See also: Young Turk

English edit

 
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Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

Calque of French Jeune-Turc, from which also Turkish Jön Türk has been borrowed.

Pronunciation edit

  • (file)

Noun edit

young Turk (plural young Turks)

  1. (historical) From the late-19th to the early-20th century, a member of a movement that campaigned for reform of the Ottoman Empire.
  2. (idiomatic, by extension) A young person who agitates for political or other reform; a young person with a rebellious disposition.
    • 1885, Horatio Alger, chapter 14, in Hector's Inheritance:
      "What! Roscoe?" inquired the principal.
      "Yes."
      "Is he in any mischief?"
      "Mischief? I should say so! Why, he's a regular young Turk."
      "A young Turk? I don't think I understand you, James."
      "I mean, he's a young ruffian."
    • 1966 September 30, “Jazz: Man with a Brain”, in Time:
      He arrives at a time when jazz's discontented Young Turks have disdainfully turned away from their audiences and gone off to explore the way-out.

Usage notes edit

  • Often used in the plural form.

Translations edit