Merhaba! I have some problems with word order. I know that Turkish's word order: Subject + object + verb rule, but what about direct object, indirect object, adverb? Adjectives are always before the nouns. I am very struggling with Turkish word orders and suffixes. The suffixes are sometimes confusing me. For example, possessive pronouns and accusative case look the same (third person singular) Kitabı gördüm = I saw the book, but I saw her/his book. It is confusing me. There are also problem wıth other suffixes.
In regard to suffixes or endings, most of the things are understood from the context. For example, when you say “kitabı" it means his/her book alone. If you say “kitabı gördüm", here "gördüm" (I saw) necessitates that kitabı is accusative case. If you say "kitabı eski", here eski (is old) necessitates that kitabı is possessive (his/her). See more examples below: Evi gördüm = I saw the house. Evi yeni = His house is new. Okulu sevdim = I liked/loved the school. Okulu uzak = His/her school is far.
@@LearnTurkishTheEasyWay I am learning the pronunciation lesson first and then I will look for other videos such as grammar or verb conjugations or sentence constructions or else. I have noticed that you stop making more videos six months ago. There are plenty of your videos to learn. Thank you!
Check out more videos on Turkish grammar below:
Noun Cases: ruclips.net/video/t7UvAk9jdUk/видео.html
Verb to Be: ruclips.net/video/wq9fBrC3NmQ/видео.html
Verb to Have: ruclips.net/video/3iPQNjrVi4U/видео.html
Making Plural: ruclips.net/video/fP3RJfflkfg/видео.html
Sentence Structure: ruclips.net/video/IIkG49DpNMw/видео.html
Simple Past Tense: ruclips.net/video/t0QIYs23Jz0/видео.html
Simple Present Tense: ruclips.net/video/_nRrBSy1LOQ/видео.html
Present Cont. Tense: ruclips.net/video/X7QH13ocRLE/видео.html
Future Tense: ruclips.net/video/DuJnLNzxweU/видео.html
Merhaba! I have some problems with word order. I know that Turkish's word order: Subject + object + verb rule, but what about direct object, indirect object, adverb? Adjectives are always before the nouns. I am very struggling with Turkish word orders and suffixes. The suffixes are sometimes confusing me. For example, possessive pronouns and accusative case look the same (third person singular) Kitabı gördüm = I saw the book, but I saw her/his book. It is confusing me. There are also problem wıth other suffixes.
Have you watched my video on word order in Turkish sentences? It should be in Grammar playlist.
In regard to suffixes or endings, most of the things are understood from the context.
For example, when you say “kitabı" it means his/her book alone.
If you say “kitabı gördüm", here "gördüm" (I saw) necessitates that kitabı is accusative case.
If you say "kitabı eski", here eski (is old) necessitates that kitabı is possessive (his/her).
See more examples below:
Evi gördüm = I saw the house.
Evi yeni = His house is new.
Okulu sevdim = I liked/loved the school.
Okulu uzak = His/her school is far.
@@LearnTurkishTheEasyWay Oh, thank you for this! I hope not to give up! I am challenging this Turkish language.
Any language is a matter of time. Persistence and maximum exposure to language solves everything 😊
@@LearnTurkishTheEasyWay I am learning the pronunciation lesson first and then I will look for other videos such as grammar or verb conjugations or sentence constructions or else. I have noticed that you stop making more videos six months ago. There are plenty of your videos to learn. Thank you!
In Urdu language "bekar means useless"
In Persian, “bikar” means jobless, unemployed, which essentially means a useless person :))
@@LearnTurkishTheEasyWay hahaha yes
Sir in turkish means Un married
Yes, it means single (unmarried) in Turkish