ziyarət edər.

  • @thraciensis3589

    @thraciensis3589

    Жыл бұрын

    Beautifully detailed response. Are you from Southern Azerbaijan? Your dialect has much more commonality with Crimean Tatar indeed than Istanbul Turkish. Ofcourse there are many unofficial diealects in Turkey, similar to yours.

  • @babekelturk4648

    @babekelturk4648

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks Peyman, probably he is from Cenubi Azerbaijan, but we say exactly as he written in northern Azerbaijan especially in western (Ganja - Qazax region).

  • @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    Жыл бұрын

    Peyman Gardaşım ben isviçrede yaşiyorum tarih arşiv araştırmacısıyım Türk tarihimize ait avrupadaki orijjinal kaynakları latinceden fransızcadan bulup Türkçeye çevirip anlatmak ATATÜRKE VE TÜRK DÜNYAMIZA BORCUMDUR ilginize teşekkur eder saygılarımı sunarım

  • @suluklu
    @suluklu Жыл бұрын

    not going to lie Tatars nailed it .. i should of been on the Turkish side .. if you think about old or Anatolian Turkish its so simpler to decode Tatar sentences other than just thinking through with modern Turkish

  • @Turk_Union
    @Turk_Union Жыл бұрын

    Bahador bey, ı would like to advise you to tell your guests to say the sentences in their own dialect once they get the meaning. Great job man, ı wish you great success

  • @fong.justinm
    @fong.justinm Жыл бұрын

    gosh, i just realized how tough this channel is: people who speak their native tongue in addition to English, who then hear a similar word or phrase in another language, mentally translate it into their native tongue in their heads, then translate it into english for us to enjoy. nothing but respect. 好厉害!太好了!

  • @mekut3116
    @mekut3116 Жыл бұрын

    Kırım osmanlı beraber yaşadı. Onlar bize viyana kuşatmasinda hata yaptilar. Biz de onlara prut savaşında hata yaptık. İkimiz de kaybettik

  • @mekut3116

    @mekut3116

    Жыл бұрын

    Başarılar dilerim eksik olmayın teşekkürler

  • @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    @cengizaltinveturkturanlilartar

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mekut3116 Sağlıcakla Kalın Esen Kalın

  • @Zeynep-mj4rf
    @Zeynep-mj4rf Жыл бұрын

    Akhtem'in yüzü çok tanıdık geliyor, daha önce görmüş gibiyim. Sanırım Eskişehir'de çok fazla Kırım Tatarı olduğu için benzerini gördüm 😄

  • @acanthoscurriageniculata7141

    @acanthoscurriageniculata7141

    Жыл бұрын

    Cidden Türkiye'de bu simada insan çok var

  • @supermario4024
    @supermario4024 Жыл бұрын

    Great video ..I can speak Turkish...I hope to see video of similarities between larestani and Kurdish.. regards from Bahrain

  • @kagan4697
    @kagan4697 Жыл бұрын

    Hi, im Turk. Thank you for video

  • @briantravelman
    @briantravelman Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, I sent my Turkish friend a Crimean folk song with the written lyrics and she was able to understand a good portion of it.