VOICE CATEGORY OF THE VERB IN OGUZ DIALECTS

Authors

  • Aynur Murad gizi Namazova Phd student of ASPU, of the Department of Modern Azerbaijani Language, Azerbaijan Author

Keywords:

Oghuz dialects, Turkic languages, verb, voice category

Abstract

The voice category of the verb is considered by some researchers as the status of the verb either in relation to the subject and object, in relation to the subject, or in its relationship with the subject and complements. Some researchers do not consider voice as a separate category in Turkish, but as verb-forming suffixes. Although formation is not a subject discussed in Oghuz dialects, the formation feature of verbs is common to Oghuz dialects. In Oghuz dialects, verb roots differ from noun roots. While noun roots take all kinds of derivational suffixes, verb roots can also take suffixes that concern the sentence, in addition to these suffixes that nouns take. In almost all of the scanned sources, verbs are classified according to their structures and verbs are classified according to their structures; It is mostly discussed by dividing into three groups: simple, derived and compound. For Oghuz dialects, simple verbs have similar features.

References

1. Dogan Aksan (2000), Yesterday, today and tomorrow of the Turkish people, Bilgi Yayinevi, Ankara, p. 29.

2. Dogan Aksan (2004), Linguistics, Linguistics and Turkish Scripts, Multilingual Publications, Istanbul, p. 203.

3. Dogan Aksan (2014), In the footsteps of the ancient Turkic language, facts illuminated by lexicological, semantic and morphological studies of Orkhon and Yenisei inscriptions, Bilgi Yayinevi, Ankara, p. 17

4. A.Bican Ercilasun “The Turkish Language from History to the Future,” Journal of Turkish Language, Language and Literature, May 1999, No. 569, p. 355-362

5. Andre Martinet (Trans. Berke Vardar) (1998), DILBİLİM, Functional General Linguistics, Multilingual Publications, Istanbul p. 55

Published

2024-10-29

How to Cite

Aynur Murad gizi Namazova. (2024). VOICE CATEGORY OF THE VERB IN OGUZ DIALECTS. IQRO INDEXING, 12(01), 252-253. http://worldlyjournals.com/index.php/IFX/article/view/6670