Kinda sounds like Hungarian. "Israel is a Middle Eastern country and it is a few km away from Turkey. Looks like you're using new Reddit on an old browser. Still have questions? Hungarian words like anya ("mother"), apa, atya ("father") Turkish ana, anne and ata. Hungarian and Finnish sound alike but different.
Why is "cap'n" the eye-dialect spelling of "captain" when the point is to spell it how it's said but people who say it that way say "cap'm" ? Turkish and Hungarian are typologically similar: They are both agglutinating languages with vowel harmony and rather rich vowel inventories. I've been to Istanbul twice in my lifetime and experienced the Turkish language.But many people think that Turkish sounds more like Hungarian rather than Finnish...what do you think? Germans do say the same thing. Girlfriend says the vowels match Spanish... i'm about to make a compilation of people who have replied to me with this exact comment, you're around #74, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jXfkkxWS6iE here it is. Get your answers by asking now. Press question mark to learn the rest of the keyboard shortcuts. sounds like a plan ~ meaning » DictZone English-Hungarian dictionary. i feel like she is right. Can you understand other Turkic languages? Turkish doesnt have guttural voices like "gh" or "r" that even exists in Dutch and French... Technically, Turkish is a "Middle Eastern" language, as Turkey (or at least most of it) is part of the Middle East, just like Hungarian or Basque are European languages, just not Indo-European languages. I don't think Turkish sounds like Finnish, maybe a bit Hungarian … We have Uygur family friends and if I drone out and don't pay attention word for word it sounds like theyre speaking Turkish. If a Bulgarian person told you that, it was a joke, you probably didn't understand it. Native English speakers, could you please help me with these issues? Turkish belongs to the Turkic language family. they really have specific sounds, but once, a foreigner said to me that we speak fast and the duration between words are really tiny.
Turkish sounds to me, sometimes like Hungarian, sometimes like Armenian, and in the most part of the time, like Iranian, Azerbaidjan and Afganistan... Alexandria Thu Jun 05, 2008 4:29 pm GMT I have a Turkish friend and out of all the languages I have heard, I would say Farsi aka Persian.
i feel like it doesn't sound like a so specific language. They use Cyrillic alphabet for writing in Bulgarian. No clue why. nothing is similar to hungarian, its a very beautiful language. When I was in Hungary, I felt like I was supposed to understand what they're saying because it sounded so familiar. Listen to other Turkic languages. I think foreigners really pick up those "ü" sounds since it's not present in their language.
Kinda sounds like Hungarian. "Israel is a Middle Eastern country and it is a few km away from Turkey. Looks like you're using new Reddit on an old browser. Still have questions? Hungarian words like anya ("mother"), apa, atya ("father") Turkish ana, anne and ata. Hungarian and Finnish sound alike but different.
Why is "cap'n" the eye-dialect spelling of "captain" when the point is to spell it how it's said but people who say it that way say "cap'm" ? Turkish and Hungarian are typologically similar: They are both agglutinating languages with vowel harmony and rather rich vowel inventories. I've been to Istanbul twice in my lifetime and experienced the Turkish language.But many people think that Turkish sounds more like Hungarian rather than Finnish...what do you think? Germans do say the same thing. Girlfriend says the vowels match Spanish... i'm about to make a compilation of people who have replied to me with this exact comment, you're around #74, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jXfkkxWS6iE here it is. Get your answers by asking now. Press question mark to learn the rest of the keyboard shortcuts. sounds like a plan ~ meaning » DictZone English-Hungarian dictionary. i feel like she is right. Can you understand other Turkic languages? Turkish doesnt have guttural voices like "gh" or "r" that even exists in Dutch and French... Technically, Turkish is a "Middle Eastern" language, as Turkey (or at least most of it) is part of the Middle East, just like Hungarian or Basque are European languages, just not Indo-European languages. I don't think Turkish sounds like Finnish, maybe a bit Hungarian … We have Uygur family friends and if I drone out and don't pay attention word for word it sounds like theyre speaking Turkish. If a Bulgarian person told you that, it was a joke, you probably didn't understand it. Native English speakers, could you please help me with these issues? Turkish belongs to the Turkic language family. they really have specific sounds, but once, a foreigner said to me that we speak fast and the duration between words are really tiny.
Turkish sounds to me, sometimes like Hungarian, sometimes like Armenian, and in the most part of the time, like Iranian, Azerbaidjan and Afganistan... Alexandria Thu Jun 05, 2008 4:29 pm GMT I have a Turkish friend and out of all the languages I have heard, I would say Farsi aka Persian.
i feel like it doesn't sound like a so specific language. They use Cyrillic alphabet for writing in Bulgarian. No clue why. nothing is similar to hungarian, its a very beautiful language. When I was in Hungary, I felt like I was supposed to understand what they're saying because it sounded so familiar. Listen to other Turkic languages. I think foreigners really pick up those "ü" sounds since it's not present in their language.
Kinda sounds like Hungarian. "Israel is a Middle Eastern country and it is a few km away from Turkey. Looks like you're using new Reddit on an old browser. Still have questions? Hungarian words like anya ("mother"), apa, atya ("father") Turkish ana, anne and ata. Hungarian and Finnish sound alike but different.
Why is "cap'n" the eye-dialect spelling of "captain" when the point is to spell it how it's said but people who say it that way say "cap'm" ? Turkish and Hungarian are typologically similar: They are both agglutinating languages with vowel harmony and rather rich vowel inventories. I've been to Istanbul twice in my lifetime and experienced the Turkish language.But many people think that Turkish sounds more like Hungarian rather than Finnish...what do you think? Germans do say the same thing. Girlfriend says the vowels match Spanish... i'm about to make a compilation of people who have replied to me with this exact comment, you're around #74, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jXfkkxWS6iE here it is. Get your answers by asking now. Press question mark to learn the rest of the keyboard shortcuts. sounds like a plan ~ meaning » DictZone English-Hungarian dictionary. i feel like she is right. Can you understand other Turkic languages? Turkish doesnt have guttural voices like "gh" or "r" that even exists in Dutch and French... Technically, Turkish is a "Middle Eastern" language, as Turkey (or at least most of it) is part of the Middle East, just like Hungarian or Basque are European languages, just not Indo-European languages. I don't think Turkish sounds like Finnish, maybe a bit Hungarian … We have Uygur family friends and if I drone out and don't pay attention word for word it sounds like theyre speaking Turkish. If a Bulgarian person told you that, it was a joke, you probably didn't understand it. Native English speakers, could you please help me with these issues? Turkish belongs to the Turkic language family. they really have specific sounds, but once, a foreigner said to me that we speak fast and the duration between words are really tiny.
Turkish sounds to me, sometimes like Hungarian, sometimes like Armenian, and in the most part of the time, like Iranian, Azerbaidjan and Afganistan... Alexandria Thu Jun 05, 2008 4:29 pm GMT I have a Turkish friend and out of all the languages I have heard, I would say Farsi aka Persian.
i feel like it doesn't sound like a so specific language. They use Cyrillic alphabet for writing in Bulgarian. No clue why. nothing is similar to hungarian, its a very beautiful language. When I was in Hungary, I felt like I was supposed to understand what they're saying because it sounded so familiar. Listen to other Turkic languages. I think foreigners really pick up those "ü" sounds since it's not present in their language.
Kinda sounds like Hungarian. "Israel is a Middle Eastern country and it is a few km away from Turkey. Looks like you're using new Reddit on an old browser. Still have questions? Hungarian words like anya ("mother"), apa, atya ("father") Turkish ana, anne and ata. Hungarian and Finnish sound alike but different.
Why is "cap'n" the eye-dialect spelling of "captain" when the point is to spell it how it's said but people who say it that way say "cap'm" ? Turkish and Hungarian are typologically similar: They are both agglutinating languages with vowel harmony and rather rich vowel inventories. I've been to Istanbul twice in my lifetime and experienced the Turkish language.But many people think that Turkish sounds more like Hungarian rather than Finnish...what do you think? Germans do say the same thing. Girlfriend says the vowels match Spanish... i'm about to make a compilation of people who have replied to me with this exact comment, you're around #74, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jXfkkxWS6iE here it is. Get your answers by asking now. Press question mark to learn the rest of the keyboard shortcuts. sounds like a plan ~ meaning » DictZone English-Hungarian dictionary. i feel like she is right. Can you understand other Turkic languages? Turkish doesnt have guttural voices like "gh" or "r" that even exists in Dutch and French... Technically, Turkish is a "Middle Eastern" language, as Turkey (or at least most of it) is part of the Middle East, just like Hungarian or Basque are European languages, just not Indo-European languages. I don't think Turkish sounds like Finnish, maybe a bit Hungarian … We have Uygur family friends and if I drone out and don't pay attention word for word it sounds like theyre speaking Turkish. If a Bulgarian person told you that, it was a joke, you probably didn't understand it. Native English speakers, could you please help me with these issues? Turkish belongs to the Turkic language family. they really have specific sounds, but once, a foreigner said to me that we speak fast and the duration between words are really tiny.
Turkish sounds to me, sometimes like Hungarian, sometimes like Armenian, and in the most part of the time, like Iranian, Azerbaidjan and Afganistan... Alexandria Thu Jun 05, 2008 4:29 pm GMT I have a Turkish friend and out of all the languages I have heard, I would say Farsi aka Persian.
i feel like it doesn't sound like a so specific language. They use Cyrillic alphabet for writing in Bulgarian. No clue why. nothing is similar to hungarian, its a very beautiful language. When I was in Hungary, I felt like I was supposed to understand what they're saying because it sounded so familiar. Listen to other Turkic languages. I think foreigners really pick up those "ü" sounds since it's not present in their language.
It has also close resemblence to Balkan countries, because I'm from Bosnia and some of the words are the same. Turkish sounds like French, Persian and Greek to me. And Kurdish kind of sounds a little like Russian I think... Rosetta Stone uses Turkish as a demo language. Hungarians are mostly Roman Catholic and Protestant. But I have also heard some of the people from Black Sea talk and then its sounds more like Georgian/Russian or … By structure Bulgarian was a synthetic language but lost the inflection system of the nouns and even an infinitive form of the verbs. No other language sounds like Hungarian! Someone wrote you here they are different... Are you sure you're "a linguistic student"?
Kinda sounds like Hungarian. "Israel is a Middle Eastern country and it is a few km away from Turkey. Looks like you're using new Reddit on an old browser. Still have questions? Hungarian words like anya ("mother"), apa, atya ("father") Turkish ana, anne and ata. Hungarian and Finnish sound alike but different.
Why is "cap'n" the eye-dialect spelling of "captain" when the point is to spell it how it's said but people who say it that way say "cap'm" ? Turkish and Hungarian are typologically similar: They are both agglutinating languages with vowel harmony and rather rich vowel inventories. I've been to Istanbul twice in my lifetime and experienced the Turkish language.But many people think that Turkish sounds more like Hungarian rather than Finnish...what do you think? Germans do say the same thing. Girlfriend says the vowels match Spanish... i'm about to make a compilation of people who have replied to me with this exact comment, you're around #74, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jXfkkxWS6iE here it is. Get your answers by asking now. Press question mark to learn the rest of the keyboard shortcuts. sounds like a plan ~ meaning » DictZone English-Hungarian dictionary. i feel like she is right. Can you understand other Turkic languages? Turkish doesnt have guttural voices like "gh" or "r" that even exists in Dutch and French... Technically, Turkish is a "Middle Eastern" language, as Turkey (or at least most of it) is part of the Middle East, just like Hungarian or Basque are European languages, just not Indo-European languages. I don't think Turkish sounds like Finnish, maybe a bit Hungarian … We have Uygur family friends and if I drone out and don't pay attention word for word it sounds like theyre speaking Turkish. If a Bulgarian person told you that, it was a joke, you probably didn't understand it. Native English speakers, could you please help me with these issues? Turkish belongs to the Turkic language family. they really have specific sounds, but once, a foreigner said to me that we speak fast and the duration between words are really tiny.
Turkish sounds to me, sometimes like Hungarian, sometimes like Armenian, and in the most part of the time, like Iranian, Azerbaidjan and Afganistan... Alexandria Thu Jun 05, 2008 4:29 pm GMT I have a Turkish friend and out of all the languages I have heard, I would say Farsi aka Persian.
i feel like it doesn't sound like a so specific language. They use Cyrillic alphabet for writing in Bulgarian. No clue why. nothing is similar to hungarian, its a very beautiful language. When I was in Hungary, I felt like I was supposed to understand what they're saying because it sounded so familiar. Listen to other Turkic languages. I think foreigners really pick up those "ü" sounds since it's not present in their language.