As a turk i heard tungusic is similar turkic languages but i see now words is dont similar do you know what is the similarty (gramer or even odd thing) is some people talking
The similarities are from Turkic, Mongolic, and Tungusic people being in contact for a long, long time, and eventually sharing words. Some similar words are, for example, “I” Evenki: Bi Turkish: Ben, “you” Evenki: Si Turkish: sen. Grammatical similarities are that both Turkic and Tungusic languages are agglutinative and have vowel harmony. These similarities came to light in the 2000s when the theory of Altaic languages was popular among some people, it proposed that the Tungusic, Mongolic, Turkic (and sometimes Japanese and Korean) are one language family, but this has been debunked. People claiming it today usually do so for nationalistic purposes, I’ve seen turkish people call them all “turkic”.
@@northernwindssongs Do you have a source proving that it has been refuted? The linguistics sector is not run by a single authority. If that were the case, Indo-European languages would have already been refuted. I am a Linguist and Altaic Languages have not been refuted. It is sad that people believe unproven information on the Internet. In the branche de structure du langage book published in 2020, Turkic-Mongolian-Tungus Languages were still classified as Altaic Languages
8 in Orok is ʒакпу
As a turk i heard tungusic is similar turkic languages but i see now words is dont similar do you know what is the similarty (gramer or even odd thing) is some people talking
The similarities are from Turkic, Mongolic, and Tungusic people being in contact for a long, long time, and eventually sharing words. Some similar words are, for example, “I” Evenki: Bi Turkish: Ben, “you” Evenki: Si Turkish: sen. Grammatical similarities are that both Turkic and Tungusic languages are agglutinative and have vowel harmony. These similarities came to light in the 2000s when the theory of Altaic languages was popular among some people, it proposed that the Tungusic, Mongolic, Turkic (and sometimes Japanese and Korean) are one language family, but this has been debunked. People claiming it today usually do so for nationalistic purposes, I’ve seen turkish people call them all “turkic”.
@@northernwindssongs Do you have a source proving that it has been refuted? The linguistics sector is not run by a single authority. If that were the case, Indo-European languages would have already been refuted.
I am a Linguist and Altaic Languages have not been refuted. It is sad that people believe unproven information on the Internet. In the branche de structure du langage book published in 2020, Turkic-Mongolian-Tungus Languages were still classified as Altaic Languages