• Tim@lemmy.snowgoons.ro
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    2 days ago

    The Turkish Government decided that they’d like the English translation of their name to be Turkiye, and asked the world nicely.

    The world, for whom it is absolutely no inconvenience whatsoever, went “fair enough, sure.”

    If the majority of people are now writing Turkiye, it just means the majority of people are not utterly wearisome bellends; consider this a rare good news story.

    • ThirdConsul@lemmy.zip
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      2 days ago

      If the majority of people are now writing Turkiye

      Majority? Not really, no. Haven’t seen that outside some lemmings.

    • Ougie@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Timmy, Turkey illegally occupies half of Cyprus since 1974 - to name just one of all the other “nice” things they’re doing - so them “asking the world nicely and the world going fair enough sure” is a feel-good little story you can tell your feeble-minded friends. Then again you sound like a Brit so your country is responsible for all this with your great divide and conquer tactics that fucked the entire world so you might want to keep your mouth shut altogether.

    • pet the cat, walk the dog@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      What you wrote is certifiably wrong. Turkey asked to be called ‘Türkiye’. Note that you didn’t call them the correct name, despite claiming that it’s no bother for you. Because ‘ü’ isn’t a letter of the English alphabet, so the so-called ‘English name’ is not English.

      • Tim@lemmy.snowgoons.ro
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        1 day ago

        I hate to break it to you, but the diaeresis (two-dots diacritic) is, in fact, a standard part of modern English orthography.

        But yes, I was lazy when writing. I’ve slapped myself on the wrist.