>>8647900Acually you do, bozgor.
A whole sentence can be derived of the similarity between the two languages. "Zsebemben sok kicsi alma van" in Hungarian, would be "Cebimde çok küçük elma var" in Turkish. The linguistic concept of "there is/there are" is represented with a single word (van/var) only in Turkish and Hungarian. The number of similar words are too many to count here, but some examples are sok/çok, kicsi/küçük, alma/elma, balta/balta, kec/keçi (that's me lol!), zsep/cep, ki/kim, szaz/yüz, and thousands of others.
There is also vowel harmony in both languages, and the ways to conjugate possessive pronouns and tenses are very similar:
almam (azerbaijani dialect) = almaM = My apple
geldim = jötteM = I came
yaptım =csináltaM = I made
geldik = jöttünK = We came.
yaptık =csináltunK = We made.
The name Turk is also believed to have derived from the Hungarian word török (kırık in Turkish, what a coincidence, similarity again!) by some scholars as Turks used arrows with broken tips in wars on purpose.