Turko-Tatar
Proper noun A subfamily of the Altaic language family. This term refers to a major branch of languages, often used in linguistic classification to group together the Turkic and Tatar languages. It encompasses a wide range of languages spoken across a vast area from Eastern Europe to Siberia and Central Asia.
The term "Turko-Tatar" is primarily used in academic and historical linguistic contexts to describe this language grouping. * Linguists in the early 20th century often used the classification Turko-Tatar. * The Turko-Tatar languages share certain grammatical features.
- In modern linguistic typology, the term "Turkic languages" is more commonly used than "Turko-Tatar." The older term "Turko-Tatar" is sometimes seen in historical texts or specific scholarly discussions about language family relationships.
- Turkic (adj/n): Pertaining to the Turkic peoples or languages. This is the more contemporary and prevalent term for the language family.
- Modern linguistics prefers the term Turkic languages.
- Tatar (n/adj): Specifically refers to the language of the Tatar people or anything related to them. It is one language within the broader family.
- She is studying the Tatar language.
- Turkic languages: This is the most direct modern synonym for the language family previously labeled "Turko-Tatar."
The term "Turko-Tatar" reflects an older scholarly perspective that grouped these languages together. Contemporary linguistics typically uses "Turkic" as the name for this language family, with Tatar being one of its constituent members. The hyphenated form emphasizes the historical inclusion of both the broader Turkic and the specific Tatar groupings under one subfamily.
- a subfamily of Altaic languages