duyulmasyla
Duyulmasyla is a Turkish neologism used in sociolinguistics and media studies to describe the state or process by which a person’s voice becomes audible and acknowledged within a communicative setting. The term derives from duyulmak (to be heard) plus the noun-forming suffix -ması and the instrumental suffix -yla, yielding a construction that can be understood as “with its being heard” or “through being heard.” In analysis, duyulmasyla emphasizes audibility as a social mechanism that shapes who speaks, how influence is structured, and whose messages are recognized as legitimate.
The concept is applied to examine how attention, reception, and validation affect power in discourse. It is
Duyulmasyla intersects with ideas of voice, visibility, and recognition in the public sphere. Researchers may analyze