The Turkish élite have long felt uneasy about the connotations in English of the name Turkey. Its association with the large North American bird typically served for dinner at Thanksgiving has been a perpetual sore point.  Moreover, TRT World, Turkey’s English-language TV channel, recently pointed out that “turkey” in English is also slang for a theatrical flop and a stupid person.

The name is derived from the medieval Latin “Turchia,” and for hundreds of years the Ottoman empire was also commonly referred to in English as Turkey or the Turkish empire. The 1923 Treaty of Lucerne, which formalized the breakup of the old Ottoman empire, saw the birth of a new state which adopted the name “Türkiye Cumhuriyeti,” translated in English as the Republic of Turkey.

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