User:BassHelal/Notes Turkish

Turkish
For Turkish we can easily tackle the words from Arabic by using the commonly borrowed forms, these are most commonly nouns with occasional adjectives, verbs are rarer:

For a comprehensive reference on the Arabic forms see https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Appendix:Arabic_verbs

mufail (munasib, muharib, munakis, munafik) iftial (ihtiyac, ihtimal, ixtiyar, intibah, intiqam) filiyye(t) (medeniyyet, belediye, saxsiyyet)

Verbal Nouns &
These exist but are harder to find because they are borrowed in somewhat unusual ways leading to odd pronunciations, particularly inserted vowels. From my observations it is preferred to either use another form leading to a similar meaning, or just a native word.

Passive participle
This is very common

Active participle
Less common but still found, though I notice they are often words that are more well integrated into the language than the passive participle.

Verbal Noun
Unsure about how often this is found, but it's definitely not a unicorn

Active Participle
This is somewhat common, but definitely more dated and eloquent speech and not well integrated

Passive Participle
This is similar to the previous, not too well integrated it seems as the language would rather use native constructs over these

Verbal Noun
Very common, can end with an inserted t or without one

Active participle:
Also quite common

Passive participle:
Haven't seen this very much at all, struggling to even find examples, probably rare

Verbal noun:
Fairly common

Active participle:
Doesn't seem that common, could be wrong

Passive participle:
Struggling to find many examples!

Verbal noun: ‎
I've seen it quite a bit, somewhat common, relatively easy to find though not well integrated into the language because of gemination and thus weird spelling and very foreign pronunciation, the language prefers native words or compound constructs

Active participle:
Somewhat common, easy to find in a dictionary, still suffers from same problems from the verbal noun so most of these are dated or eloquent speech

Passive participle:
Like previous passive participles, this is nowhere to be found

Verbal noun:
Seems somewhat common

Active participle:
Seems not very common

Passive participle:
Seems non existent like other passive participles

Verbal noun:
Quite common, integrates somewhat well into the language too

Active participle:
I don't think this is that common

Passive participle:
Can't even think of many used Arabic words in this form, seems very rare but I actually found one

Verbal noun:
Very common!

Active participle:
Somewhat common

Passive participle:
Seems somewhat not uncommon and integrates well into the language