Kurdish - Borat
Borat’s character is introduced as a journalist from Kazakhstan. However, the language used in the 2006 film Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan is not Kazakh or any Turkic language. Cohen, who is Jewish, chose Hebrew as the primary basis for Borat’s speech, along with Polish words and phrases learned from his mother (a Polish-born Israeli). To most global audiences unfamiliar with Hebrew or Slavic languages, the guttural sounds and unfamiliar cadence sounded vaguely "Middle Eastern" or "Central Asian."
"Borat Kurdish" does not exist as a linguistic reality. It is a product of cultural mishearing, online memes, and the human tendency to categorize unfamiliar sounds into known but inaccurate boxes. While harmless as a joke among those who know the truth, repeating it as fact can spread misinformation about a real, vibrant language spoken by millions. So the next time you hear someone say, “Borat speaks Kurdish,” feel free to reply: “Jagshemash – but that’s Polish-Hebrew, not Kurmanji.” For further reading: Compare a clip of Borat speaking with a genuine Kurmanji or Sorani news broadcast. The difference is immediately audible. borat kurdish
Because Kurdish is a prominent Iranian language spoken by a large, stateless population across Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Syria—and is less widely recognized than Arabic or Persian—some viewers mistakenly labeled Borat’s language as "Kurdish." The meme gained traction on early social media platforms and forums, where users shared clips claiming, "Borat actually speaks Kurdish." Borat’s character is introduced as a journalist from