i felt like reading in turkish

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 182

  • @alseta19
    @alseta19 11 месяцев назад +173

    as a native turkish speaker lives in istanbul and benefited from your other videos for language learning, you are doing great progress so far ! and don’t worry when grammar gets complicated because we usually make ‘devrik’ sentences and even many turkish student fails in turkish grammar (yep their native language’s grammar!) too. yürü be elysse!!

    • @AKLDHIFOABNDUYSIFLS
      @AKLDHIFOABNDUYSIFLS 7 месяцев назад

      ingilizceni nasıl geliştriyorsun hangi seviyedesin yardımcı olurmusun

    • @alseta19
      @alseta19 7 месяцев назад

      @@AKLDHIFOABNDUYSIFLS hazırlık okudum

    • @sickturret3587
      @sickturret3587 6 месяцев назад

      @@AKLDHIFOABNDUYSIFLS elinizin altında internet var. bedavaya ulaşacağınız yüzlerce kaynak var. kafanıza hiçbir bilgiyi zorla sokamazlar ama çabalayıp öğrenmek isterseniz insanlık tarihindeki en şanslı nesilsiniz, azıcık zorlayın kendinizi de öğrenin. bilginin ya da gücün gökten yağmasını beklemeyin.

  • @kanatsizkanatli
    @kanatsizkanatli 11 месяцев назад +90

    your Turkish accent is insanely good! you will sound native one day! it's really helpful to hear how you study and learn here! i will try this with my Spanish learning.

    • @sickturret3587
      @sickturret3587 6 месяцев назад +2

      yup, her pronunciation skills are suprisingly good. she struggles at the grammar a bit, but it is normal for a non uralic-altaic native speaker. also her translation guide is kinda problematic, it transfered "to allow" as to "to forbid" which sucks when you are memorizing words in a new language.

  • @ninadant
    @ninadant 11 месяцев назад +27

    Yay Turkish content!! I'm also currently learning it and Turkish content from you is great, from tips to boosting my motivation

  • @ryan_Almeida21
    @ryan_Almeida21 11 месяцев назад +38

    If you ever open up a live streaming doing it for hours I'd watch it. I used to think I was slow while reading in German (I'm like an A2) but that's how it really happens: sometimes it takes minutes just to understand a single sentence and maybe weeks or months to wrap your head around a new sentence structure, and showing that to people helps them accept the difficulty of learning a new language and just trust the process.

    • @Αλντιάρ
      @Αλντιάρ 6 месяцев назад

      are you dumb? feels like turkish people barely study in school

  • @lauraisabella03
    @lauraisabella03 11 месяцев назад +52

    I am one of those who wants to learn Turkish thanks to Muhteşem Yüzyıl tv series.🇹🇷

    • @elyssedavega
      @elyssedavega  11 месяцев назад +17

      onu bilmiyorum 🤔

    • @ustarhymes
      @ustarhymes 11 месяцев назад +4

      Watch Dirilis Ertugrul, ten times better

    • @bsh5492
      @bsh5492 11 месяцев назад +3

      Ben biliyorum:) And now I noticed that you, with your long wavy red hair and especially when speaking Turkish, look so much like Hürrem from that series.
      You have super good pronunciation. How about learning Kazakh later, a Turkic language from the Kipchak group? Oghuz ancestors of Turks of Turkey come from southern Kazakhstan. Many people don't know that Turkic people made world history for thousands of

    • @sairkara3552
      @sairkara3552 11 месяцев назад +5

      Hepsi saçmalık kurgu 😂😂😂

    • @lauraisabella03
      @lauraisabella03 11 месяцев назад

      @@sairkara3552 ?

  • @tr.geniussparrow9102
    @tr.geniussparrow9102 11 месяцев назад +12

    9:25 Fun fact
    When you use kış kış , It's means "Shoo!". You can use for animals for "get away from here , Also u can use for people too but It can be rude (Depends on the way you say)
    And I am proud of you too. Keep going learning 💪💪

  • @LearnEnglishwithCamille
    @LearnEnglishwithCamille 11 месяцев назад +10

    As an English native speaker who also speaks Spanish and is learning Turkish, I really enjoyed this. Turkish is not an easy language! You’re doing a great job! 🎉❤

  • @cbekaroglu
    @cbekaroglu 5 месяцев назад +6

    Elysse, Turkish may be a bit hard for you, but SINCERELY I should say that YOUR TURKISH PRONUNCIATION IS PERFECT. My jaw dropped and I am still looking for it! If you master the vocabulary and a little bit of grammar, it will be impossible to tell you from a Turk. Keep that in mind and keep it up!

  • @ozancandemirsk9423
    @ozancandemirsk9423 11 месяцев назад +70

    Yiyecek also means food. Giyecek is clothes, in the same manner. I just realized that it could be so confusing to a foreigner because usually you don’t realize these kind of things unless someone who is learning the language points it out to you 😀 Also the fact that you understood the sentence “Tedbiri elden bırakmıyordu” is very impressive! It is by all means not a simple one.
    Un video divertidísimo, por cierto. Enhorabuena!

    • @erencavdar
      @erencavdar 11 месяцев назад +3

      Türkler bile çoğunlukla etimolojisini bilmiyorken onun bilmesi imkansız gibi bir şey. Ama türkçenin güzelliği de biraz burada işte her sözcük her şeye evrilebiliyor.

  • @ashley8471
    @ashley8471 11 месяцев назад +11

    I’ve been learning Turkish pretty seriously since March 2023 as a native English/Spanish speaker. I was so happy to know the majority of the words you were reading and totally understand you on how many brain cells you’re burning on trying to learn a completely unique language to English lol 😂Unfortunately today I received a comment from my aunt in law saying that “I’m not learning Turkish fast enough” 🤷‍♀️ oh well, I’m going at MY pace and I’m happy with my progress in Turkish 🎉

  • @berryesseen
    @berryesseen 5 месяцев назад +1

    -ecek/-acak means both the future tense suffix and the suffix that makes a noun from a verb to mean "xecek = something to x". For example, pazardan yiyecek aldi. = she bought something to eat (food) from the market. Elma yiyecek misin? = Will (would) you eat an apple? Other examples, giyecek = something to wear. Yapacak = something to do. Yapacak cok is var = there is a lot of work to do. In theory, you can make nouns by combining any verb with -ecek but yiyecek and giyecek are so common that there are no other words for food and clothes to replace with.

  • @КириллЛасточкин-с6ь
    @КириллЛасточкин-с6ь 11 месяцев назад +7

    Finally found to something about Turkish on RUclips! Especially together with this a great moment that I extremely wanna will learn to this a interesting language, and also second reason that's I really love to this a wonderful country together with different amazing places and also famous place with different air balloons that's just a lawless place. So yeah thanks for such wonderful content.

  • @Zuhal_C
    @Zuhal_C 11 месяцев назад +5

    İ am stunned 😳 the sound of your turkish is absolutly insanely correct. You are made for turkish speaking 👏🏻 Aferin Elysee

  • @latinmonsieur
    @latinmonsieur 11 месяцев назад +8

    keep it up! i loved this video, as someone who is also learning turkish at around your level, this was very cool to watch

  • @atheer3290
    @atheer3290 11 месяцев назад +4

    I lovvvve this type of videos where it’s about two languages at the same time.. for me Turkish is waayyyy more better than my Español so I really loved how I gained new vocabularies in two languages at the same time. Thanks!!

  • @PaolaOrtegaZelen
    @PaolaOrtegaZelen 11 месяцев назад +2

    Hi, first of all, I can't describe how much I love your content, it's such a motivation for every person that is involved in this adventure of language learning.
    I’m from Spain and now I’m learning Polish, which is my sixth lenguage, and I’m struggling so much with pronunciation. So I just wanted to share an exercise that I’ve been practicing recently and with which I have improved my level:
    I put a video with transcription in polish so that I can listen the pronunciation as well, then I stop the video on a short sentence and on a document of Drive I turn on the ‘Dictado por voz’ so I can speak out loud and if the tool can understand me, means that I pronounced it well. I hope this could be useful for anyone!
    I wish you the best in all your process of learning.😊😊💜💜💜💜

  • @sinus90
    @sinus90 11 месяцев назад +7

    omg it was so cute seeing your reaction for "tedbiri elden bırakmıyordu" sentence i'm a native turkish speaker but i never realised in that way haha
    your Turkish accent is very good overall
    also daima is not prononuced like "dayma" instead of y, read i like the english "e"

  • @Asy_4
    @Asy_4 11 месяцев назад +6

    You improved your Turkish accent. Go girlll :)

  • @zacharyosinski4214
    @zacharyosinski4214 11 месяцев назад +2

    Enjoyed this! Currently learning Turkish myself. Would love to see more videos like this!

  • @fal8_
    @fal8_ 11 месяцев назад +3

    We want moreeee Turkish reading videos 💖💖💖💖💖💖

  • @leyalyssa
    @leyalyssa 11 месяцев назад +2

    elysseee you did a great job i'd never guess how hard Turkish is actually, now that i think about all the words you kinda mixed up make soo much sense like I've realized how many familiar words we have with completely different meanings 👁️👄👁️ your pronunciation is also great it's so clear love ya great video 👩‍❤️‍💋‍👩💗💗

  • @erencavdar
    @erencavdar 11 месяцев назад +2

    I wrote everything even the little details I noticed. Pls dont try to understand it fully if you get complicated so much. I wanted to show you the logic but bcs of I dont know your level very precisely this is it for now. But one thing I'm sure is you are doing great.
    2:43 kurmak means also setting something up or to build or to create like in turkish some words can mean lots of words in english and also lots of words can mean the same word in english
    2:50 not so important but her şey means everything, it was too hard for me to learn difference between anything and everything in english. In turkish there are not that much of a difference
    3:05 Actually that is a very advanced level grammar there. For keeping the life joy for yourself just know ecek in that doesnt means future tense. You can see some other words like this yiyecek içecek giyecek etc.
    5:35 Also In turkish there are some groups of words and gaining kinda like half new meanings. Is the caution something that could be hold or released? No. But does it makes sense? Definitely yes. You are going to learn deyimler, Mecaz anlamlı sözcükler and understand theese better.
    6:10 Because of Turkish is the intersection point of lots of languages and also old turkic there can be situations like this. Daima probably has arabic origin.
    7:30 nazik means kind.
    8:30 Anlaşabilmek is one of the most complicated examples of Turkish grammar. As I told you at the other comment if you understand the logic of structure you will be very relaxed. You can look this word by anla-ş-abil-mek anla means understand anlaş means understand each other or like communicate anlaşabilmek means can communicate basicly. As I said this one of the hardest examples of Turkish grammar structure and shows how limitless possibilities you can create new words from one origin (anla in this example).
    10:20 You did it really great in this sentence. Maybe one thing I can say is (DO NOT EVER try to understand this fully right now) did you notice the similarity between yakın ve yaklaşık (Close and closely). Yaklaş means get closer.
    11:05 Same with az and azalmak (little and to decrease)

  • @selenathesparklycabbage
    @selenathesparklycabbage 11 месяцев назад +3

    i cant imagine a languagelearninglife without word reference tbh. also this was so cool make more of these!! :D

  • @yusufcnar4307
    @yusufcnar4307 11 месяцев назад +6

    You’re Turkish is pretty. And I believe that one day you will achieve your fluency ❤ Kızım resmen bi harikasın ya.

  • @loraivanova8635
    @loraivanova8635 11 месяцев назад +3

    I just had finished watching an old video of yours about Portuguese when I saw you uploaded a new video about Turkish and I almost screamed out of excitement. 😅 Just like you say that Spanish is your best friend I can say the same about Turkish and Greek. I'm proud of myself because the only word that I didn't know was "tedbir" but let's say I have been learning Turkish for a long time. When you said "Thank you for watching me suffer in Turkish" I felt understood. 😂 Sometimes Turkish is really crazy with its unique logic.

    • @kubrabozdag3084
      @kubrabozdag3084 11 месяцев назад +4

      tedbir is definitely not a beginner level word. Probably that's why you saw it in this video for the first time. Başarılar!

    • @loraivanova8635
      @loraivanova8635 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@kubrabozdag3084 Thank you! The only word that I know for "precaution" is "önlem". From what I read they are kind of synonyms? But yea, I don't think I have ever met the word "tedbir" before. Thanks again. 🖤

    • @ozancandemirsk9423
      @ozancandemirsk9423 11 месяцев назад +7

      Yes, they are complote synonyms! Önlem is a newer word while tedbir is much older and comes from Arabic. After the Turkish Republic has been founded, a lot of new Turkish alternatives to Persian and Arabic words were reproduced. Önlem was one of them but tedbir is also still used pretty frequently.

  • @hhh-vf9eq
    @hhh-vf9eq 11 месяцев назад +5

    Finally some more turkish content ❤

  • @meedlelynn4248
    @meedlelynn4248 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you queen for featuring Sarah bc I am joining her italian book club / following along her reading series because of you!

  • @angelicawhite
    @angelicawhite 10 месяцев назад +1

    Hello from İstanbul, Turkey! Loved ur accent btw keep learning turkish u are doin great!

  • @Whofeeddrogon
    @Whofeeddrogon 11 месяцев назад +2

    yiyecek means literally food but you are right it is the future form of yemek like he/she/it will eat. In Turkish some verbs are just turns into real nouns.

  • @gwchk7
    @gwchk7 11 месяцев назад +2

    Understood almost nothing of the story (I don’t understand Turkish or Spanish), but watched the whole video ❤well done! My take from this is: I should read more !

  • @Cation_bibliophile
    @Cation_bibliophile 11 месяцев назад +2

    Loved this video! I should start reading french too but I always get so disappointed when one word throughout the paragraph passes that I don't understand. I love how you laugh during the process and just have fun, I wish I could do that, instead I would just feel stupid lol

  • @kubrabozdag3084
    @kubrabozdag3084 11 месяцев назад +2

    I'm a native turkish speaker and I'm telling you, you SHOULD be proud

  • @Omeliyaa
    @Omeliyaa 11 месяцев назад +2

    2:58
    Yiyecek means= Food or will eat
    Yemek means= Food or eat

  • @noellematzinger7884
    @noellematzinger7884 11 месяцев назад +3

    I love this, I’m learning Spanish and this is so validating because I read in Spanish and my brain just melts lol 😂

  • @ece9609
    @ece9609 11 месяцев назад +2

    İçeriklerin harika! Dil öğrenirken işime yarayan pek çok uygulamayı sende keşfettim. Teşekkürler Elysse

  • @ozancandemirsk9423
    @ozancandemirsk9423 11 месяцев назад +3

    Here is a list of some words that mean always:
    her zaman, hep, sürekli, daima, mütemadiyen, ebediyen
    And there are more, believe me. The ones except “her zaman”, “hep” and “sürekli” are older and more literary. They come from Arabic.

  • @nsamiyen
    @nsamiyen 11 месяцев назад +7

    Keşke herkes senin gibi azimli olsa 😅

  • @RhiannaVarney
    @RhiannaVarney 9 месяцев назад

    I'm currently learning Turkish and I find your Turkish videos so helpful! Thank you 😊

  • @emreozkokeli
    @emreozkokeli 11 месяцев назад +1

    As a native Turkish person who have to take IELTS UKVI academic 15 days later, I was surprised when I saw your video. I am sure that you take for granted Turkish in terms of its more hard if you compare to certain West European languages. I believe that you, on the other hand, will be successful eventually, if you work in this way.
    Çok güzel konuşuyorsun, başarılarının devamını dilerim. Îyi çalışmalar.🙂

  • @Haplo-san
    @Haplo-san 10 месяцев назад

    I am still watching it and enjoying a lot. The climax of the video brought a tear of joy to my eye. I wish to see more reading sessions. :)

  • @jenndevault741
    @jenndevault741 10 месяцев назад +1

    im not learning turkish but this was really enjoyable to watch, i know u said it felt embarrassing lmfao but i thought it was really nice. when i try to read my italian books i feel very similarly and it was just nice to see someone else do it the same way. def subscribing ☺️

  • @isasaglam7587
    @isasaglam7587 7 месяцев назад

    Watching this video as a native Turkish speaker gives me a lotta pride .knowing ohter people from the ohter countries trying to learn this language . Congrats 🎉

  • @uwja_
    @uwja_ 11 месяцев назад +5

    I love this concept (would love one video like this in German!!). If it’s not too much trouble when editing, it would be nice to have some kind of indicator of where you are currently reading from since the cuts away from the text makes me lose my spot a little bit. 😊

  • @nemaiemoskalia
    @nemaiemoskalia 9 месяцев назад

    I loved this format, thanks for making the video! Turkish is so hard for me, but I'm not giving up)

  • @astragalusson
    @astragalusson 11 месяцев назад +1

    "Yiyecek" is both the future tense of the verb "yemek" (to eat) in 3rd person, like "o elma yiyecek" ("he/she/it will eat apples") and it's also a noun meaning "food" in general, including every type of eating supply, vegetables, fruits, meat, grains, bread, etc... Normally -ecek/acak suffix is the future tense suffix but in a few basic common cases it also produces a noun (or sometimes an adjective) from the root verb. "Yakacak" also means "(something) to burn" which is used for heating supplies like wood, coal, etc... "Giyecek" also means "(something) to wear" which is used for all clothing in general.
    I really liked this video. I wish you could do this an ongoing series and it wasn't emberrassing at all. I like to see English speaking people learning Turkish and understand their approach and potential struggles in the process. When it's your mother tounge it's hard to put yourself into a foreigner's shoes to understand what parts of your own language might be an obstacle or hard to comprehend for them. This was a great example of that for me. I promise to watch every episode if you do this regularly and even I wish I could even help you if ever you needed any.

  • @BILLURE_BOLAT
    @BILLURE_BOLAT 11 месяцев назад +1

    Elysse, first of all, I would like to thank you very much because I am a Turk trying to learn Spanish and I could not find any resources for myself... I found the book you shared and I hope that while you are improving your Turkish, I can also improve my Spanish... I am also improving my English... so there may be some mistakes in the writing. .. I'm trying... I wish you success❤

  • @blablablassss
    @blablablassss 11 месяцев назад +1

    Çok tatlısın ve azmine hayran kaldım ben de ayni senin gibi ingilizce öğrenmeye çalışıyorum 😅 fakat ingilizce çok zor umarım ikimizde bu dillerde gelişiriz❤

  • @eldredsashes
    @eldredsashes 11 месяцев назад +2

    J’aime beaucoup vos vidéos, même quand je n’étudie pas la langue.

  • @elenafari_
    @elenafari_ 11 месяцев назад +1

    me gusta mucho este tipo de contenido, es bien lindo ver de forma realista lo complicado que es aprender un idioma ^^ estoy empezando a estudiar vietnamita con ese método también y me está ayudando bastante

  • @mellyx96
    @mellyx96 10 месяцев назад

    almanca öğrendiğin ve konuştuğun videonun altına yorum yapmıştım şimdi bir de bunu gördüm, kendin ile gurur duyabilirsin cidden müthiş🫶🏼

  • @sarahidioma
    @sarahidioma 11 месяцев назад +2

    OH MY GOSH!!!😭 I love your videos, thank you so much for mentioning me ❤

    • @elyssedavega
      @elyssedavega  11 месяцев назад

      thanks for being awesome!!

  • @elifgilmore
    @elifgilmore 10 месяцев назад +1

    As a turkish I think you re good on this keep going!❤

  • @sorunlarvesorular
    @sorunlarvesorular 11 месяцев назад +1

    as a native Turkish speaker I do feel compelled to tell you that your pronunciation is pretty impressive!!!! keep up the good work, and if you have any questions please feel free to ask, I'd love to help :)

  • @MarAdriatnePC
    @MarAdriatnePC 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for this video, you motivated me to continue reading in my target language even though I still have a long room to learn hahaha Dx

  • @utkuy1537
    @utkuy1537 11 месяцев назад +1

    Very good! A few comments:
    -miş is for unwitnessed events ONLY when it's used alone. "Öğrenmiş" would mean "apparently he learnt", but -mişti is a totally different tense: itsthe pluperfect. "Öğrenmişti" = He had learnt.
    Şüphesiz is pronounced with separate P and H sounds. There is no "PH = F" combo in Turkish. Pronounce them separately.
    Azalmak comes from "az" = little.
    Anlaşmak is the reciprocative of "anlamak" = to understand. So "to understand each other"
    Yiyecek is 'he will eat", but also "food". This is a way to make nouns from verbs. It doesn't exist for every verb, but some common ones are: "içecek" (drinks), "açacak" (bottle opener), tutacak (holder or handle), etc. We also use this form together with "bir şey". You can then use it with almost any verb: "Okuyacak bir şey" = something to read; "izleyecek bir şey" = something to watch. Basically "X-ecek bir şey" = something to X.

    • @eyupcimen
      @eyupcimen 11 месяцев назад

      yazmak istediklerimi yazmişsın teşekkür ederim :)

  • @skyblader
    @skyblader 11 месяцев назад +3

    That was good. And the jokes are fun too :)
    By the way, I don't know the Spanish part but the Turkish translation of the book could have been better.
    For example "Daima yanında silah taşıyordu" could be "Yanında daima silah taşıyordu".etc.

  • @gapag2023
    @gapag2023 11 месяцев назад +1

    I love your Turkish contents ♥

  • @eylul7809
    @eylul7809 9 месяцев назад

    Native Turkish speaker here - it is fun to see some language learning content from the other side (meaning from the Turkish-learner point of view).
    If I could humbly suggest you some studying tips, I would stick to English when it comes to using an interface language, firstly because it is your native language (I assume?) and secondly there seems to be more mistakes or inaccuracies in the translations in other languages e.g. izin vermek ---> to allow but not to forbid
    Another important point would be considering the existence of potential idioms, especially the level in which you were reading in the video would probably contain a ton of them. Actually in general, we use way too many idioms and sayings in comparison to the other European languages, well Italian is another one.
    To your question: Yes, daima is rather literary but we do use it in daily life as well, so not a certain answer in there.
    I hope this helps! Keep up with the good work!

  • @KarelDolgun
    @KarelDolgun 8 месяцев назад

    Hi Elysse! I am Turkish, fluent in English, B2 level in French and recently started learning German and Italian. Your progress is inspiring. Turkish is a difficult language and you seem like you handle it pretty good! Feel free to contact me if you need a practicing buddy. Good luck! 😊

  • @OzkAltBldgCo-bv8tt
    @OzkAltBldgCo-bv8tt 11 месяцев назад +2

    I challenge you to take the Clozemaster 10 languages 10 questions each challenge if you include Turkish I'm certain you'll score high and it'll be a great way to showcase your skills while entertaining and inspiring us.
    Or if you play just a deck of 100 on Turkish on Clozemaster that too would be cool

  • @muberracoban1064
    @muberracoban1064 10 месяцев назад

    as a person who is a native turkish and a fluent eglish speaker, also as someone who is learning spanish, it's the reverse of my mind lol

  • @wesleysneider9112
    @wesleysneider9112 11 месяцев назад +5

    Türkçeyi iyice öğreneceksin bu gidişle, bravo sana.

  • @lichlikefish
    @lichlikefish 10 месяцев назад

    I'm listening to my first audiobook in Spanish and I have to read the pdf in Spanish as well, and I'm also referencing the English audio and text. Wish me luck. Reading in another language is tough.

  • @KULTURKAFASI1
    @KULTURKAFASI1 9 дней назад

    Tebrikler. Çok güzel okuyorsun. Türkçe nin mantığını anlayınca çok kolay olduğunu göreceksin.yakin zamanda harika Türkçe konuşacaksın.eminim.

  • @SuperAykt
    @SuperAykt 11 месяцев назад

    I am happy to see a new video

  • @nono-fo5ls
    @nono-fo5ls 10 месяцев назад

    it is a type of participle. yiyecek: something to eat. giyecek: something to wear. yakacak: something to burn. içecek is probably something that you know, it means drink. so içecek: something to drink :) it is the same structure. i cannot think of many examples really, it is not a productive suffix.

  • @eyupcimen
    @eyupcimen 11 месяцев назад

    Your videos of reading Turkish book is so enjoyable for me. Bu konuda şüphesiz çok iyisin :) hahahah

  • @undomiel86
    @undomiel86 11 месяцев назад

    Elysse, you are a fan of cultural immersion, you should definitely watch “Kızılcık Şerbeti”

  • @aysenurozdemir2500
    @aysenurozdemir2500 11 месяцев назад +1

    not the süt mısır stand NMKCSDBVHDSUWEG I just burst out laughing

  • @yusufbastem5037
    @yusufbastem5037 11 месяцев назад +1

    Hahaha i know im not supposed to but i am laughing my ass off as a native speaker 🤣 you are pretty good tho it is a hard language (word orders, the verbs, mixed vocabulary from different langueges etc) you shuld be proud👏

  • @sidartaylanergun6595
    @sidartaylanergun6595 6 месяцев назад

    You are really smart, Turkish is a difficult language your ability to perceive your mistakes and correct immediately is phenomenal even though you are using a dictionary and translation.

  • @Mr.Subhuman
    @Mr.Subhuman 11 месяцев назад

    This gives you an insight into the difficulties we Turks go through to learn English as a second language. The word order is hell. Once you get a grasp of it, though, it becomes second nature. it's all about getting over the learning curve.

  • @gorend
    @gorend 11 месяцев назад

    Your accent is actually so good. Keep going.

  • @sahinucansoy1881
    @sahinucansoy1881 11 месяцев назад

    Dünyadaki birçok dilbilimci Türkçe için o kadar güzel tarifler yapmıştır ki gurur duymamak elde değildir.

  • @Urlocal123
    @Urlocal123 11 месяцев назад

    Plz go to el salvador (spanish country)
    Their food is sooo good!!
    My mom is from that country
    (In Central America)

  • @mertkursun1342
    @mertkursun1342 11 месяцев назад

    hayatta kalmak : to survive . you are good keep it up :)

  • @mfcobanoglu1
    @mfcobanoglu1 7 месяцев назад

    As s native Turkish I can guarantee you're on a higher intermediate level of Turkish. I mean you got the logic of Turkish sentence structure well. With this progress you'll soon become advanced level. I advise you to study on Turkish idioms because idioms are heavily used in Turkish.
    But the real thing I want to emphasize is your accent is nearly perfect. No doubt you have a good ear to get the pronunciations correct.

  • @myuniyt
    @myuniyt 11 месяцев назад

    You’re making me want to learn Turkish

  • @zetnikoven
    @zetnikoven 11 месяцев назад

    @Elysse Speaks You should careful about level books. For example some books say "intermediate level" but you can check inside and realize that content could be advance level. this reason I stopped reading all spanish level books. Now happy with oly richard's books. Their levels are appropiate. I dont know can you find turkish one.

  • @Vildann_krtl
    @Vildann_krtl 11 месяцев назад

    As a native, your accent damn very good!

  • @fireemblem2770
    @fireemblem2770 11 месяцев назад

    1:39 *pronounces perfectly with good accent* "We're already off to a bad start"

  • @ABC_Guest
    @ABC_Guest 11 месяцев назад +1

    I totally relate to this, as someone who tried learning Azerbaijani a few months ago (the languages are very similar). The word order & cases are so hard to get used to, but it feels great when you actually get it.

    • @ismayilhajihasanov7328
      @ismayilhajihasanov7328 11 месяцев назад

      Hi there. What is the your native language? I'm native Azerbaijani speaker, maybe we can do language exchange.

    • @ABC_Guest
      @ABC_Guest 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@ismayilhajihasanov7328 English is my most proficient language, but I grew up in a Russian-speaking family. Unfortunately I wouldn't be a good language exchange partner, since I'm pretty shy & have mostly stopped learning Azerbaijani - I visited Baku a few months ago (it was great!). Wish you the best of luck though!

    • @ismayilhajihasanov7328
      @ismayilhajihasanov7328 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@ABC_Guest Thanks for the prompt reply. Good to know. Wish you all the best.

  • @erencavdar
    @erencavdar 11 месяцев назад

    Hskxhsixhsixhsixbsibdeixbsi çok çok özür dilerim ama nedenini bilmediğim şekilde Türkçede acı çekmenden çok keyif alıyorum. Kanalını Almanca videolarından takip etmiştim ve şimdi bu videoları izlemek çok eğlenceli. Bu arada gerçekten çok ilerlemişsin ve bazı şeylerin mantığını oturtmaya başlamışsın. Bundan sonrası daha kolay olabilir bir süre özellikle ekleri anladığında her şey daha kolaylaşacak.

    • @TREBUSHANYY
      @TREBUSHANYY 11 месяцев назад

      Sadist misin? QWEQWE:F

  • @mardukgames4535
    @mardukgames4535 11 месяцев назад

    You are doing perfect

  • @enesa6489
    @enesa6489 7 месяцев назад

    Your Turkish accent sounds so good. You sound like a person who grew up in a Foreign countries with Turkish Parents.

  • @nurversace1930
    @nurversace1930 11 месяцев назад

    your pronounciation is very on point

  • @taexjjn7293
    @taexjjn7293 11 месяцев назад +1

    Hi, your Turkish pronunciation is very good. I speak English without an accent because I hear it everywhere, but since I want to learn different languages, how can I learn it well without an accent and with well pronunciation? how did you learn? Because for example Russian or Norwegian there are not as many resources as English and how can I learn it with a native accent ? for improve to prononciation you can watch turkish dramas but for norwegian and russian there is not much good movies or shows to watch to improve the language. Also I want to learn french, maybe then italian too.

  • @berkaysen2246
    @berkaysen2246 Месяц назад

    You‘re doing so good in Turkish😅 I am a native speaker. Some points you are almost sounding like a native 😅 Congratulations.

  • @enesay-v5w
    @enesay-v5w 16 дней назад

    birçok türkten daha iyi bir açılış yapmışsın. tebrik ederim

  • @pierreabbat6157
    @pierreabbat6157 11 месяцев назад

    I recognized a cognate! (when you said the meaning, of course) "Nehir" is from the Arabic cognate of "נהר".

    • @grismuerto
      @grismuerto 11 месяцев назад +1

      that's hebrew

  • @thisismelekk
    @thisismelekk 11 месяцев назад

    Aksanın mükemmel, şok oldum

  • @GeneRauXxX
    @GeneRauXxX 11 месяцев назад +6

    6:40 Amerika'da çok silah var. (Silahlar demene gerek yok, çok derken çoğul olduğu belli oluyor zaten)
    You don't have to say plural of Silah, it is already obvious from "çok" that you are referring multiple items.

    • @elyssedavega
      @elyssedavega  11 месяцев назад +1

      teşekkür ederim!!

    • @hhh-vf9eq
      @hhh-vf9eq 11 месяцев назад +2

      Yes actually this is always the case! Insanlar vardı, çok insan vardı. 3 elma, 2 bebek (not elmalar ör bebekler). If i am not mistaken

    • @GeneRauXxX
      @GeneRauXxX 11 месяцев назад

      yeah that's the most common mistake, I do the opposite of it when I speak English. I always say for example "give me two cookie" or "I see two car" - now I am saying the correct ones but it was a challenge for me and for other Turks as well. @@hhh-vf9eq

    • @ozancandemirsk9423
      @ozancandemirsk9423 11 месяцев назад +1

      I was going to point out to the same thing. In Turkish, the words after the plural adjectives are always singular. Same with numbers. “Dört kalem”, not “dört kalemler”. (There are some classic book or story names such as Üç Silahşörler, Kırk Haramiler vs., if you come across them, dont’t mind them; they are the exceptions.)

  • @kd6gs
    @kd6gs 6 месяцев назад

    You sound like using a Turkish accent while speaking English which is cute ❤

  • @brunomoura7719
    @brunomoura7719 11 месяцев назад +2

    ❤❤❤

  • @هديل-ض3ث
    @هديل-ض3ث 11 месяцев назад

    Kız harikasın ya😍😍😍

  • @melikeerf
    @melikeerf 11 месяцев назад

    başta Türksün sandım, Türkçen bir harika!

  • @koseku3
    @koseku3 11 месяцев назад

    as a turk its also very hard to switch to english for me because sentence order is completely different

  • @mumtazdurmaz88
    @mumtazdurmaz88 7 месяцев назад

    Your turkish prononciation is so good that makes one wonder if you had turkish background somehow. You have almost no accent!

  • @blablablassss
    @blablablassss 11 месяцев назад

    Türkçen çok iyii tebrik ederim sadece biraz aksanlı ama bu çok normal ❤

  • @canalklyn5770
    @canalklyn5770 11 месяцев назад

    Hi I'm from Brazil I'm learning english by myself its hard for me help me please