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The Best Ever Book of Turkish Jokes: Lots and Lots of Jokes Specially Repurposed for You-Know-Who

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In 2020, an application to include "Telling tradition of Nasreddin Khoja" in the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list was jointly submitted by the governments of Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Turkey and Turkmenistan. [6] Origin and legacy [ edit ] Part of a series on Islam

Turkish: Nasreddin Hoca, Ottoman Turkish: نصر الدين خواجه, Nasreddīn Hodja, Persian: خواجه نصرالدین, Pashto: ملا نصرالدین, Arabic: نصرالدین جحا / ALA-LC: Naṣraddīn Juḥā, Urdu: ملا نصر الدین / ALA-LC: Mullā Naṣru l-dīn, Uzbek Latin: Nosiriddin Xo'ja, Bosnian: Nasrudin Hodža, Albanian: Nastradin Hoxha, Nastradini, Romanian: Nastratin Hogea This phrase describes a person who doesn’t like to work and wants everything comes ready and done for themselves. 9. Kafayı üşüttü Play This phrase means that you take the farthest and most difficult way to do something while there is a much easier way. 18. Ense yapmak PlayThis phrase is used when the acts of someone will not be approved even if he does the miracles. 16. Balık kavağa çıkınca Play Naqvi, Hassan (6 February 2016). "Problems with privatisation". Pakistan Today . Retrieved 14 February 2016. Once There Was, Twice There Wasn't: Fifty Turkish Folktales of Nasreddin Hodja, adapted by Michael Shelton. Boston: Hey Nonny Nonny Press, 2014

Aya baktım seni gördüm, sana baktım ayı gördüm — “I looked at the moon and saw you; I looked at you and saw a bear.” This is a playful pun that reveals Turkish attitudes toward bears. Calling someone a bear ( ayı) is a good way to let them know that they’re a big, dumb ogre. a b "Nasreddin Hoca". Republic of Turkey Ministry of Culture and Tourism. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 . Retrieved 28 December 2006. Afandi or Afanti originates from Turkish "Efendi" ( Effendi) and this is a title still used to show respect in Turkey. The combination "Hoja Efendi" is used in Turkey very often for the Muslim scholars in modern times as well. The word "Efendi" is ultimately derived from Greek "Authentes" (αὐθέντης) into Turkish. "Nasreddin Hoja Efendi" was shortened as "Efendi" in time. Subsequently "Efendi" happened to be the proper name as "Affandi" in Central Asia for Nasreddin Hoja.

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This phrase describes the parent’s love for their first child, so the child won’t be jealous of their younger siblings. 11. Güle güle gidin Play SENSEX (15 February 1977). "Ranga Shankara to provide professional help to amateur theatre companies in Karnataka". The Economic Times . Retrieved 14 February 2016.

Nobody likes sad goodbyes, right? Turks do the farewell in the best way possible by saying this phrase to departing visitors. 12. Güle güle kullan Play Why did the Turkish chef go broke? Because he always gave his customers a “Kurban for their money”! In Greek mythology, Chiron was half man, half horse. He had knowledge and wisdom in medicine. You could say he was the centaur for disease control.Donald Haase, ed. (2008). The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Folktales and Fairy Tales. Vol.2: G–P. p.661. ISBN 978-0-313-33443-6. First Iranian Mullah who Was a Master in Anecdotes". Persian Journal. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 . Retrieved 26 July 2009. Many peoples of the Near, Middle East, South Asia and Central Asia claim Nasreddin as their own ( e.g., Turks, [19] [9] [20] [21] Afghans, [20] Iranians, [19] [22] and Uzbeks). [10] His name is spelt in a wide variety of ways: Nastradin, Nasrudeen, Nasrudin, Nasruddin, Nasriddin, Nasr ud-Din, Nasredin, Nasiruddin, Naseeruddin, NasrEddin, Nastradhin, Nasreddine, Nastratin, Nusrettin, Nasrettin, Nostradin, Nastradin (lit.: Victory of the Deen) and Nazaruddin. It is sometimes preceded or followed by a title or honorific used in the corresponding cultures: "Hoxha", "Khwaje", "Koja", " Hodja", "Hoja", "Hojja", "Hodscha", "Hodža", "Hoca", "Hocca","Hooka", Akşehir Belediyesi - Nasreddin Hoca Şenliği". aksehir.bel.tr. Archived from the original on 17 August 2011. Welcome to a light-hearted collection of jokes that playfully highlight various aspects of Turkish culture. Humor knows no boundaries, and these jokes aim to entertain while embracing the rich heritage and traditions of Turkey.

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