Turkish-Kurdish social setting where the Turkish and Kurdish languages are in contact for a long time induces borrowing and change at different levels.This study explores the contact between Kurmanji Kurdish and Turkish that take place at both morphological and lexical level. The data consist of three hours of recordings of family talks on the phone. Corpus analysis of data obtained from audio and video recordings of a family talk on the phone was done. Preliminary findings revealed that verbs are borrowed from Turkish and then integrated into Kurdish. The changes that Turkish borrowed verbs undergo include the integration process of morphological elements and the combination of verbs with light verbs (kirin, bun) in Kurdish. The change tha...
This article provides a comparative overview of phonological and phonetic differences of Mukrī Kurdi...
This is a presentation on language contact phenomena in Turkish with a focus on lexical borrowing
Turkey (cf. The Ethnologue). It is divided into several dialects some of which are sometimes regarde...
Exploring interaction among Kurdish speaking family members, this paper investigates the use of disc...
This chapter provides an overview of the influence of Arabic on Kurdish, especially on its Northern ...
Language is in the process of change in the course of time. Most of the languages have taken several...
Classified as an endangered language, the Laz language is spoken in a restricted area by a small num...
Abstract This thesis explores the nature of Arabic lexical borrowing in Central Kurdish (CK) from...
This study explores language shift and interregional migration among Turkey’s Kurdish-origin populat...
This study explores language shift and interregional migration among Turkey’s Kurdish-origin populat...
This paper analyzes the way loan verbs from a single donor language (family), Oghuz Turkic, are acco...
From Asia Central to Anatolia, contact between Iranian and Turkic languages covers a large geographi...
The current study is a diachronic study of the use of English loan words in Kurdish political discou...
This study places special emphasis on socio-linguistic and language-contact phenomena. It concerns, ...
This paper investigates effects of language contact on a previously undocumented variety of Turkic (...
This article provides a comparative overview of phonological and phonetic differences of Mukrī Kurdi...
This is a presentation on language contact phenomena in Turkish with a focus on lexical borrowing
Turkey (cf. The Ethnologue). It is divided into several dialects some of which are sometimes regarde...
Exploring interaction among Kurdish speaking family members, this paper investigates the use of disc...
This chapter provides an overview of the influence of Arabic on Kurdish, especially on its Northern ...
Language is in the process of change in the course of time. Most of the languages have taken several...
Classified as an endangered language, the Laz language is spoken in a restricted area by a small num...
Abstract This thesis explores the nature of Arabic lexical borrowing in Central Kurdish (CK) from...
This study explores language shift and interregional migration among Turkey’s Kurdish-origin populat...
This study explores language shift and interregional migration among Turkey’s Kurdish-origin populat...
This paper analyzes the way loan verbs from a single donor language (family), Oghuz Turkic, are acco...
From Asia Central to Anatolia, contact between Iranian and Turkic languages covers a large geographi...
The current study is a diachronic study of the use of English loan words in Kurdish political discou...
This study places special emphasis on socio-linguistic and language-contact phenomena. It concerns, ...
This paper investigates effects of language contact on a previously undocumented variety of Turkic (...
This article provides a comparative overview of phonological and phonetic differences of Mukrī Kurdi...
This is a presentation on language contact phenomena in Turkish with a focus on lexical borrowing
Turkey (cf. The Ethnologue). It is divided into several dialects some of which are sometimes regarde...