Why did Turkey adopt the Latin alphabet instead of the Arabic alphabet?

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  • Опубликовано: 22 дек 2024

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  • @康介-h5f
    @康介-h5f Месяц назад +448

    I respect Atatürk from Japan.

    • @hxlydimension
      @hxlydimension 24 дня назад +30

      Japan is the most beautiful country in this world.
      Respect Japan from Turkey^^

    • @thief5
      @thief5 20 дней назад +12

      @@康介-h5f Thank u bro love Japan from Turkey

    • @Ahmad_55773
      @Ahmad_55773 19 дней назад +7

      Im misri and respect Mostafa Kamal also

    • @thief5
      @thief5 19 дней назад +5

      @@Ahmad_55773 thank u bro love Egypt

    • @turktoyu1711
      @turktoyu1711 19 дней назад +3

      I respect Japanese culture and people the most. Your moral values and how you hold onto them are amazing.

  • @JFFaksiBey
    @JFFaksiBey Месяц назад +444

    You are wrong because the origin of the Turkish language did NOT began with an Arabic script. Turkish began in the 8th century with the Ruinic Script in the Orkhon Valley in today’s Mongolia.
    Ruinic script is written vertically NOT horizontally, and read from bottom to top and right to left.
    Also, you did not mention that other
    Agglutinative languages are Hungarian and Finnish.

    • @lonelywolf1480
      @lonelywolf1480 Месяц назад +50

      And you are right only partly.
      Orkhon scripts were the oldest known texts, that does not mean that Turkish language itself began with Orkhon scripts, which is of course way older.

    • @Badger_IV.
      @Badger_IV. Месяц назад +10

      Id say the runic alphabet was used even before those stuff were discovered
      We Just dont know where to look

    • @SelmaErdal
      @SelmaErdal 19 дней назад

      Yüreğine sağlık olsun kardeşim; önyargılı cahiller sürüsüne ki onlar yalnızca ulusal alanda değil uluslararası alanda da milyonlarca sayıdalar, işte onlara gerçek Türk kimliğini, dilini, yazısını, yazıtını anlatmak gerek. Türkler'in Arap olmadığını onlara öğretmek gerek.

    • @Lotusum2064
      @Lotusum2064 17 дней назад +1

      👍

    • @Lotusum2064
      @Lotusum2064 17 дней назад

      ​@we have oldest letters on the orhon obelisks!!! lonelywolf1480

  • @bedrie9552
    @bedrie9552 Месяц назад +487

    0:19 is enough make the case. Three very basic and different Turkish words (rose/come/bald) become indistinguishable when transcribed with the Arabic alphabet. You have to guess the meaning from the context. Arabic alphabet is completely incompatible with the Turkish language.

    • @SamAlQattan-p2h
      @SamAlQattan-p2h Месяц назад +14

      Only if you can't spell.

    • @Yarluqaduq
      @Yarluqaduq Месяц назад +132

      @@SamAlQattan-p2h I dont want to learn your alphabet to spell my languages words lol

    • @jamiehope4580
      @jamiehope4580 Месяц назад +15

      And yet the selcuk and ottomans used it fine for over a 1000 years abit more to it then calling it difficult when people can't speak properly to understand them these days

    • @Yarluqaduq
      @Yarluqaduq Месяц назад +88

      @@jamiehope4580 At seljuk era, turks were mostly nomadic and they didnt know to write or read. Only ruling class, statesmen and aristocrats knew how to use it. At ottoman era, nomadic or settled, rural Turk population under ottoman domain didnt know how to write or read. Only city people, ruling elites and religious class "used it fine".

    • @İzmir_city_state_republic
      @İzmir_city_state_republic Месяц назад +11

      If some of you wonders meaning of words:
      Rose: gül [ɟyl]
      Come: gel /ɟɛl/, [ɟæl]
      Bald :kel /'cæl/
      Fixed their pronounce
      I think I was all wrong according to comments. Saying after a month

  • @Mehmetcan93
    @Mehmetcan93 Месяц назад +408

    “If one day my words contradict science, choose science.” M. KEMAL ATATÜRK

  • @victoryever
    @victoryever Месяц назад +176

    Atatürk’e teşekkür etmemiz gereken şeylerden biri de budur. Güzel Türkçemizin kurallarını bu alfabe ile en iyi şekilde öğrenip, öğretelim genç nesillere.

    • @Badger_IV.
      @Badger_IV. Месяц назад

      Indeed, Ataturk saved yall from being devoured by arabs

    • @lintahlou1555
      @lintahlou1555 Месяц назад

      @@Badger_IV. How is this possible ? After the umayyad caliphate collapse arabs didnt show up till 1910s*

    • @AitchD
      @AitchD Месяц назад +4

      You are not a turk.. Real Turks look like Chinese people

    • @Tighnariiloverr
      @Tighnariiloverr Месяц назад +24

      @@AitchD real turks looks like central asian not chinese

    • @AitchD
      @AitchD Месяц назад +1

      @Tighnariiloverr lo ke uygurs, who are chinese

  • @arielsergioramos
    @arielsergioramos Месяц назад +826

    This innovation has enabled Turkish to evolve in a better direction. The pronunciation of Arabic letters is quite difficult for Turkish.

    • @In_Our_Timeline
      @In_Our_Timeline Месяц назад +32

      yeah but i still think it was a bad decision i like ataturk ok but he still was a flawed man he made many mistakes, this was one of them
      the Arabic alphabet was part of cultural heritage

    • @arpe7045
      @arpe7045 Месяц назад +98

      Nope. Islam is inseperetable element of Turkish society. Not the alphabet ​@@In_Our_Timeline

    • @emreyigit3404
      @emreyigit3404 Месяц назад +70

      @@arpe7045 Not even that.

    • @Semilamist
      @Semilamist Месяц назад

      Ignore these two çomars as we call them, turkey is secular and we shall be freed from arabic taint

    • @sekiptopcu7787
      @sekiptopcu7787 Месяц назад +183

      @@In_Our_Timeline I am Turkish and was forced to learn the Ottoman script as a child in a religious course, which I hated. There is no correspondance between the Turkish sounds and those Arabic letters. The Latin alphabet that was adopted to Turkish corresponds to Turkish sounds 1-to-1, which makes it so easier for any Turkish person to learn. What Atatürk did was not a mistake but a monumental move in a pure linguistical sense.

  • @AD-yq8rl
    @AD-yq8rl Месяц назад +706

    Short answer: Phonetically, the Arabic script was not suitable for Turkish (since it is an agglutinative language (such as Hungarian or Finnish) and has lots of vowels). Therefore it was hard to learn it, which caused centuries-long illiteracy among the Turks. Atatürk, the first president of the Republic of Türkiye, wanted to increase the literacy level in order to modernize and empower his country. As a result, Latin script which is compatible with Turkish and easy to learn, was adopted in 1928.

    • @emreyigit3404
      @emreyigit3404 Месяц назад +43

      Indeed. Shoehorning a language that is known for its vowel harmony into an abjad is a recipe for confusion.
      In addition, all you have to do to understand the confusion in the rest of the letters is consider where the name "Ottoman" came from (hint: from Europeans who knew Arabic but not Turkish) and the utter confusion regarding the pronunciation of Ottoman Turkish inscriptions seen in many parts of things like Wikipedia.

    • @moezmedia98
      @moezmedia98 Месяц назад +25

      Arabic alphabet works well with semetic languages but might be not suitable for other languages which I understand, it's best to do what's most effective even if it comes at the detriment of sentimentality

    • @laurentdevaux5617
      @laurentdevaux5617 Месяц назад +16

      And not only. Atatürk also decided to get rid of a lot of words of arabic or persian origin, replacing them by words from other origin, beginning with french

    • @samsoom96
      @samsoom96 Месяц назад

      Non-sense if this is true how can we explain that Arabs today are literate and have no problem learning the alphabet? The motivation behind the alphabet is clearly only racist

    • @ulughank
      @ulughank Месяц назад +3

      This is actually half correct. The main reason was the Baku Turkology Congress which issued the Common Turkic Alphabet, before this, the panturanist majoritt of the newly founded Turkish government was in favor of keeping the historic Arabic script

  • @ugur4511
    @ugur4511 Месяц назад +150

    When I look at the editions of many important books on sites like Goodreads, I almost always see the Turkish editions, but not the Arabic or Persian editions. More books are published in Turkiye than in 23 Arab countries plus Iran plus Pakistan. Even some important books do not have an English edition, which is a global language, but they have a Turkish edition. For example, Umberto Eco's approximately 1500-page ancient history books have only a Turkish edition, apart from Italian. The Turks have made great progress in general culture and literature, as they have in military technology. They are developing in every field.

    • @orar6435
      @orar6435 Месяц назад +10

      If we are talking yearly production, Iran publish more books than Türkiye in recent years. Recently they passed so probably in total Türkiye published more, but they are narrowing the gap. And yes, every year, Turkey publish more books than all Arab countries plus Pakistan combined.

    • @mehmetcagrdogan2753
      @mehmetcagrdogan2753 Месяц назад +9

      Might this be because Turkey is way more industrialized than those countries?

    • @AitchD
      @AitchD Месяц назад

      Who the fucking cares about reading sh*t in Turkish?? A very local language,,Arabic is international buddy

    • @pouyajabbari3912
      @pouyajabbari3912 Месяц назад

      ​@@mehmetcagrdogan2753More industrialised than which country? Like name one literally.

    • @mehmetcagrdogan2753
      @mehmetcagrdogan2753 Месяц назад +4

      @@pouyajabbari3912 From Pakistan to the Egypt and everything in between Turkey is the most industrialized country in MENA region. Industrialization isn't only production capacity or building big scary factories its more about a social order if anything. It's natural for this to happen also because Turkey received independence rather early compared to the middle eastern countries. Maybe Iran is up there with Turkey however im not so sure because its a complex and multifactorial problem.

  • @bArda26
    @bArda26 Месяц назад +315

    probably one of the best reforms Ataturk put in place. The literacy rates went up quickly, people could actually read and write in a compatible alphabet.

    • @Nusret15220
      @Nusret15220 Месяц назад +6

      lies

    • @AA-jp9cj
      @AA-jp9cj Месяц назад +52

      @@Nusret15220 No its factually correct. Do you mind sharing the literacy rate under Ottoman Empire? Didn't think so...

    • @bArda26
      @bArda26 Месяц назад +48

      @@Nusret15220 the literacy rate before the adoption of latin alphabet was about 8%. In less than fifteen years, it went up to 20%. What about published books? More books were published in 15 years than in the last two centuries of ottoman empire!

    • @AA-jp9cj
      @AA-jp9cj Месяц назад

      @@bArda26 mal olum ne anlatıyoruz ki...

    • @notter344
      @notter344 Месяц назад +1

      forgetting your past and history just to get closer to the ones who made you fall?

  • @Sekuler_Adam
    @Sekuler_Adam Месяц назад +39

    The fact that the Turkish states at that time used the Latin alphabet, that it was an easy alphabet integrated into the modern world and that it was compatible with Turkish was the biggest factor in our transition to this alphabet. One of the best revolutions is our transition to the Latin alphabet.

    • @erosgritti5171
      @erosgritti5171 Месяц назад +6

      That region was Roman for more than 1500 years, so it was normal to maintain the Roman alphabet.

    • @ekesandras1481
      @ekesandras1481 Месяц назад +2

      one thing they forgot to mention was typwriters. Try to write Arabic on a typewriter or even try to get such a typewriter. Or send telegrams, manage a railroad network, print books (you could easily buy a second hand printing press from Europe, where they were abundant; try to get such a thing with Arabic letters).

    • @kasadam85
      @kasadam85 7 дней назад

      ​@@ekesandras1481Exactly lol

  • @borakaraca9788
    @borakaraca9788 Месяц назад +86

    5:04 "bizi cehaletten kurtaran ulu gazi var ol" "Long live the great ghazi who saved us from illiteracy"

    • @İzmir_city_state_republic
      @İzmir_city_state_republic Месяц назад +3

      Fun fact: Ghazi means veteran

    • @İzmir_city_state_republic
      @İzmir_city_state_republic Месяц назад

      Another fun fact: veterin means vet

    • @Zeyneep_pp
      @Zeyneep_pp Месяц назад +4

      ​​@@İzmir_city_state_republicsırf bu yorumun doğruluğunu araştırmak için dolabımın üstündeki Türkçe sözlüğümü alıp gazi kelimesinin anlamına baktım ama veteriner diye bir anlamı yok "savaşta büyük emekleri geçmiş askerlere veriler bir ünvan" işte anlamı bu 3 anlamı var ama hepsi neredeyse ayını sonuç olarak yanlış bilgi

    • @İzmir_city_state_republic
      @İzmir_city_state_republic Месяц назад +3

      @@Zeyneep_pp veteran ingilizcede gazi için kullanılan bir kelime.

    • @İzmir_city_state_republic
      @İzmir_city_state_republic Месяц назад +1

      @@Zeyneep_pp medyada "war veteran" kelimesinin american gazilerine kullanıldığını biliyom

  • @SagucuTegin
    @SagucuTegin Месяц назад +381

    Ataturk was great leader of the 20 th Century.

    • @DukeOfTheYard
      @DukeOfTheYard Месяц назад +14

      He was. What he managed to achieve (and the odds were heavily against him) is staggering.

    • @magicmike97m
      @magicmike97m Месяц назад +37

      He committed genocide after genocide. Wheres the greatness?

    • @magicmike97m
      @magicmike97m Месяц назад +1

      He is a mass murderer. Can never be great.

    • @Abdullah-mh7eg
      @Abdullah-mh7eg Месяц назад +1

      لعنة الله اليه

    • @StalkerX426
      @StalkerX426 Месяц назад +65

      @@magicmike97m what genocide? don`t make me laught, comrade. Do you have any good non-propoganda sources other than wikipedia (it is shit when it is comes to history)

  • @marshmallow7713
    @marshmallow7713 Месяц назад +20

    Arap alfabesi hiç bir zaman halkın alfabesi olamadı öğrenemedi ve Türkçe karşılığı zor harfler ama Osmanlı hanedanlığı için zengin bir alfabeydi ve edebiyatta da çok güzel örnekleri var

    • @TurguhanAlp
      @TurguhanAlp 23 дня назад

      Kesinlikle Kur'an Kerimde arapça kelime olmamalı

    • @stefano1005
      @stefano1005 8 дней назад

      Turks don’t have alphabet 😆😆😆

    • @Warcriminal-19983
      @Warcriminal-19983 3 дня назад

      @@stefano1005 but they do, look at gokturk alphabet and cope with reality little stefan

    • @weloveturkiye3-qw7xb
      @weloveturkiye3-qw7xb 3 дня назад

      @@stefano1005 göktürk alfabesi?Uygurlardan bahsetmiyorum bile

    • @stefano1005
      @stefano1005 3 дня назад

      @@weloveturkiye3-qw7xb you have nothing . The Seljuks have arkhitektor from armenians…. Balyan families building dolmanahce Palast and more….. you have everything from greece and Armenia stolen.
      About this knows everybody ….

  • @spartakos536
    @spartakos536 18 дней назад +21

    I am Turk, and respect so much Father of Our Country (Ataturk). His reforms put Turkey into modern age literally. Specifically Turkey proceeded in science, industry and art with Ataturk's reforms and revolutions.

    • @jaytoven7
      @jaytoven7 10 дней назад

      Erdoğan ruining his legacy

    • @nikolaosspartakos5392
      @nikolaosspartakos5392 9 дней назад

      spartakos (?) 536 are you turk ?

    • @Turkic_Soul
      @Turkic_Soul 8 дней назад

      ​@@nikolaosspartakos5392 Why not?

    • @ahmetsalih857
      @ahmetsalih857 5 дней назад

      ​@@nikolaosspartakos5392It is normal for someone praising Atatürk to use the name Spartakos, because Kemalists are Western wannabes.

    • @ahmetsalih857
      @ahmetsalih857 5 дней назад

      Have we progressed in science and art?😂Don't make me laugh. Ataturk did not take science and technology from the West. He only imposed the culture and immorality of the West on the Turks.

  • @thief5
    @thief5 Месяц назад +68

    As a Turk I’m so happy for this reform, our father Ataturk made us come back to our roots, fixing our language. Now we are connecting heavily with other Turk countries. Love from Turkey to all Turk states/countries. We are all siblings. ❤🇹🇷🇦🇿🇹🇲🇰🇿🇰🇬🇺🇿❤️❤️

    • @pouyajabbari3912
      @pouyajabbari3912 Месяц назад +11

      Hmmmm actually latin is not your root.... Don't get me wrong Ataturk was great for many reasons, but westernizing the country didn't bring it back to it's roots.

    • @NationsEviltwin
      @NationsEviltwin Месяц назад +3

      Daddy ataturk is crazy 💀

    • @thief5
      @thief5 Месяц назад +13

      @@pouyajabbari3912 I never said Latin is our root. He removed all loan words almost and fixed the language as the folk was already speaking like that. He made people remember they are TURKS. He made us connect with other Turk countries.

    • @thief5
      @thief5 Месяц назад

      @@NationsEviltwin Cope lol

    • @kamale.a3627
      @kamale.a3627 Месяц назад +6

      ​​@@thief5Mmmm... Not really, he threw to the bin many Persian and Arabic words used in the Turkish vocabulary for centuries and change them mostly to French, Spanish and Italian ones, which is funny because many Spanish words came also from Arabic so some words were changed from Turkish Arabic to Spanish Arabic words, also the Latin alphabet is not the root of the Turkish language, maybe is the way the promoted these changes on the language but I don't see it

  • @zoroasterman
    @zoroasterman 5 дней назад +4

    Respect to Türkiye 🇹🇷 from Australia 🇦🇺

  • @robertsugg280
    @robertsugg280 Месяц назад +90

    scientists shaped the Latin alphabet to nearly a perfect match to Turkish. The Arabic one was ill matched

    • @7-8-BaykutAbi
      @7-8-BaykutAbi Месяц назад

      Biz latin alfabesi istemiyoruz, sadece savaşı kaybettik ve sizin ajanınız yönetimi ele geçirdi. Biz latin değiliz, ve latinlerin tarihinden ve kültüründen hoşlanmıyoruz. Kokuşmuş alfabenizden birgün kurtulmak umudu ile..

    • @BayGrishnackh
      @BayGrishnackh Месяц назад

      f'*** everything about arabs as a Turk

    • @Yusufspider42
      @Yusufspider42 Месяц назад +2

      @@BayGrishnackhcare to explain why instead of spewing blind hate?

    • @pouyajabbari3912
      @pouyajabbari3912 Месяц назад

      Just because latin alphabet is a better match than arabic doesn't mean it's a perfect match 😅 I would argue ruinic is better.

    • @Yusufspider42
      @Yusufspider42 Месяц назад +4

      @@pouyajabbari3912 i feel like ruinic would just make things more confusing

  • @Gefehhka
    @Gefehhka 29 дней назад +11

    Short Answer: Because it was the best and most rational decision.

  • @nenenindonu
    @nenenindonu Месяц назад +69

    Semitic scripts are among the least suitable for Turkic the syllabels and pronunciations are just so different yet Turks adopted it due to religious dynamics ideally they should've sticked to Uighur, Orkhon, or Issyk script

    • @kkaixer
      @kkaixer Месяц назад +6

      Yeah, agree. Also, revisioned versions of those alphabets, right?

    • @CortexNewsService
      @CortexNewsService Месяц назад +1

      Weren't they several centuries removed from the central Asian scripts? And I think those were being actively suppressed by the Soviets at the time of Turkey's establishment

    • @SamAlQattan-p2h
      @SamAlQattan-p2h Месяц назад

      Yes. Semites being the most civillised people on earth and Turks being the least.

    • @sibelshinaishin5170
      @sibelshinaishin5170 Месяц назад +6

      Very simple, the letters represented sounds from throat that were in Arabic were useless for Turks,since Turkish doesn’t have words with sounds coming from the throat, and some others on the other hand there are sounds in Turkish that doesn’t exist in Arabic language. It was a good decision. M.K Atatürk ruffled some feathers but by the time of his demise illiteracy was almost a thing of the past. God bless his soul we are grateful to him.

    • @kevinyonan9666
      @kevinyonan9666 Месяц назад +1

      So how do you explain the Syriac alphabet being used for Mongolic-Turkic languages?

  • @firefly9700
    @firefly9700 Месяц назад +191

    Ataturk was a real visionary

    • @Pap294-j4l
      @Pap294-j4l Месяц назад

      And genocidal as well.

    • @BayGrishnackh
      @BayGrishnackh Месяц назад

      this days islamists like erdogan want to destroy what Ataturks did

    • @BornvsMe
      @BornvsMe Месяц назад

      Also a murderer of armenians. He is the leader of the armenian genocide

    • @TurguhanAlp
      @TurguhanAlp 23 дня назад +10

      This man is seen as a devil by today's Islamists because of his forward thinking and solidarity in society.

    • @firefly9700
      @firefly9700 23 дня назад

      @TurguhanAlp Atatürk'ü sevmeyen herkes mal amk

  • @Umut35.
    @Umut35. Месяц назад +70

    ❤️THANK YOU ATATÜRK ❤️🇹🇷🇹🇷

    • @komizaloto
      @komizaloto Месяц назад +3

      Turkiyë 🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️🇸🇦💪💪💪💪

    • @cowboyfritz2813
      @cowboyfritz2813 Месяц назад

      Turks are Wannabe European, but Europe don't want you.

    • @TurguhanAlp
      @TurguhanAlp 23 дня назад +2

      Turkiye is not arab but islamic are arab ​@@komizaloto

    • @komizaloto
      @komizaloto 21 день назад

      @@TurguhanAlp ♥️♥️♥️♥️ تركيا بلد مبتكر رائع من المملكة العربية السعودية 🇸🇦♥️🇹🇷

    • @last.journey
      @last.journey 21 день назад

      بطل بقة انعدام الشخصية دة الناس دول حرفيا بيهجرو لغتك وثقافتك وهويتك عشان يندمجو مع الغرب عشان شيفينك متخلف وانت رايح تشجعهم علي دة ​@@komizaloto

  • @AugustusIV
    @AugustusIV Месяц назад +9

    It should also be added that Turkish states convened a congress regarding the Turkish language in 1926. At this congress, a decision was taken regarding Turkish countries switching to the Latin alphabet. In line with this decision (and because of the items mentioned in the video), Turkey decided to change its alphabet. Turkish historians say that in the wars in which the Ottoman Empire collapsed, the commanders didnt understand each other's correspondence and therefore there were communication breakdowns, which shows how necessary this innovation was
    Another point i would like to add about the video is the claim that the language revolution completely separated the modern Turkish people from Ottoman history and literature. This is the thesis most frequently put forward by opponents of the revolution, but it isnt true. Let us remind you that the literacy rate in Arabic letters is below 5%. Even if there was no letter revolution, these texts would not be read. In addition, today's Turkish people would not be able to read and write. This isnt as big a loss as it seems. Because in Turkish universities, students of history and literature departments are taught Turkish (Ottoman Turkish), which is written with the Arabic alphabet. Another issue that historians mention is that the writings that entered the state archives in the 15th and 16th centuries could not be read in the 18th and 19th centuries. The difficult and cumbersome language caused problems even before the empire had dissolved. For this reason, there was an important reform movement especially during the 30th and 34th sultans (Mahmud II and Abdulhamid II)
    In summary, the foundations and justifications for this innovation that Ataturk was able to achieve are quite solid. Turkish nation is lucky to have a leader like Ataturk

    • @Mahanology
      @Mahanology  Месяц назад +1

      Thanks a lot for this helpful comment. Yes, there are many details and different aspects of this issue. Maybe we can delve into the details in the upcoming videos.

    • @pioterosiemdziesiat
      @pioterosiemdziesiat 28 минут назад

      In 1926 there was only one Turkic state ;)

  • @In_Our_Timeline
    @In_Our_Timeline Месяц назад +116

    i really thought that this video was going to be "aTauUK bAd" but turns out this was more educational and interesting, the research was top notch

    • @oulawd6281
      @oulawd6281 Месяц назад +20

      seeing a person from pakistan say this really shocked me as a turk lol thank you

    • @oulawd6281
      @oulawd6281 Месяц назад +14

      never mind i’ve seen your other comments and i take it back LMAO

    • @emperorhadrian8440
      @emperorhadrian8440 Месяц назад

      I sht on atarats grave​@@oulawd6281

    • @harlowida
      @harlowida Месяц назад +4

      @@oulawd6281Maybe you should broaden your horizon lmao. Stop living in cucu land

    • @harlowida
      @harlowida Месяц назад

      @@oulawd6281broaden your horizon bud

  • @wazzup233
    @wazzup233 Месяц назад +39

    Vietnamese language also adopted the Latin script from the Chinese script when they'd been colonized by the French in the 19th century and it became a huge success on adopting the Latin script in their language just like Turkish. I wonder if other non-Latin languages like Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Hindi, Arabic, etc. would also do the same thing as Turkish and Vietnamese but that would be complicated due to cultural and religious reasons.

    • @ugur4511
      @ugur4511 Месяц назад +15

      The situation of Vietnam and Turkiye is different. Vietnam was a colony of France.
      Turkey was never a colony. The decision to switch to the Latin alphabet belonged entirely to the Turks and it has a long history.

    • @Alias_Anybody
      @Alias_Anybody Месяц назад +10

      Koreans already use a pretty new phonetic script. So it would probably be possible but also pointless.
      Persian and Hindi would be 100% possible. They are both Indo-European languages and decently closely related to Latin.
      Japanese would probably be possible without too many issues. "Romanji" is already a thing. But their symbols simply have too much cultural significance, this will never happen.

    • @fairybeliever4479
      @fairybeliever4479 Месяц назад +9

      China almost changed to Latin alphabet. When computers came about. China had a dilemma. Cause their language is character based and there was no way to type the characters on a computer. They did solve it, by copying their neighbors approach. I don’t remember which country it was that came up with the solution. It might have been Taiwan.

    • @JolivoHY9
      @JolivoHY9 Месяц назад +3

      not every language should switch to latin script. there are plenty of other prettier scripts in the world.

    • @corvacopia
      @corvacopia Месяц назад +1

      Those are all languages that have scripts written for their Ms huave, Korean in particular has a very good phonetic script and abjads like the Arabic script just are a lot more efficient for Semitic languages (although there are Semitic languages that use the Latin script, like Maltese). I am less familiar with the others, but these are scripts that were made for the languages, it’s a very different dynamic

  • @randomperson1408
    @randomperson1408 17 дней назад +5

    Turkish has its own alphabet used during ancient times when Turks settled in Central Asia known as Göktürks, their alphabet being "Göktürk Yazıtı (Göktürk Alphabet)" which is pretty alike Latin or Greek or Cyrilic alphabets compared to arabic or Persian alphabets which is why adapting Latin alphabet over Persian-arabic makes sense for Turkey.

  • @alperalyaz
    @alperalyaz Месяц назад +11

    Baya Türk dostu video olmuş. Pek alışık değiliz. Teşekkürler.!

    • @uygaronur3605
      @uygaronur3605 3 дня назад

      Türk dostu yerine "objektif" demek daha doğru olacaktır. Bizi övmek gibi bir kaygısı olduğunu zannetmiyorum, yalnızca olan biteni nesnel bir biçimde anlatmaya çalışmış.

  • @whQQps
    @whQQps Месяц назад +25

    In 1926, a congress was held in Baku with the participation of representatives from all Turkish states.. At this congress, the Latin alphabet was chosen as the most suitable alphabet for the Turkish language. The transition to the Latin alphabet was approved in all Turkish states, including those occupied by Russia at that time. After 2 years of preparations, the Republic of Türkiye switched to the Latin alphabet in 1928.
    Our transition to the Latin alphabet has nothing to do with the West. On the contrary, it's purpose is to ensure cultural unity with the Turkish Communities in the East.

    • @anonym-pm6mj
      @anonym-pm6mj Месяц назад

      not really atatürk is known to be a bootlicker for the west

    • @joseanfigueroa8785
      @joseanfigueroa8785 Месяц назад +1

      that makes no sense...

    • @whQQps
      @whQQps Месяц назад +3

      @@joseanfigueroa8785 This is history. Religions are makes no sense too but they are exists.
      if Turkish states were decided to use Gokturk alphabet at that congress, we were using gokturk alphabet now

    • @joseanfigueroa8785
      @joseanfigueroa8785 Месяц назад +3

      @hakant.7242 No, your interpretation of history is absurd. Turkey clearly chose the Latin alphabet as a westernization instrument.

    • @muzarisi
      @muzarisi Месяц назад +1

      ​​@@joseanfigueroa8785That is correct. We stopped using Arabic because it was not suitable. And it is no shame to accept that we choose the Latin alphabet of all because it was mostly used by the west, which to us was more civilized, progressive and educated which is also what we aimed to be. Infact, it was not hidden at all that the reason why we choose latin for a more suitable alphabet was to be closer with the west but rather accepted and was told as one of the reasons behind us choosing it.

  • @nuricomez
    @nuricomez Месяц назад +19

    We have certain sounds and the arab alphabet does not contain those. However, the latin alphabet is perfectly capable of scripting all Turkish sounds. For example: another name of Doner Kebab is ‘çevirme’ in Turkish ‘chevirme’ as there is no ‘che’ or ç sound in Arabic, they called it Shavarma. Arab alphabet is for arab sounds. Not suitable for Turkish.

    • @itachi7285
      @itachi7285 Месяц назад +3

      you mean "shawarma". They also don't have the "v" sound and we don't have the "W" sound.

    • @harambifi5451
      @harambifi5451 14 дней назад

      The Ottoman script used the perso-arabic alphabet which contained such sounds. Also Enver Pasa introduced the that matched the turkish phonetics more.

  • @robertsugg280
    @robertsugg280 Месяц назад +4

    When my Turkish students wanted to ask another one how to 'spell' a word in Turkish, the word was just pronounced and the other knew how to write it. The only instance I noticed was if a word from Arabic needed an Arabic pronunciation, the spelling system could not show it. These young students had little need to spell or speak Arabic words as they were taught as pure a form of Turkish as possible. They did not know much of the old Ottoman vocabulary that my Greek girlfriend knew how to use in speaking to an Armenian jeweler. I was astonished at how well they communicated in that fashion.

  • @nenenindonu
    @nenenindonu Месяц назад +69

    The language reform was a net positive and one of the many contributions Atatürk made to his nation today other Turkic states follow by ditching Cyrillic for Latin

    • @kadirbozkus-ss3sm
      @kadirbozkus-ss3sm Месяц назад +2

      As far as I know, other Turkic states are perfectly fine and happy with cyrilic, they seem to be making this choice (an uncessary one, in my opinion) for political reasons İ.E distancing themselfs from Russia; aligning more with Europa.

    • @laurentdevaux5617
      @laurentdevaux5617 Месяц назад +16

      Romania did the same in the late 19th century, switching from cyrillic to latin, which indeed is much more consistent for a romance language

    • @DehydratedDarkness
      @DehydratedDarkness Месяц назад +1

      ​@@laurentdevaux5617It was a political decision though. Polish and Czech use the latin script (Slovakian went extinct and was artificially revived, so it doesn't really count here) because of political reasons. Polish was notoriously hard to transcribe to a latin alphabet, at some point having a proposal of 56 letter Latin script based on modified umlauts and other diacritics.
      At this point, of course, Czech and Polish have basically been hammered to sound like a western language, but it's inauthentic and they stick out a lot compared to other Slavic languages, especially Polish

  • @Evlander-t6i
    @Evlander-t6i Месяц назад +10

    actually Ottomans tried to change it as well since Suleiman a alphabet change was definite and in 1800s II.Mahmud choiced it Latin however they were'nt able to make this reform because there was also too many problems and it might make more problems as well

  • @UjjwalKumar-f9i
    @UjjwalKumar-f9i 16 дней назад +4

    As an Indian, I feel proud that we have our own indigenous scripts for our languages that are completely distinct from any other scripts of world.

  • @Wul-Lop
    @Wul-Lop Месяц назад +21

    🇹🇷 🇹🇷 🇹🇷 🇹🇷 🇹🇷 🇹🇷 🇹🇷 🇹🇷 ❤ Respect to M. KEMAL ATATÜRK... from Thailand...

  • @Serenay53
    @Serenay53 Месяц назад +11

    iyiki latin albesini kullanıyoruz biz kuranı temel alarak arap alfabesi kullandık islamın etkisiyle ama kendi eski milli alfabemiz var

    • @TurguhanAlp
      @TurguhanAlp 23 дня назад

      Keşke müslüman olmasaydı toplum gevurlar bile uzaya çıkıyor bizler yerin dibini kazıyoruz gömülmek için.

  • @hamzaterzi8801
    @hamzaterzi8801 Месяц назад +6

    So writing the Latin alphabet is extremely easy. You can understand what is written even from a distance. The Cyrillic alphabet might have been the second best option. I think Atatürk made a very good choice.

  • @kalvon
    @kalvon 7 дней назад +4

    Non-Turks hate this guy so much because of this, lmao

  • @HedefOdak
    @HedefOdak 10 дней назад +4

    As a Turk i love Ataturk so much

  • @HolgerJakobs
    @HolgerJakobs 5 дней назад +2

    @4:13 The word "Görüşemeyeceklermiş" means "I heard that they are not going to be able to see each other". This is a really compact language.
    I think the time around 1927 was kind of a last chance to change the alphabet, because literacy rates were still low, so not many people were affected. Nowadays such a change would be very difficult. You can see this for instance in the U.S.A., where switching from their akward imperial units to the metric system seems to be too difficult to carry through.

    • @borabingol6797
      @borabingol6797 4 дня назад

      The thing is the measure units were also changed. The older one was like imperial system. Ataturk changed it to metric.
      A very interesting detail... Ataturk wrote a book with the title Geometry. He invented most of the basic geometry terms in Turkish by himself. For example, angle was called "zaviye" in the Ottoman dialect, but he invented "açı" form aç- (to open, to relieve). He was a military genius, he was a revolunist, but it is hard to describe him as a whole, he was something else above all those.

  • @umutkiran3035
    @umutkiran3035 Месяц назад +13

    Türkçe Altay dilidir 🇹🇷

    • @TurguhanAlp
      @TurguhanAlp 23 дня назад

      Türklerin kendine has anıtları olsa çoktan şu kabile ırkı olan Arapların dinine muhtaç kalmazdık Türkiye müslüman olmasa 2023 hedeflerine anında ulaşırdı.

  • @bamesh9258
    @bamesh9258 Месяц назад +12

    It's wrong to say that Turks were just using the Arabic script. In reality, they used the Persian script, which came from Arabic but was modified by the Persians to include letters that aren't in Arabic. Urdu also uses the Persian script. The official language of the Seljuk Empire was Persian, as it was spoken by the elite, while the common people spoke Turkish. Since then, Turks have used the Persian script for writing, until Atatürk changed it to a modified Latin script.

    • @halitmahmut66
      @halitmahmut66 Месяц назад

      WE PAKISTANIS DON'T USE THE PERSIAN SCRIPT!! WE MODIFIED THE PERSIAN SCRIPT BY ADDING EXTRA CHARACTERS OR LETTERS TO SUIT OUR URDU LANGUAGE SOUNDS, SO THEREFORE IT'S NO LONGER A PERSIAN SCRIPT BUT A NEW URDU SCRIPT! 🇵🇰💪🇵🇰💚🇵🇰💚🇵🇰💪🇵🇰💪🇵🇰💚

    • @pouyajabbari3912
      @pouyajabbari3912 Месяц назад

      ​@@halitmahmut66Please give examples of letters in Urdu that don't exist in Persian...

    • @faraznaqvi1113
      @faraznaqvi1113 Месяц назад

      @@halitmahmut66 Bro you forget we also write Urdu in Latin script when texting to our friends and family🤣🤣💀💀

    • @saadsalman6641
      @saadsalman6641 22 дня назад

      ​@@pouyajabbari3912retroflex r, d, t ڑ ڈ ٹ۔۔ Similarly there are sounds which have h incorporated in them, like bh بھ ph پھ th تھ retro Th ٹھ jh جھ chh چھ etc

    • @eiiiotrodger6279
      @eiiiotrodger6279 5 часов назад

      @@faraznaqvi1113 They write it in devanagari too

  • @mousamoradi3038
    @mousamoradi3038 Месяц назад +22

    As an Iranian Turk, I was able to read all those old newspapers in Arabic script shown in the video. It feels nice to be able to read those still standing scriptures in historical sites of Istanbul.

    • @ruxmania
      @ruxmania Месяц назад +8

      Turkish people, who took religious education in their youth, can read Ottoman Turkish as well, and anyone interested can easily learn it. However, the issue is that it's more complex than it needs to be. Additionally, there aren't many books written during the Ottoman era. Most scientific papers are either in German or English, and the Latin alphabet makes it easier to learn those languages.

    • @mousamoradi3038
      @mousamoradi3038 Месяц назад

      @@ruxmania Thanks for the information, I had no idea about the volume and availability of Ottoman Turkish books and the situation with scientific material.

    • @nothingtosay6622
      @nothingtosay6622 Месяц назад

      Its not arabic script, turks using persian script

    • @mousamoradi3038
      @mousamoradi3038 Месяц назад +8

      @@nothingtosay6622 It is Arabic script. If you want to be more specific and point out the Persian aspect, you can say "Perso-Arabic script", which is the more accurate name. If you want to ignore the fact that Persian took its script from Arabic and added some letters, then we can ignore the same since Ottoman Turkish also added some letters and just call it "Ottoman script".

    • @servantofGod-xyz
      @servantofGod-xyz Месяц назад

      ​English,french, german, Turkish, uses latin script​, as the script was used once upon a time to write latin.
      So the Ottoman Turkish and Persian both are written in Arabic script.@@nothingtosay6622

  • @ulughank
    @ulughank Месяц назад +7

    The change to latin was done not because of western values but because of the already standart Common Turkic Alphabet which is where the modern Azerbaijani and the Past Crymean alphabets come from.

    • @codingstyle9480
      @codingstyle9480 Месяц назад

      It was a by-product anyways. I mean, it, in a way, showed its intention to break away from backward Arab lands.

  • @jackperson3626
    @jackperson3626 29 дней назад +2

    Thanks!

  • @michaelowino228
    @michaelowino228 3 часа назад +2

    Good video.

  • @Hasanaljadid
    @Hasanaljadid Месяц назад +59

    Latin Alphabet is much more suitable for turkish Alphabet

    • @islammehmeov2334
      @islammehmeov2334 Месяц назад +2

      Yes just look TURKIYE and the rest of the MUSLAM WORLD you can see how the SECULAR LATIN ALPHABET help the TURKS to progress

    • @fy7589
      @fy7589 Месяц назад +5

      Theres no modern Turkic alphabet and the Latin alphabet is definitely much easier than the Arabic alphabet.

    • @behlulhan421
      @behlulhan421 Месяц назад +2

      @@fy7589 I think he meant turkish language

  • @batuhantamburaci
    @batuhantamburaci Месяц назад +3

    Today if I can understand this video and make this comment as a Turk today, it is thanks to this alphabet revolution

  • @MinaMilay-b2e
    @MinaMilay-b2e Месяц назад +92

    I'm algerian i try every time to read and understand Persian but I can't even I've i speak Arabic but the turkish was very easy to learn and read because i speak English and French the Latin alphabet is much suitable for Persian and turkish even for other languages or dialecte iv algerian dialecte use latin alphabet will be much easier to learn for foreigners because Arabic is very difficult and more complex, algerian dialecte sounds like malta in case you want to learn who use latin alphabet,
    I'm happy that ataturk switch from Arabic to latin because thanks to that i can understand and read and speak little bit .
    ❤love turkiye ❤ seni çok seviyorum ❤

    • @Abdullah-mh7eg
      @Abdullah-mh7eg Месяц назад

      kidayr khoya

    • @egecagdas9506
      @egecagdas9506 Месяц назад +7

      Big respect to Algerians from Turkish people.

    • @Proud_Hadrami
      @Proud_Hadrami Месяц назад

      الجزائر دائما عبيد لمستعمريهم 😂

    • @Proud_Hadrami
      @Proud_Hadrami Месяц назад +3

      @@MinaMilay-b2e الجزائر دائما عبيد لمستعمريهم 😂

    • @MinaMilay-b2e
      @MinaMilay-b2e Месяц назад +4

      @@Proud_Hadrami حشاك انا قلت نهدر اللغة ماشي راني نعبد فيهم هذا علم ماشي تتبع انا اصلا هوايتي تعلم الغات ماشي كي جات فتركيا حاولت نتعلم لغات وحدخرين بصح تركية جاتني ساهلة ،
      معلابليش منين بلادك بصح جاتني غريبة تطيح ببلادي وبجنسيتي انا انسانة وطنية ونحب بلادي ونحب بلدان العالم هوايتي اكتشاف والسفر وتعلم وهادي ماشي تتبعية هادي فطرة فالانسان
      حرت علاه تقول كلام هك عيب عليك والله ما يليق شوف الأجانب كيفاش يعلقو غير بتقافة وتربية ماشي بتمسخير وسبان والاستهزاء الله يهديك

  • @markmorrow8o
    @markmorrow8o 11 дней назад +22

    Because we're not Arabs

    • @fadyalqaisy
      @fadyalqaisy 9 дней назад +3

      Are you latin?

    • @OrbayOguz
      @OrbayOguz 9 дней назад +3

      ​@@fadyalqaisyAnatolia was part of Rome, therefore we are Romans!

    • @Turkic_Soul
      @Turkic_Soul 8 дней назад +2

      ​@@fadyalqaisy So you mean English people are latin? Scandinavian nations are latin?
      Turks aren't arabs, just an Eurasian nation like other European nations who doesn't latin but use latin alphabet.
      You must agree we are different people we have our own culture, language, history, gastronomy, music etc... You can't assimilate us anymore in 21th century bro.

    • @fadyalqaisy
      @fadyalqaisy 8 дней назад +1

      @@OrbayOguz part of Byzantium, you should be writing in Greek

    • @fadyalqaisy
      @fadyalqaisy 8 дней назад +1

      @@Turkic_Soul nope, but their holy script was written in latin

  • @sefakaragoz7159
    @sefakaragoz7159 Месяц назад +29

    Ataturk got Turkey stand up in the past. We are grateful to him. Thank you !🇹🇷

    • @7-8-BaykutAbi
      @7-8-BaykutAbi Месяц назад +1

      Niye ? Latin misin yoksa ?

    • @sefakaragoz7159
      @sefakaragoz7159 Месяц назад +8

      @7-8-BaykutAbi sen arap dinine inaninca arap olmuyorsan bende latin alfabesi yazinca latin olmuyorum

    • @7-8-BaykutAbi
      @7-8-BaykutAbi Месяц назад

      @@sefakaragoz7159 Sen önce islam dininin ne olduğunu araştır sonra konuş. Yahudiler gibi konuşuyorsun farkında değilsin. İslam arap dini değildir, Kuran'da araplarla ilgili tek bir ayet geçmez. İslam evrenseldir. İkincisi sende çok iyi biliyorsun bu dinsiz sebateistin tüm bunları neden yaptığını. Millete mi sordu alfabe değiştirirken? Devrim dediğiniz şapka saçmalığı için kime danıştı? Harf inkılabıda bugün sen çok sevsen bile o zaman için diktatörce yapılmış birşeydi ve kendi kafasından yapmıyordu bunları. O dönemde osmanlı ülkesi üzerinde kurulan her devletin birçok kanunu değişti, hatta bizde ingilizce ya da fransızcanın resmi dil olmaması çok şaşırtıcı çünkü bizden kopan kuzey afrikada bunu da yaptılar. Sen şimdi dinsiz biriysen alfabeyi kaldırmasını ya da bu devlerimleri yapmasını hoş karşılayabilirsin, buna birşey demiyorum, ama eğer müslümansan ya da türksen ya ahmak olmalısın ya da art niyetli.

    • @Pap294-j4l
      @Pap294-j4l Месяц назад

      😂

    • @gk98s
      @gk98s Месяц назад +3

      @@7-8-BaykutAbi hadi çölüne

  • @Pepiyas7
    @Pepiyas7 29 дней назад +7

    Simply,turkey used the latin alphabet because they are not arabic,greek,bulgarian or russian

    • @gulaycevik1363
      @gulaycevik1363 21 день назад +2

      They are not Latin either though 😅

    • @sezersydm6844
      @sezersydm6844 16 дней назад +1

      We are TURK, not arabic or greek or Bulgarian.

    • @Pepiyas7
      @Pepiyas7 15 дней назад

      @@gulaycevik1363 there is no turkish alphabet so it will be the definitive way to use the most wide spread alphabet,and another turkish country,azerbaijan(i guess i did not write it right😅)uses latin alphabet too.

  • @WeAreTheWinnerr
    @WeAreTheWinnerr 21 день назад +4

    Atatürk ❤️🤍

  • @YKKck-vf1vc
    @YKKck-vf1vc 5 дней назад +2

    TÜRKÇE KONUŞMAK ÇOK GÜZEL ŞEYDİR 🥰🇹🇷❤️

  • @Sch8265
    @Sch8265 6 дней назад +1

    This is very simple; the most suitable writing style for the Turkish language is Latin. Even today, most Central Asian Turkish states try to write their language in Latin like ours, except for the Cyrillic alphabet.

  • @DATFurkan
    @DATFurkan 7 дней назад +4

    Arap olmadığımız için olabilir belki

    • @ahmetsalih857
      @ahmetsalih857 5 дней назад

      Latin de değiliz.

    • @IlkinSantak
      @IlkinSantak 2 дня назад

      @@ahmetsalih857 Ama Araptan çok Latinsin. Türkiye Roma İmparatorluğunun bir kısmı olmuş.

  • @mussajavdan8203
    @mussajavdan8203 Месяц назад +3

    Their are many pronunciations that is impossible to find in Latin . Although we had our own scripts before Islam . But later on the Persian literatures the Great Ferdowsi and Hafez came to the conclusion to transferring the Arabic scripts to a Persian version was the best option for the new Persian language what we today call the modern Persian language which we speak today . Although very difficult in writing ,its is rich very rich

  • @keykey4216
    @keykey4216 3 дня назад +2

    What makes me laugh is the attempt of the country of Islamic star and crescent 🇹🇷 to resemble the countries of European Christian cross 🇦🇩🇦🇱🇦🇲🇦🇹🇦🇽🇧🇦🇧🇪🇧🇬🇧🇻🇨🇭🇨🇮🇨🇵🇨🇾🇨🇿🇩🇰🇪🇦🇪🇪🇪🇸🇫🇮🇫🇴🇬🇧🇬🇪🇬🇬🇬🇮🇬🇱🇬🇷🇭🇷🇭🇺🇮🇪🇮🇸🇮🇹🇯🇪🇱🇮🇱🇻🇱🇺🇱🇹🇲🇨🇲🇩🇲🇪🇲🇰🇲🇹🇳🇱🇳🇴🇵🇱🇵🇹🇷🇺🇷🇸🇸🇪🇸🇮🇸🇯🇸🇰🇸🇲🇹🇩🇺🇦🇻🇦🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿, but to no avail 😂

  • @abuhammad
    @abuhammad 19 часов назад

    All you have to do is to assign new letters ( in this case, vowels, as Arabic alphabet has three semi vowels which is facilitated to represent a consonant (w,y, ') or an elongation of vowel it is attached to, and three vowel markers (a,i,u) which is not part of the alphabet itself and not written in the writing system except in dictionaries or places where it's necessary to clear out ambiguity , where as Turkish has eight vowels with no difference in vowel length, so the vowel system is vastly different). I myself learn reading and writing Uyghur writing in school which is written in Arabic script, and reached to literacy within two semesters to be able to read newspapers and journals in the second grade of elementary school. I don't see how superior Latin script is than Arabic script in this case.

  • @erinpilla
    @erinpilla Месяц назад +9

    I remember in the dizi Kurt Seyit ve Sura, the characters were still writing in Arabic script. By the end, Türkiye had become independent, and the signs had become Latin

  • @CukZebczx
    @CukZebczx Месяц назад +210

    BECAUSE WE ARE NOT ARAB

    • @Exocrotic-yn2ck
      @Exocrotic-yn2ck Месяц назад +97

      We are not European nor latins either!

    • @CukZebczx
      @CukZebczx Месяц назад +15

      @ You are right

    • @Yarluqaduq
      @Yarluqaduq Месяц назад +43

      @@Exocrotic-yn2ck everybody knows we are not arab or european. But using latin makes sense in todays world and makes everything easier.

    • @suleymanthemagnificent1526
      @suleymanthemagnificent1526 Месяц назад +29

      No one said you are arab

    • @sentientglitch
      @sentientglitch Месяц назад

      so you are latin? lmfao. you should use Arabic script

  • @ioanvalentinpavlov605
    @ioanvalentinpavlov605 Месяц назад +3

    and they made it phoneticly consistant if you are listening ( english , french , dutch , danish , swedish , norwegian etc) .

  • @Psyyyyyyyyyyyyyy
    @Psyyyyyyyyyyyyyy 18 дней назад +2

    I’m still imagining it how better iran would’ve been if shah actually managed to migrate the country to latin letters instead of arabic and not being taken over by islamists

  • @asena5485
    @asena5485 Месяц назад +100

    It was a shame for us Turks to use arabic alphabet in the first place. We should never have adopted their culture, Atatürk just fixed this mistake.

    • @acultofpersonality7162
      @acultofpersonality7162 Месяц назад

      This is how slaves think🤣
      You just proved that you have no culture by adopting the western culture instead of the Arab culture🤣🤣🤣.
      If great Turks like Alp Arslan and Mehmed the Conqueror saw you today would spit on you for kissing Europeans asses

    • @mayacobain94
      @mayacobain94 Месяц назад

      ​@@acultofpersonality7162 dude thinks arabs or western europeans has a culture

    • @NyX060
      @NyX060 Месяц назад

      𐰴𐰀𐱅𐰴𐰺𐰢 𐰀𐰺𐰉𐰃𐱃 𐰑𐰃𐰞, 𐰀𐱅𐰀 𐱅𐰃𐰞𐰀𐰢 𐰀𐰺𐰉𐰃𐱃𐰴𐰀 𐰑𐰃𐰞

    • @NyX060
      @NyX060 Месяц назад

      ​@@acultofpersonality7162punk

    • @MkkhhDcccjh
      @MkkhhDcccjh Месяц назад

      @@mayacobain94 or turks.

  • @yukseleryaz1142
    @yukseleryaz1142 12 дней назад +5

    Arap olmadığımız için olabilirmi?

    • @Zafer-m3d
      @Zafer-m3d 12 дней назад +1

      Elbette Arap değiliz

    • @yukseleryaz1142
      @yukseleryaz1142 12 дней назад +1

      @Zafer-m3d yani

    • @Zafer-m3d
      @Zafer-m3d 12 дней назад +1

      @yukseleryaz1142 Arap o, bu olmak değil mesele mesele aslını inkâr etmek.

    • @yukseleryaz1142
      @yukseleryaz1142 11 дней назад +1

      @@Zafer-m3d anlamadım?

    • @ahmetsalih857
      @ahmetsalih857 5 дней назад

      ​@@yukseleryaz1142 Arap harflerini kullanmakla Arap olunmaz.Tıpkı Latin harfleri kullandığımız için Latin olmadığımız gibi.

  • @thenotoriousman712
    @thenotoriousman712 Месяц назад +2

    The alphabet reform was accepted on November 1, 1928. In the population census conducted before this (October 28, 1927), the literacy rate in the country was determined as 8.61 percent. 3.67 percent for women; 12.99 percent for men!

  • @Sch8265
    @Sch8265 6 дней назад +1

    5:11 sinirlarimiz genişlemiş lan h.o

  • @hecatesgirl
    @hecatesgirl 6 дней назад +2

    Turks had their own language and alphabet before islam. It's called 'Gokturk Alphabet' Arabic alphabet has nothing to do with their culture and language, and not compatible. Latin innovation was a lot easier and helped Turks become multilingual and understand the world languages better today..

  • @egeham71
    @egeham71 Месяц назад +5

    I ask those who say to Turks, “You have switched from an alphabet that is not yours to an alphabet that is not yours.” Are you Latin? Or are you English so you can read this comment?

  • @Farmalade
    @Farmalade Месяц назад +62

    shortest answer
    we turks are not arabs.

    • @wolfRegal0
      @wolfRegal0 Месяц назад +12

      Pakistanis use Arabic alphabet but they r not arab

    • @NyX060
      @NyX060 Месяц назад

      ​@@wolfRegal0Pakistan is full of Arabs dude tf u talkin about

    • @LuthienwithoutBeren
      @LuthienwithoutBeren Месяц назад +6

      ​@@wolfRegal0Pakistanis don't interest me. Do I have to use the arabic alphabet? What is your matter about us?

    • @BDizzleMySchnizzle
      @BDizzleMySchnizzle Месяц назад +22

      You're also not Roman but are using the Latin alphabet now. What is your point?

    • @Farmalade
      @Farmalade Месяц назад +1

      @@BDizzleMySchnizzle what about you?

  • @Yusufspider42
    @Yusufspider42 Месяц назад +15

    Simple answer: to have closer relations to Europe and the western world

    • @bilgibilgi-nr6sj
      @bilgibilgi-nr6sj Месяц назад

      You don't know our language.Shut up

    • @Apistoleon
      @Apistoleon Месяц назад +9

      You did not even listen the video. Turkish language has never been compatible with Arabic script

    • @Yusufspider42
      @Yusufspider42 Месяц назад +1

      @ because my answer isnt related to the video im just saying what i know

    • @Apistoleon
      @Apistoleon Месяц назад

      @@Yusufspider42 Ottoman Empire already was accepted being part of Europe and the world, before Türkiye. Türkiye did not start this.

    • @Yusufspider42
      @Yusufspider42 Месяц назад +1

      @@Apistoleon yes but changing into the latin alphabet had a big effect aswell

  • @MeinKrampf-33-45
    @MeinKrampf-33-45 17 дней назад +2

    Ich glaube nicht wenn Atatürk all das mit diesem Land gemacht hätte wären sie nicht so weit auf der Welt verbreitet.
    Danke Mustafa Kemal Atatürk

  • @sudebulut6299
    @sudebulut6299 Месяц назад +2

    The changes of alphabet was already discussed in late period of ottomans . I am little bit surprised how people act like Atatürk suddenly came up with the idea .

  • @fes13us
    @fes13us Месяц назад +6

    I thank atatürk very much

  • @europeanlover
    @europeanlover 23 дня назад +10

    Turkey start to be more European than asiatic this is why they should join EU in 2033

    • @cihansaglamoz8589
      @cihansaglamoz8589 18 дней назад

      But can't

    • @hypercar3663
      @hypercar3663 9 дней назад +1

      As a German, I disagree. We shouldn't let a country that sees others as mere Tools in an already broken European Union. Further, Türkiye would have to much power as it would be the most populated country in this entity, making it more difficult to pass important laws as they will Block them with their patriotic and non-scientific reasoning.

  • @LerosMckelly2212
    @LerosMckelly2212 Месяц назад +13

    Using Latin alphabet is way more easier and suitable for Turkish language.

    • @Ki_yunmi
      @Ki_yunmi Месяц назад +3

      No

    • @LerosMckelly2212
      @LerosMckelly2212 Месяц назад

      @ How come ?

    • @akbulutarda472
      @akbulutarda472 Месяц назад +1

      @@LerosMckelly2212 he/she is arabic don't listen to him/her

    • @LerosMckelly2212
      @LerosMckelly2212 Месяц назад

      @@akbulutarda472 I had a chance to learn some turkish for a while and figured out that there is a logic behind it compare to most of languages.So that's why latin is more sutiable.

  • @BurakGirgin-q3f
    @BurakGirgin-q3f 15 дней назад +2

    I am deeply grateful to Atatürk. We remember him with respect.
    Je remercie profondément Atatürk. Nous lui rendons hommage avec respect.
    أنا ممتن جدًا لأتاتورك. نتذكره بكل احترام.

  • @tunahan1296
    @tunahan1296 11 дней назад +3

    Türk dili ile arap alfabesi uyumsuzdur. Türkçe ural-altay dil grubundadır.

    • @ahmetsalih857
      @ahmetsalih857 5 дней назад

      Latin harfleri de Hint-Avrupa dil grubunda olan Latince'ye aittir.Farklı dil grupları aynı alfabelerle ifade edilebilir(mesela Farsça ile Arapça gibi)

  • @atusa909
    @atusa909 Месяц назад +9

    You made a mistake.They did not use arabic script but actually it was Farsi(persian) alphabet,however the alphabet is similar but not the same because Farsi(persian) has four letters more than arabic which are چ،گ،ژ،پ.
    And if paid enough attention you could see that they did have that four letters in their alphabet .
    So they used Fasi(persian) alphabet not arabic.

    • @hassansiddiq455
      @hassansiddiq455 Месяц назад +1

      Persian alphabet is borrowed from arabic

    • @thangri-la
      @thangri-la Месяц назад +8

      farsi alphabet is just another variation of arabic alphabet. iran lost its writing instrument to islam

    • @shadowgod1797
      @shadowgod1797 Месяц назад

      @@thangri-la lol no

    • @edrrj5639
      @edrrj5639 Месяц назад +7

      There is nothing called Persian alphabet. It’s an Arabic alphabet used in the Persian language

    • @shadowgod1797
      @shadowgod1797 Месяц назад +3

      @@edrrj5639 persian alphabet in arabic script know the difference

  • @babylatte4444
    @babylatte4444 10 дней назад +2

    Teşekkürler Atatürk ❤

  • @fy7589
    @fy7589 Месяц назад +9

    I have heard many anti secular people complain about this reform but I can see how it revolutionized the Turkish literature and science development.

    • @codingstyle9480
      @codingstyle9480 Месяц назад

      Because they are for Arab nationalism not knowing what they are after for. Just so stupid.

  • @AchyutChaudhary
    @AchyutChaudhary Месяц назад +21

    *I’m curious why they didn’t adopt the neighbouring:*
    🇬🇷🇨🇾 Greek - Ελληνικά
    🇬🇪 Georgian - ქართული
    🇦🇲 Armenian - հայերեն
    🇧🇬🇦🇿 Cyrillic - Цыриллиц
    *…scripts but instead went with Latin given none of their neighbours used it?*

    • @kaloschke
      @kaloschke Месяц назад +18

      Because the hate the Greek, killed Georgians and Armenians and Cyrillic has no connection there 😂

    • @nenenindonu
      @nenenindonu Месяц назад +14

      Out of those Armenian is the most suitable one for Turkic

    • @swedishnationalist6632
      @swedishnationalist6632 Месяц назад +4

      No azerGAYjan is arabic

    • @LuthienwithoutBeren
      @LuthienwithoutBeren Месяц назад +25

      @AchyutChaudhary Because developed western countries were using the Latin alphabet. To avoid difficulties in communicating with them. I think he talked about this in the video. Why choose other when you can have the best!

    • @Samirustem
      @Samirustem Месяц назад +18

      Azerbaijan also had latin alphabet. It changed few times but during independence it was latin and stayed latin while after being in soviet union

  • @adineatha9766
    @adineatha9766 Месяц назад +20

    Hope they adopt the Old Turkic script written downwards. Would be 👑🧡

    • @PatriotOfPersia
      @PatriotOfPersia Месяц назад +6

      It's Sogdian Script Actually with Aramic Background!!!

    • @islammehmeov2334
      @islammehmeov2334 Месяц назад +9

      @PatriotOfPersia LoL in your SEMITIC GYPSY DREAMS

    • @PatriotOfPersia
      @PatriotOfPersia Месяц назад +2

      @islammehmeov2334
      Said Azerbaijani Clown With Semitic J2 Hapologroup and Arabic Name and Gypsy Lifestyle!!!
      According To " Ilber Ortali " Turkish Historian Gokturk Script is Broken Sogdian Alphabet !!!

    • @Eastern_Egale
      @Eastern_Egale Месяц назад +1

      ​@@islammehmeov2334
      Average IQ in Azergayjan is 80

    • @islammehmeov2334
      @islammehmeov2334 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@PatriotOfPersiaSaid the GEYRAN how is not more than SEMITIC GYPSY with the J1 haplogrup and ILBER ORTAYLI never set that the GOKTURK ALPHABET comes from SEMITIC GYPSY sogdian

  • @OBUnting
    @OBUnting Месяц назад +1

    5:36 the thing is, the literacy percentage of the general population was already in shambles in those times. The mentioned "gap" already existed in a way, practically nothing has changed. You still have to learn the language to read what's written. The Ottoman literacy was already hard to access for the average citizen.
    The old CHP poster shown at 0:26 reads as:
    THE OLD ALPHABET WAS VERY HARD
    THE NEW ALPHABET Has made reading and writing easier.
    The number of schools after the reform has increased.
    National Schools were opened: Old and young, everyone are learning how to read.

  • @Rhythm412
    @Rhythm412 Месяц назад +1

    Wow! We need more creaters like you. You explained this topic in a simple manner discussing reason and their outcomes.

  • @LazieKat
    @LazieKat 7 дней назад +5

    I don't understand why Turks don't just stick to their grounds and just admit it is political. No one is gonna get mad or force them to switch back to Arabic, they have all the right to formulate their language the way they want, but they should be truthful cuz otherwise you will just look uneducated of their own linguistic history and they would just be propagating political arguments as if they were linguistic.
    The "gül, gel, kel" example is incorrect, as g and k use different Arabic letters, and a verb and a noun can never be mistaken together. You wouldn't mistake the word "gone" and "gun" in spoken English. And still, in modern written Turkish the word "yüz" means "hundred", "face", "front", "observe" and more, does that mean Latin is unsuitable for Turkish? All languages have different meanings for the same "word" whether written or spoken.
    The point of vowel based vs consonant based also doesn't apply, because Turkish used its own rules for writing that are different from Arabic, the same way Persian, South Azerbaijani, Kurdish, Urdu and Uyghur all do. They all use Arabic letters but each language has its very own set of rules and phonology. Two of the languages I mentioned are also Turkic. Using diacritics for vowels was also helpful in some scenarios as Turkish vowel harmony is perceived not hardcoded. For example -ler and -lar do not need to be explicitly written as such for a native speaker to know which one is correct, you could write -lr and it would be impossible to use the wrong vowel because only one vowel would flow with the rest of the sentence. Mistaking the vowel is practically impossible for a native speaker.
    Even the lack of literacy was not an effect of the alphabet. The entirety of the middle east had low literacy at the time due to lack of education regardless of the language, and the common Turkish person at the time was a different class from the ruling class and there was a lack of care due to the dying empire. Today, literacy is almost at a 100% for the entire middle east regardless of alphabet.
    As I said, other Turkic languages still use Arabic script to this day and they do not suffer from any of the claimed "difficulties", and people who can read and understand Ottoman Turkish know the language was quite fine. The change was merely political, and that's okay, Turks should embrace their motives. This can be a discussion on its own sure, but, linguistically, using Arabic or Latin or Cyrillic makes no practical difference.

  • @DelustLinoth
    @DelustLinoth Месяц назад +54

    As a born-raised Turkish person, I wish Islam never influenced our land and culture, we would be much more advanced and peaceful nation today.

    • @A_I_N_P
      @A_I_N_P Месяц назад +20

      You would not exist as a nation without islam my beautiful ataturkist fella

    • @StalkerX426
      @StalkerX426 Месяц назад +8

      yeah. I wish all of us oghuzs migrated from urals to ukraine to balkans to anatolia instead of from turkmenistan to iran to anatolia.

    • @İzmir_city_state_republic
      @İzmir_city_state_republic Месяц назад +1

      ​@@StalkerX426
      Lad, it would be way worse. If most oghuz followed upper part like huns in 375s we would start to lose our culture faster. Also slaws would be a greater issue

    • @abdullahiabdisalan1170
      @abdullahiabdisalan1170 Месяц назад +6

      Lol u would be in a tent in Mongolia lol it that was the case

    • @Kimgangze
      @Kimgangze Месяц назад

      What do arab think of Turkic empire​@@abdullahiabdisalan1170

  • @atk61yld
    @atk61yld Месяц назад +14

    I'm a Turk and I learned Ottoman Turkish in one month it's not even hard. But those handwritten records are hard to read you have to train yourself.

    • @user-jz1wz3ts9j
      @user-jz1wz3ts9j Месяц назад +1

      Bad bait, typicial 61..

    • @jamiehope4580
      @jamiehope4580 Месяц назад +5

      Mate I've learned ottoman alfabet from my turkish friends and it was much easier then learning modern turkish.

    • @atk61yld
      @atk61yld Месяц назад +2

      @@jamiehope4580 Actually I already knew Arabic alphabet and learning Ottoman Turkish was easy for me. But you have to know Turkish to understand the Ottoman Turkish. The difference between Turkish and Ottoman Turkish is Ottoman Turkish has old words and you can write some words in a lot of different way. Also writing Arabic and Persian words are different than writing Turkish words. But in Turkish there is only one way to write a word and there is no different writing ways for Arabic and Persian words.

    • @06egekilic
      @06egekilic Месяц назад +1

      ya ben 1 ayimi niye harcayayim osmanli turkcesi ogrenmek icin

    • @user-jz1wz3ts9j
      @user-jz1wz3ts9j Месяц назад

      @@06egekilic 1 ayda da ogrenebilecek bir sey degil yalan soyluyor amk

  • @Yah474
    @Yah474 10 дней назад +2

    None of what you said conveys the factual truths. The fact is that he wants to divorce Turkish people from accessing their religious text easily.

    • @OrbayOguz
      @OrbayOguz 9 дней назад +1

      Don't worry, they don't read it anyway 🤣

    • @OrbayOguz
      @OrbayOguz 9 дней назад +1

      Reading was %5 in Ottoman Empire.

    • @alperbasiyor
      @alperbasiyor 8 дней назад

      lmao just shut up. Writing Turkish with Arabic alphabet and reading Arabic text is not the same thing. You are pathetic.

    • @ahmetsalih857
      @ahmetsalih857 5 дней назад

      ​@OrbayOguz The low literacy rate during the Ottoman period has nothing to do with the difficulty of Arabic letters. In those years, the literacy rate was low all over the world. In addition, since most of the educated people were martyred in World War I, the literacy rate remained low compared to the period. Instead of educating the people, the Kemalists were busy imposing Western culture on the people. The reason for the high literacy rate in Turkey today is not the Latin alphabet, but the conditions of the developing world. Because in the 1960s, Turkiye was still one of the countries with the lowest literacy rate.

    • @alperbasiyor
      @alperbasiyor 5 дней назад

      @@ahmetsalih857 You've got to be kidding me, ahaha. You don't even know your own history, man. Most people who are interested in history know the difficulties in writing Turkish words with Arabic letters. Even 2nd Abdülhamid II made efforts to switch to Latin letters due to problems such as disagreements in communication within the army and the state during his period. While the Turkish language requires 8 vowels, there are only 3 vowels in the Arabic alphabet. You should do better research. Also, without Kemalists you wouldn't have such a modern republic right now. You're one of those guys who think you're from the Ottoman dynasty.😂😂

  • @borabingol6797
    @borabingol6797 4 дня назад

    A very interesting detail... Ataturk wrote a book with the title Geometry. He invented most of the basic geometry terms in Turkish by himself. For example, angle was called "zaviye" in the Ottoman dialect, but he invented "açı" form aç- (to open, to relieve). He was a military genius, he was a revolunist, but it is hard to describe him as a whole, he was something else above all those.

  • @e9mer
    @e9mer Месяц назад +5

    3:37 The reason for the places appearing red in this section was the Kurdish population there.

  • @ugur4511
    @ugur4511 Месяц назад +7

    The Latin alphabet originally belongs to the Latins in Italy. The Latin alphabet has no connection with the people of Germanic or Celtic origin. The Germens and Celts were barbarians in the eyes of the Latins.

  • @evrenerakcora3432
    @evrenerakcora3432 Месяц назад +22

    One of the greatest man of all time.

  • @ThymeHere
    @ThymeHere 4 дня назад +1

    1MO
    3,5K L
    2,3K C
    110K S
    112 517 V
    DEC 19 2024

  • @mussajavdan8203
    @mussajavdan8203 Месяц назад +14

    Hello
    .I am Iranian. Persian is my mother tongue . I have studied six different languages .So i know what Iam talking about. It is true with the indo thing you said of course. I never said Arabic and Persian are the same at all. But the modern Persian language have adopted the Arabic scripts and transferred the to a Persian version.Because of that you could express yourself in Persian when writing and speaking in many ways and words and sentence structure all with the same meaning . That's the glory of a rich language

    • @stefanmantov
      @stefanmantov Месяц назад +3

      I am bulgarian, can speak also thurkis, you know - like in Iran some of us in some parts of country from past centuries use to speak some Turkish
      والي بهترين كه كردم با زبان تزركي ، كه بلادم اين بود -فرسي رو خوبب فرسي به ياد كرفتم. ثروتمند يك زبان است ، با تاريح و
      شعرها زيباي بي نظير

    • @shadowgod1797
      @shadowgod1797 Месяц назад

      @@stefanmantov درود بر شما دوست گرامی

    • @TurguhanAlp
      @TurguhanAlp 23 дня назад

      ​@@stefanmantov Your immigrant friends love to exploit countries

  • @sefakaragoz7159
    @sefakaragoz7159 Месяц назад +12

    Ataturk got education level of Turkish people increased inside of short time. If I can do master today, this is thanks to great Ataturk. 🙏🏻

  • @Hashemaljarah1
    @Hashemaljarah1 Месяц назад +6

    I expect that the reason for changing the alphabet is only Westernization, and by the way, the education system in Turkey that Ataturk adopted is the same one that raised the rates of reading and writing. For example, in my country, Jordan, the reading rate did not exceed 10%, and during the reign of King Abdullah I, the reading rate rose to 50%. This means that it was possible to adopt a good and serious education system in the Ottoman Empire and illiteracy could have disappeared.

    • @whQQps
      @whQQps Месяц назад +2

      In 1926, a congress was held in Baku with the participation of representatives from all Turkish states.. At this congress, the Latin alphabet was chosen as the most suitable alphabet for the Turkish language. The transition to the Latin alphabet was approved in all Turkish states, including those occupied by Russia at that time. After 2 years of preparations, the Republic of Türkiye switched to the Latin alphabet in 1928.
      Our transition to the Latin alphabet has nothing to do with the West. On the contrary, it's purpose is to ensure cultural unity with the Turkish Communities in the East.

    • @Hashemaljarah1
      @Hashemaljarah1 Месяц назад

      @hakant.7242 why didn't you develop the Arabic letters themselves or go back to the old Turkish letters, Wouldn't that have been better?
      Also Question: What is the name of the conference? Baku Conference or what exactly? Because I searched for it and didn't find it.

    • @ozan7427
      @ozan7427 Месяц назад +2

      Arabic is hard and needless for Turks. Latin suited better. Not the mention bunch of translation mistakes when writing with arabic alphabet

    • @Hashemaljarah1
      @Hashemaljarah1 Месяц назад +1

      @ozan7427 This is not true. The Arabic alphabet is not difficult, but to be fair we do not have many vowels like Latin and perhaps this is what makes it difficult for languages ​​that use Arabic letters, But there are many attempts to add new vowels to the Arabic letters, most of which were Ottoman attempts that could have been used, but no one

    • @ozan7427
      @ozan7427 Месяц назад +1

      @@Hashemaljarah1 Latin comes from aramaic like Orkhon inscriptions which are Turkic comes from aramaic too. Its very hard to write in arabic alphabet and there is translation mistakes in shop ownership etc.

  • @damlatorun6756
    @damlatorun6756 26 дней назад +2

    1: We’re not arabs (this is a joke, I don’t mean to offend anyone)
    2: words with similar sounds and letter counts become indistinguishable from eachother with arabic script.
    3: arabic script is difficult to learn, and in order to increase literacy rates Atatürk opted for an easier (and more commonly used) alphabet.

    • @amronemhb
      @amronemhb 19 дней назад

      Not surprising if you want to offend Arabs and Arab speaking, you can rather edit it without offence

  • @StomachAcid
    @StomachAcid Месяц назад +1

    I found this so interesting! Sending love from the US!

  • @nazenin235
    @nazenin235 Месяц назад +3

    Atam sen çok yaşa

  • @thenotoriousman712
    @thenotoriousman712 Месяц назад +8

    When the age group of 15-29 years is included;
    (in Turkiye)
    43% - Those who identify as "religious".
    45% - Those who describe themselves as "not religious, but believers".
    5% - Those who identify as "sophisticated". (Extremely religious)
    4% - Those who identify as "non-believers".
    4% - Those who identify as "atheists".

    • @alpertunga6792
      @alpertunga6792 Месяц назад +5

      In 2024, the rate of Turkish youth who define themselves as secular is 95%. Even the middle-aged group that defines itself as religious actually lives secularly. If we consider the entire population, 80% of the country lives secularly. Turkish society is a secularized society, even if it does not accept it. (My personal opinion as a Turk)

    • @januszlepionko
      @januszlepionko Месяц назад

      @thenotoriousman : 43+45+5+4+4=101 Either your data is corrupt or you are bad in adding whole numbers.

    • @pouyajabbari3912
      @pouyajabbari3912 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@januszlepionkoIt's called rounding, you learn it in elementary school...

    • @januszlepionko
      @januszlepionko Месяц назад

      @@pouyajabbari3912 If you use percents, and you round numbers in a way the sum of those percents goes beyond the value you derive percents from (like here), you are using wrong way of rounding. Period. Because there are many methods of rounding, and not all are applicable in the same situations.

    • @pouyajabbari3912
      @pouyajabbari3912 Месяц назад +1

      @@januszlepionko Just because you think it's wrong doesn't make it wrong.... if for example you have 7.5% and 32.5% then in many cases you say 8% and 33%, even though really they should add up to 40% but could also be 41% if you had rounded. So the point is that you should concentrate on the subject and statistics rather than small details. It's not like the number add up to 150%!!!

  • @maxsoloman4548
    @maxsoloman4548 Месяц назад +13

    Thank God for Kemal Atatürk!