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Türkischen

Türkischen is the inflected form of the German adjective Türkisch, meaning Turkish. In German, adjectives decline to reflect case, number, and gender, and after definite articles they typically take endings such as -en in plural forms. The form türkischen (lowercase t is standard in normal usage) appears in phrases like die türkischen Städte (nominative plural) or in den türkischen Ländern (dative plural). Capitalized forms such as Türkischen occur mainly at sentence start or in titles for orthographic reasons, but Türkisch is not a separate lexical entry; the ordinary adjective is türkisch.

The Turkish language, called Türkçe in Turkish, is a member of the Turkic language family, specifically the

In German-speaking contexts, Turkish is a prominent minority language due to immigration and diaspora communities. It

Oghuz
branch.
It
is
spoken
mainly
in
Turkey
and
Cyprus,
with
sizable
communities
worldwide.
Modern
Turkish
uses
the
Latin
script
since
1928,
features
agglutinative
morphology
and
vowel
harmony,
and
follows
a
subject–object–verb
word
order.
Standard
Turkish
has
undergone
extensive
language
planning
and
modernization
since
the
early
20th
century,
shaping
its
vocabulary,
orthography,
and
grammar.
The
language
includes
loanwords
from
Arabic,
Persian,
and
European
languages,
reflecting
centuries
of
contact.
influences
German
through
bilingual
speech
and
a
large
number
of
Turkish
loanwords
in
everyday
language,
cuisine,
media,
and
cultural
life.
The
term
Türkischen
thus
functions
within
German
grammar
as
a
typical
inflected
form
rather
than
as
an
independent
linguistic
topic,
while
the
broader
topic
of
Turkish
covers
its
history,
structure,
and
sociolinguistic
presence.