Thanks for your report.

This is actually due to an issue in the installer. For cases when you
install Ubuntu without an internet connection, the installer always
creates a directory in /usr/share/locale-langpack for the selected
language, so you get prompted in the session to install the complete
language support.

The problem is that a directory is also created in /usr/share/locale-
langpack for the locale which denotes regional formats. So when the
selected time zone location results in some other initial locale for
regional formats than the locale for the selected language, a redundant
directory is created - in your case /usr/share/locale-langpack/tr . IMO
the installer should be changed to not create that directory.

@Usama: To fix it for yourself, and get rid of the 'semi-installed'
language, you can delete the /usr/share/locale-langpack/tr directory.
Alternatively you can accept to install the missing language support.
Then it should be marked as installed in the Language Support tool, and
you can delete it the normal way if you like.

** Package changed: language-selector (Ubuntu) => ubiquity (Ubuntu)

** Changed in: ubiquity (Ubuntu)
   Importance: Undecided => High

** Changed in: ubiquity (Ubuntu)
       Status: New => Confirmed

** Summary changed:

- Language support installed because of keyboard choice but not checked in 
installed languages
+ Locale for regional formats should not be treated as an incompletely 
installed language

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1532519

Title:
  Locale for regional formats should not be treated as an incompletely
  installed language

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