I'm also learning turkish since 2 years now. I like how the grammar makes so much sense and it made me generally understand grammar easier, so I can learn other languages quicker. The hard part is all the idioms that are used in speech. Also the small details that change the meaning of a sentence.
I am Bulgarian, Russian and Turkish , but I know only the Bulgarian language. This video motivated me to try to learn Turkish.It would be great to know my mother's native language. Also this app looks helpful.
Okay idek why I'm such a fan of this video, I'm not even learning Turkish, but you nailed this 😁 Very cool to see the quality of the stuff you're putting out now, idk just feels like you've really found your stride, loved it, well done! 😄
If anyone is interested in trying out the pro version, wait until Black Friday when they usually have 50%off sale on all their plans. The lifetime plan costs the equivalent of 2 years in this case, so I’d highly recommend it
wow, i'm very impressed with your turkish, your pronunciation is so good and obviously you've made a great progress in such a short time❤ i've been learning english for years and i think it's now time to learn a new language!! i've been wanting to learn german for a long time and i'm pretty sure your videos are gonna be a part of my journey💜
How's your German going?? I just started learning and it's so weird as a native English speaker!! Definitely easier than some other languages though haha
I've had Clozemaster Pro for almost a year now, but I'd never tried creating my own sentences. Using the tool you showed on the video was mindblowing! Thanks for the tip!
You're the reason why i'm saving money to get the full version of clozemaster just so i can make my own set and have it auto create sentences for me! I'll def be using the code you provided too when i do get it!!
Thank you! Teşekkür ederim. I studied Turkish 40 years ago in college (I am that old) and am relearning it now. We just got back from Türkiye and are going back next summerç I have a tutor twice a week but this site is great practice. My tutor will be happy that I have found this other resource. Sağ ol!
I've never expected that you are actually going to learn Turkish. I've been speaking Turkish like over 10 years( cause it is my first language that I had learned, I mean I'm native). Your pronounciation is really good. Keep going
This comment is so funny because I wasn't sure I actually would either! I had the book, I had the desire, but I just had to make a plan. It's working so far! thanks :)
I’ve recently started to use this app for Spanish. I already know the words I’m at rn but it’s been an easy and fun way to keep Spanish going in my mind lately
Yes ne var ne yok is highly used in everyday life. Ne var means = what there’s Ne yok = what’s (there’s) not So it’s more like a deep question about how’s life going
Freaking loved this video! I was just looking for a review of Clozemaster, and thanks to your personality you just got a new subscriber. :) Watching your videos is very fun.
My greetings and big respect to Brazil! 🇧🇷 I really dream about visiting your beatiful country someday. Yet, I make fun English lessons, podcasts and live vlogs 😊 Have a great day! 🙌
@@OzkAltBldgCo-bv8tt Buusu is good, but I don't think it's great for a beginneor of Turkish. If you already have a foundation, it can be great. I've taken classes before, so it's useful for me. I am using Clozemaster and Duolingo, as well, but I am thinking if I should get the Lifetime for Clozemaster.
Loved the video, you're the reason why I use clozemaster, i'm using it for German and French, planning on using it for Russian. Thank you so much for this review, I was thinking about getting the pro version, now I made my mind. Thank you so much 💗🤗
I’m glad I found your channel. 🎉 I am at that phase where I am desperately looking for new resources to expand my Turkish vocabulary list (been learning for 5 months now) Bu çok faydalı olur. Tavsiye için teşekkürler!
hey i might be a little late to comment on this but the best method i use when explaining agglutinative languages is to resemble the method to an old-fashioned train, does that make sense? like, there's always gotta be a locomotive (which is the word root) and the wagons (suffixes) vary, some carry materials some carry people. and that's why i love agglutinative languages becasue it reduces "the traffic" on rails. i looooove your videos btw keep them up! 💚💚💚
my adhd ass started learning german for immigration purposes and i get so so discouraged bc grammar is super boring for me but i am getting my GAME on with this app vielen Dank Elysse
hi Elysse, i loved your videos. i watched like three of them. it's so cool that you're learning Turkish. you must be one of the very few Americans that do that. 🙂 i really wanted to like clozemaster, and i don't know if anybody else pointed this out but the few samples that you showed in the video made me think that it's not very good, at least not with Turkish. some sentences weren't natural. the audios were a bit strange. the ones that you didn't understand were the ones that were really poorly pronounced. i don't know, maybe it's hard to find good material in Turkish, but I'd like to tell you not to count very much on that app for Turkish. keep up the good work. Turkish can be difficult but you obviously have the motivation and the talent. you got what it takes. I'm sure you'll be even more fluent soon. 🙂 best
Yes, Ne Var Ne Yok basically means what's up, what's new? In Arabic, there is something similar Shu Fee, Ma Fee, which is an exact translation. Iraqis say Sha Koo Ma Koo. What is there, what isn't there? Basically, in one's life, what's happening. Interestingly, the word Harika for great is also used in Jordan, in Arabic Harika means "Fire as in it's on fire". Not sure if the Turkish one came from Arabic or not.
The app is amazing, now I am learning Turkish and Indonesian, and I am doing the 500 and 1000 most common words with a notebook by my side, I have learned too much, the best thing is that when creating your own phrases you can add notes, and also create groups of own phrases such as the most used verbs, adjectives, adverbs, and I put a note in my native language in some phrases (Spanish), it is the best application of all if used correctly
I thought "böyle" is the shortened version of "bu öyle" so it means like "such as this"? And then şu öyle = şöyle "such as that". Not sure, I'm also just a Turkish learner.
I really got inspired watching your videos. I want to learn so many languages coz i find languages are really interesting. I learnt english and now I am learning french but i want to learn more. I want to learn Spanish, Turkish, Korean, Japanese, amhric and hindi. I already can understand Turkish and hindi coz i watched lots of their media. I am afraid of learning too many languages at once what do you think?
Bence ve sanırım benzer anlamlara gelen kelimeler ve kullanabilirsin ama uygulama en doğru anlamı göstermi.,Bu böyle bir rahatlık yanlış bir kullanım this is such a relief cümlesinin tam çevirisi yok , bu böyle bir rahatlık this is that kinda relief gibi bir anlama geliyor ve bir şey belirtmeden bu cümleyi kurmak biraz anlamsız olur.Dinleme kısmında ben bile zorlandım telaffuzlar net olmadığı için, senin zorlanman çok normal. Ve evet ne var ne yok kalıbını kullanıyoruz ama naber(Ne haber kelimelerinden geliyor) ve nasılsın kelimeleri daha sık kullanılıyor. 8:15 ’de kullanılan kullanım yanlış bir kullanım, Tom is even more confused now cümlesinin çevirisi Tom artık daha da şaşkın şeklinde olması gerekir Tom bile daha şaşkın cümlesi Even Tom is more confused now anlamına gelir. Ayrıca konuşurken vurguların biraz daha sert Rusça gibi ama yeni başladığın düşünülürse bence gayet iyi. Ve bahsettiğin gibi uzun kelimeler biraz bela olacak sana ama bu hızla ve motivasyonla gidersen çok hızlı şekilde yol katedebilirsin.Ben senin geldiğin seviyeye hayran kaldım açıkçası (I wrote this text natural and wrote as how they really used.Maybe you couldn't understand some words,you can ask them to me or translate them)
Cool video! I'm thinking about visiting Turkey the next year, so maybe I should learn at least some basic vocabulary, just in case they won't understand my post-Soviet-school English 🤣
you can speak daily basic Turkish in a month by listening 1 lesson per day from my frist list. each lesson is 30 minutes. you can speak everything in the lesson after each lesson.
USAGES OF PRESENT SIMPLE TENSE (+will, +request) I wrote present simple tense but we call it “Geniş= Broad” tense. 1- It can be used for “will tense” (uncertain, unplanned, guessed future) Belki yarın gelirim= maybe i will come tomorrow. Yarın yağmur yağar mı? = will it rain tomorrow 2- and it can be used also in questions to request.Such as “would you please” kapıyı açar mısınız= would you open the door? (request) çay içer misiniz? = would you drink tea? 3- It can be used to tell general facts such as “Sun rises from east.” 4- Yes you can use this tense to talk about daily routine but it is not common usage because we use present continuous tense to talk about daily routine. - USAGES OF present continuous tense (-yor) 1-present continuous tense is used to talk about the moment. şimdi su içiyorum = I'm drinking water now. 2-present continuous tense is used to talk about daily routine her gün çay içiyorum =I'm drinking tea everyday. But there is also present simple tense in Turkish. 3-As it is in English, present continuous tense can be used for planned future tense "to be going to". Yarın akşam geliyorum. =I'm coming tomorrow evening. But there is also a future tense in Turkish.
to make present continuous tense in Turkish, just add "yor" after verb. do not think about which vowel to add before yor. the vowel will come here itself even if you do not try to pronounce it. bil+yor will sound like bil+iyor there is not subject suffix for O subject (s/he,it) biliyor= s/he knows just add mu at end to make yes/no question. biliyor mu=does she know? add M after verb to make negative bil+M+iyor bilmiyor= s/he does not know bilmiyor mu?=does not she know ------------- now add subject suffix at end to change the subject. um=ben (I) sun=sen (you) biliyor =s/he knows biliyorum = I know biliyorsun = you know -------------- bilmiyor =s/he does not know bilmiyorum = i do not know bilmiyorsun = you do not know ---------------------- biliyor mu = does s/he know biliyor musun = do you know bilmiyor mu = does not s/he know bilmiyor musun? = do not you know
2 WAY VOWEL HARMONY (1-A, 2-E) tongue is at front to pronounce E e, İ i, Ö ö, Ü ü (front vowels together in a word, (2 way vowel harmony) suffix will have E Tongue is at back to pronounce A a , I ı , O o, U u. ((back vowels together in a word, (2 way vowel harmony) suffix will have A - 4 WAY VOWEL HARMONY (closed version of last vowel) (1- I 2-İ 3-U 4-Ü) for example ; if you close your chin while ou say A , it will sound like ı. - to pronounce A a ; lips straight, tongue at back, CHIN OPEN. to pronounce I,ı ; lips straight, tongue at back, CHIN CLOSED - to pronounce E e ; lips straight, tongue at front CHIN OPEN. to pronounce İ i ; lips straight, tongue at front, CHIN CLOSED - to pronounce Ö, ö ; lips rounded, tongue at front, CHIN OPEN. to pronounce Ü ü ; lips rounded, tongue at front, CHIN CLOSED - to pronounce O, o ; lips rounded, tongue at back,CHIN OPEN. to pronounce U u; lips rounded, tongue at back, CHIN CLOSED --------- 2 WAY VOWEL HARMONY (OPEN VOWEL HARMONY) tongue keeps being in back or front. if suffix have open vowel (a,e) such as plural suffix ler,lar, then if last vowel is back vowel (a,ı,o,u), then suffix will have "a" vowel if last vowel is back vowel (e,i,ö,ü), then suffix will have "e" vowel example; Ağaç, Ağaçlar kedi, kediler - 4 WAY VOWEL HARMONY (CLOSED VOWEL HARMONY) in 4 way vowel harmony, tongue keeps being in back or front. and also lips keep being unrounded or rounded. only you close your chin to make closed version of last vowel of word. if it was already closed vowel, then you keep your chin closed. if suffix has closed vowel (ı,i,u,ü) such as "pronoun suffixes", then if last vowel is a, ı suffix will have ı if last volwel is e,i suffix will have i if last vowel is o,u suffix will have u if last vowel is ö,ü suffix will have ü example; iyisin kötüsün nasılsın doktorsun
as a native turkish speaker I also couldnt grasp the sentence 'ne atinalı ne de bir yunanım' when I hear it 😄 sounds like the speaker of the app has a strict accent. and yes, we use 'ne var ne yok' in daily conversations. That is a quite common way to ask whats up between friends
@@elyssedavega iI this seriously your answer now? 😎 I ask you why and your answer is why not? So Elysse Babe; we're going to try it again and if it doesn't work we'll let it be for good: Why turkish?
Been considering downloading clozemasters for such a long time for German but if I did it I would be replacing my quizlet usage because I definitely don’t have time or mental capacity for both. Curious how you’d compare this to quizlet learn for daily flash card use.
It couldn’t be more different haha, Quizlet does very little to cater to language learners specifically because it’s not specifically a language learning app. Clozemaster is. Further, you have to make all your own sets on Quizlet, whereas Clozemaster gives you sets to work with first. Clozemaster is always practicing words in context of sentences, Quizlet not always
Uykuda sounds very unnatural. As a Turkish I would probably just say "Uyuyor" Also, I am a Translator and I highly recommend using Tureng :) And yep, we really do say "ne var ne yok" as means of greeting someone, totally informal tho I started using Closemaster after you recommended it for Portuguese and I think it's really useful. But I also should say there are some errors in the translations of some sentences. Like in the example "bile" the translation was wrong. In the English sentence it says "Tom is even more confused now." the app translates it " Tom bile şimdi daha şaşkın." bile (even) intensifies the word that comes before itself. But in this sentence it doesnt make sense for it to be there. You would use "daha" instead of "bile" to make the sentence make sense. So the correct translation would be "Tom şu an çok daha şaşkın." "Bile" is equal to "even" semantically but the usage can differ a lot. Check out these examples: Ayşe bile partiye gidiyor. -> Even Ayşe is going to the party. Bana para bile vermedi. -> He didn't even give me money. Bana para vermedi bile. -> He didn't even give me money. See? Thx for the video and congrats on your progress, you're doing really well !!
Para tailandés me viene como anillo al dedo ajaja pero para coreano, dios mío, no entiendo prácticamente nada en las oraciones ajajjaja y eso hace que me confunda al querer responder aún conociendo/ sabiendo la palabra por la cuál me preguntan x.x
Sis in my country Türkiye everyone almost dead they are dying (kahramanmaraş 6 feb eartquake) because of the lack of equiments ,tecnic personal team,lack of heater and you know in here winter can you tell other people for help in there in a short video or something like that we re really sad all people s family are dying or waiting for rescue from underground please say to world for rescue our people .im waiting for your reply .loves from Turkey
I'm afraid the app mistranslated "this is such a relief!" Okay the translation for the word "such" is "böyle" but as a sentence "this is such a relief" makes a daily expression. So we should think for a side meaning of the word "such". The use of that expression is "bu çok büyük bir ferahlık." İn Turkish. So "çok büyük" should have been the answer. You were actually partially right in your first guess.
@@madameenmamadaliyev1727 i think any word that is pronounced as a turkish word is now turkish. I mean arabic people cant even understand those words when we use them. Because they are not totally same but similar.
Only 6% of Turkish is taken from Arabic and 5% is from French. Every Arab speaks as if the entire Turkish language is Arabic. Many of you say that you understand us, but we cannot understand anything from your smallest conversation. Leave the Turks and Turkish alone.
I love Clozemaster but for some languages they use quite unnatural sounding sentences. If they would change that, there would be no better app out there in my opinion. At least in terms of practicing.
they pull the sentences from an outside source, they do not generate them themselves. if you’re using Clozemaster with the intent of memorizing entire sentences (aside from smaller ones), you’re likely using it wrong. the point is to get to see words in context, not to learn sentences.
@@elyssedavega Ich habe mich gerade erinnert, dass du auch sehr gut Deutsch kannst:) So kann ich direkt etwas üben. Also ich verstehe was du meinst, allerdings selbst wenn ich die Wörter in Kontext sehe, sie so aber nie benutzt werden, dann macht es für mich keinen Sinn. Und keine Sorge, ich lerne nicht ganze Sätze dort und habe schon verstanden für was die App geeignet ist. Ich finde auch, dass mit Sprachen wie z.B. Deutsch auch anders ist als mit anderen Sprachen. Meine Mutterspache ist Chinesisch und ich habe es etwas getestet und würde es nicht für Chinesisch empfehlen. Ich habe es auch für Thai benutzt und auch hier fand ich es nicht so gut. Für Schwedisch und Italienisch wiederum, ist es echt gut. Naja, ich lerne insgesamt lieber durch "echten" Kontent.
Hmm strange, at the 3,000 most common words i’ve never encountered mistakes. But they’re not generating the sentences themselves, they pull from an outside source
I'm also learning turkish since 2 years now. I like how the grammar makes so much sense and it made me generally understand grammar easier, so I can learn other languages quicker.
The hard part is all the idioms that are used in speech.
Also the small details that change the meaning of a sentence.
I find that Instagram teachers/pages are super useful for idiomatic expressions :)
Turkish is the most interesting language I’ve learnt. The conjugations, the suffixes, the LACK of grammatical gender! Çok zor ama çok ilginç ❤
@@joaninha3484 gerçekten öyledir, zamanla kolaylaşıyor ama inşallah
@joaninha3484 Actually there is no lack of grammatical gönder , we have gender equality
Could u help me in learning it . I'm just a beginner
We actually use "Ne var, ne yok?" pretty often during daily conversations. It's a nice thing to learn!
cool, i’ll remember that!
❤❤❤❤❤+❤+@@elyssedavega
N'haber, kanka?:) I like the word "kanka".
I am Bulgarian, Russian and Turkish , but I know only the Bulgarian language. This video motivated me to try to learn Turkish.It would be great to know my mother's native language.
Also this app looks helpful.
awww that’s a sweet thing to do 🥺 kolay gelsin!
Başarılar diliyorum!
Okay idek why I'm such a fan of this video, I'm not even learning Turkish, but you nailed this 😁 Very cool to see the quality of the stuff you're putting out now, idk just feels like you've really found your stride, loved it, well done! 😄
that’s so sweet!! i appreciate this comment so much!
I totally agree with you, my friend
If anyone is interested in trying out the pro version, wait until Black Friday when they usually have 50%off sale on all their plans. The lifetime plan costs the equivalent of 2 years in this case, so I’d highly recommend it
wow, i'm very impressed with your turkish, your pronunciation is so good and obviously you've made a great progress in such a short time❤ i've been learning english for years and i think it's now time to learn a new language!! i've been wanting to learn german for a long time and i'm pretty sure your videos are gonna be a part of my journey💜
Thanks so much!! i hope German comes easy to you :D happy to help
I totally agree with you, my friend ❤❤
How's your German going?? I just started learning and it's so weird as a native English speaker!! Definitely easier than some other languages though haha
I've had Clozemaster Pro for almost a year now, but I'd never tried creating my own sentences. Using the tool you showed on the video was mindblowing! Thanks for the tip!
glad i could be of service!
❤❤
It always amazes me when I see people using tools like this and Wanikani on devices without a physical keyboard. That extra time adds up.
You're the reason why i'm saving money to get the full version of clozemaster just so i can make my own set and have it auto create sentences for me! I'll def be using the code you provided too when i do get it!!
DM me on instagram, i’ll send you some $ to get you a month free :P ♥️
I'm so happy that this video is sponsored! You deserve it. Thank you for the content that you have shared with us. Blessings!
Thank you! Teşekkür ederim. I studied Turkish 40 years ago in college (I am that old) and am relearning it now. We just got back from Türkiye and are going back next summerç I have a tutor twice a week but this site is great practice. My tutor will be happy that I have found this other resource. Sağ ol!
as a native speakers I'm impressed your passion and your ability of learning turkish so🥰😄 I can't wait to watch next video
thank you so much! 🙏
Me too, my friend. She always inspires myself
Really appreciate the energy you put in your videos!
hell yeahhh I appreciate you watching them!!
I've never expected that you are actually going to learn Turkish. I've been speaking Turkish like over 10 years( cause it is my first language that I had learned, I mean I'm native). Your pronounciation is really good. Keep going
This comment is so funny because I wasn't sure I actually would either! I had the book, I had the desire, but I just had to make a plan. It's working so far! thanks :)
@@elyssedavega rica ederim (you're welcome)
Where're u from?
I’ve recently started to use this app for Spanish. I already know the words I’m at rn but it’s been an easy and fun way to keep Spanish going in my mind lately
awesome!! i agree, buena suerte friend ~
yo la uso para aprender inglés :D, te deseo suerte
You might be my favorite RUclipsr at this point. Well done, your videos are truly enjoyable and entertaining!
best comment ever
Yes ne var ne yok is highly used in everyday life.
Ne var means = what there’s
Ne yok = what’s (there’s) not
So it’s more like a deep question about how’s life going
deep 🤌
Freaking loved this video! I was just looking for a review of Clozemaster, and thanks to your personality you just got a new subscriber. :) Watching your videos is very fun.
i love you so much im learning turkish and russian atm and this app is amazing in increasing my vocab tysm ❤️😭
I’m so glad it helped!!! sending hugs hehehe
as a turkish i say that your pronunciation is soo sweet.
başarılar
❤❤
nice to know about this app. am learning Turkish too now. got to give it a try. thanks!
i'm glad i could introduce it to you!
Iyi sanslar Frances!
Just joined. The Brazilian Portuguese voice is quite good. Thanks for putting this out there and Voce estava optimo! Obrigado!
I’m glad to hear! yeah, it really does depend on how difficult the voice is hahaha
My greetings and big respect to Brazil! 🇧🇷 I really dream about visiting your beatiful country someday. Yet, I make fun English lessons, podcasts and live vlogs 😊 Have a great day! 🙌
I'm also learning Turkish. I was looking for a proper application to learn vocabulary. Çok teşekkür ederim for your suggestion.🌸🥀♥️
Clozemaster is one of my favs!
Also Busuu
@@OzkAltBldgCo-bv8tt Buusu is good, but I don't think it's great for a beginneor of Turkish. If you already have a foundation, it can be great. I've taken classes before, so it's useful for me. I am using Clozemaster and Duolingo, as well, but I am thinking if I should get the Lifetime for Clozemaster.
I've watched like 50 times your Turkish intro, and it doesn't get anywhere near to being old.
Loved the video, you're the reason why I use clozemaster, i'm using it for German and French, planning on using it for Russian. Thank you so much for this review, I was thinking about getting the pro version, now I made my mind. Thank you so much 💗🤗
Awesome!! It’s so worth the investment :) i hope it helps even more now
👍👍❤❤
Hi Elysse, thanks for the discount code for Clozemaster!
I hope you love it!! 💗 thanks for watching :)
I’m glad I found your channel. 🎉 I am at that phase where I am desperately looking for new resources to expand my Turkish vocabulary list (been learning for 5 months now) Bu çok faydalı olur. Tavsiye için teşekkürler!
Busuu and Drops application
You and your channel is so good. Excited to see how you're learning Turkish^_^
thanks so much for the support!
@@elyssedavega You're welcome! Thank you for being awesome! ^_^❤
I totally agree with you, my friend ❤❤
hey i might be a little late to comment on this but the best method i use when explaining agglutinative languages is to resemble the method to an old-fashioned train, does that make sense? like, there's always gotta be a locomotive (which is the word root) and the wagons (suffixes) vary, some carry materials some carry people. and that's why i love agglutinative languages becasue it reduces "the traffic" on rails. i looooove your videos btw keep them up! 💚💚💚
Omg I've been listening to for like 1 minute. First time. And I'm already in love with your personality.....
AWWW i hope you watched the rest too
my adhd ass started learning german for immigration purposes and i get so so discouraged bc grammar is super boring for me but i am getting my GAME on with this app vielen Dank Elysse
i hope it helps! yeah, i never thought about using it more for grammar :0
the fact that you mentioned guarani made me feel validated for the first time in this platform lol
Thank you so much for sharing this!! i've been looking for something like this
Thanks a lot... You are really good in learning languages.. I will try this app.. Definitely.
Your pronunciation is on point . Very well done 😊✅
Thanks so much!
🥰🥰🥰🥰
I love everything in this video but can we PLEASE appreciate how BEAUTIFUL her hair is?? Daaaaamn girl
:”) hey thanks! teşekkürler!
I'm gonna try this app, Thanks for recommend me
awesome! i hope it works for you 🤗
I am proud of you. You are amazing. You always inspire myself ❤❤
And i’m proud of you too!
@@elyssedavega Thank you 🥰🥰
Turish is a language spoken by adding a suffix to the end ofvthe root word
Thanks a lot !!!! 🇧🇷
thank YOU for watching 🙏😌
Kolay gelsin. Türkçe öğrenme serüveninde başarılar :)
Çok tatlısın yaa
Obrigado por mostrar esse app Elysse, eu não conhecia.
Obrigada eu!
@@elyssedavega De nada Elysse.
I do love clozemaster. :)
Great video, thank you 🙏
hi Elysse,
i loved your videos. i watched like three of them. it's so cool that you're learning Turkish. you must be one of the very few Americans that do that. 🙂
i really wanted to like clozemaster, and i don't know if anybody else pointed this out but the few samples that you showed in the video made me think that it's not very good, at least not with Turkish. some sentences weren't natural. the audios were a bit strange. the ones that you didn't understand were the ones that were really poorly pronounced. i don't know, maybe it's hard to find good material in Turkish, but I'd like to tell you not to count very much on that app for Turkish.
keep up the good work. Turkish can be difficult but you obviously have the motivation and the talent. you got what it takes. I'm sure you'll be even more fluent soon. 🙂
best
Awesome video, Elysse! :D
Glad you liked it!! thanks Marjo :)
I totally agree with you, my friend
Elysse do the 10 languages 10 questions each challenge film it
it's inspiring
I use it for English and French. Mi primer idioma es Español.
glad to hear it works for you too :)
Yes, Ne Var Ne Yok basically means what's up, what's new? In Arabic, there is something similar Shu Fee, Ma Fee, which is an exact translation. Iraqis say Sha Koo Ma Koo. What is there, what isn't there? Basically, in one's life, what's happening. Interestingly, the word Harika for great is also used in Jordan, in Arabic Harika means "Fire as in it's on fire". Not sure if the Turkish one came from Arabic or not.
The app is amazing, now I am learning Turkish and Indonesian, and I am doing the 500 and 1000 most common words with a notebook by my side, I have learned too much, the best thing is that when creating your own phrases you can add notes, and also create groups of own phrases such as the most used verbs, adjectives, adverbs, and I put a note in my native language in some phrases (Spanish), it is the best application of all if used correctly
Really enjoyed your videos
You can buy a lifetime membership. That's what i have.
I thought "böyle" is the shortened version of "bu öyle" so it means like "such as this"? And then şu öyle = şöyle "such as that". Not sure, I'm also just a Turkish learner.
True
I really got inspired watching your videos. I want to learn so many languages coz i find languages are really interesting. I learnt english and now I am learning french but i want to learn more. I want to learn Spanish, Turkish, Korean, Japanese, amhric and hindi. I already can understand Turkish and hindi coz i watched lots of their media. I am afraid of learning too many languages at once what do you think?
I have a video specifically on how i learn multiple languages, i hope it helps!
İ am behind you
Bence ve sanırım benzer anlamlara gelen kelimeler ve kullanabilirsin ama uygulama en doğru anlamı göstermi.,Bu böyle bir rahatlık yanlış bir kullanım this is such a relief cümlesinin tam çevirisi yok , bu böyle bir rahatlık this is that kinda relief gibi bir anlama geliyor ve bir şey belirtmeden bu cümleyi kurmak biraz anlamsız olur.Dinleme kısmında ben bile zorlandım telaffuzlar net olmadığı için, senin zorlanman çok normal. Ve evet ne var ne yok kalıbını kullanıyoruz ama naber(Ne haber kelimelerinden geliyor) ve nasılsın kelimeleri daha sık kullanılıyor. 8:15 ’de kullanılan kullanım yanlış bir kullanım, Tom is even more confused now cümlesinin çevirisi Tom artık daha da şaşkın şeklinde olması gerekir Tom bile daha şaşkın cümlesi Even Tom is more confused now anlamına gelir. Ayrıca konuşurken vurguların biraz daha sert Rusça gibi ama yeni başladığın düşünülürse bence gayet iyi. Ve bahsettiğin gibi uzun kelimeler biraz bela olacak sana ama bu hızla ve motivasyonla gidersen çok hızlı şekilde yol katedebilirsin.Ben senin geldiğin seviyeye hayran kaldım açıkçası (I wrote this text natural and wrote as how they really used.Maybe you couldn't understand some words,you can ask them to me or translate them)
talk turkish for 24 hours 🌚❤
great job with your accent. impressive. how do you work on that?
Me recuerdas a la típica representación de los hypies en las películas.
JAJAJA kheee
Not me remembering I bought a lifetime subscription to this two years ago lol
Ahhh kedi is so cute!
she knows it too
Tip:
instead clicking in the green button, just press "Enter", that will save your wrists if you do a lot of Clozemaster exercises
Yes i do both ofc lol
Plus I don’t really practice a lot at one time so it doesn’t matter really
is it good for someone who doesn’t know many words at all?
Geez, okay I work at Duolingo Turkish and I'm gonna remove "the cat reads a newspaper" tomorrow.
The installation failed on my phone.
Für Elysse that was written for Elysse
Cool video! I'm thinking about visiting Turkey the next year, so maybe I should learn at least some basic vocabulary, just in case they won't understand my post-Soviet-school English 🤣
it’s always appreciated when tourists speak the language!
👍👍❤❤
How to start learning Turkish?
i’ll make a video on this sometime soon!
Busuu and Drops application
Is there a good site for learning Turkish grammar please?
you can speak daily basic Turkish in a month by listening 1 lesson per day from my frist list. each lesson is 30 minutes. you can speak everything in the lesson after each lesson.
USAGES OF PRESENT SIMPLE TENSE (+will, +request)
I wrote present simple tense but we call it “Geniş= Broad” tense.
1- It can be used for “will tense” (uncertain, unplanned, guessed future)
Belki yarın gelirim= maybe i will come tomorrow.
Yarın yağmur yağar mı? = will it rain tomorrow
2- and it can be used also in questions to request.Such as “would you please”
kapıyı açar mısınız= would you open the door? (request)
çay içer misiniz? = would you drink tea?
3- It can be used to tell general facts such as “Sun rises from east.”
4- Yes you can use this tense to talk about daily routine but it is not common usage because we use present continuous tense to talk about daily routine.
-
USAGES OF present continuous tense (-yor)
1-present continuous tense is used to talk about the moment.
şimdi su içiyorum = I'm drinking water now.
2-present continuous tense is used to talk about daily routine
her gün çay içiyorum =I'm drinking tea everyday.
But there is also present simple tense in Turkish.
3-As it is in English, present continuous tense can be used for planned future tense "to be going to".
Yarın akşam geliyorum. =I'm coming tomorrow evening.
But there is also a future tense in Turkish.
to make present continuous tense in Turkish, just add "yor" after verb. do not think about which vowel to add before yor. the vowel will come here itself even if you do not try to pronounce it.
bil+yor will sound like bil+iyor
there is not subject suffix for O subject (s/he,it)
biliyor= s/he knows
just add mu at end to make yes/no question.
biliyor mu=does she know?
add M after verb to make negative
bil+M+iyor
bilmiyor= s/he does not know
bilmiyor mu?=does not she know
-------------
now add subject suffix at end to change the subject.
um=ben (I)
sun=sen (you)
biliyor =s/he knows
biliyorum = I know
biliyorsun = you know
--------------
bilmiyor =s/he does not know
bilmiyorum = i do not know
bilmiyorsun = you do not know
----------------------
biliyor mu = does s/he know
biliyor musun = do you know
bilmiyor mu = does not s/he know
bilmiyor musun? = do not you know
2 WAY VOWEL HARMONY (1-A, 2-E)
tongue is at front to pronounce E e, İ i, Ö ö, Ü ü (front vowels together in a word, (2 way vowel harmony) suffix will have E
Tongue is at back to pronounce A a , I ı , O o, U u. ((back vowels together in a word, (2 way vowel harmony) suffix will have A
-
4 WAY VOWEL HARMONY (closed version of last vowel)
(1- I 2-İ 3-U 4-Ü)
for example ; if you close your chin while ou say A , it will sound like ı.
-
to pronounce A a ; lips straight, tongue at back, CHIN OPEN.
to pronounce I,ı ; lips straight, tongue at back, CHIN CLOSED
-
to pronounce E e ; lips straight, tongue at front CHIN OPEN.
to pronounce İ i ; lips straight, tongue at front, CHIN CLOSED
-
to pronounce Ö, ö ; lips rounded, tongue at front, CHIN OPEN.
to pronounce Ü ü ; lips rounded, tongue at front, CHIN CLOSED
-
to pronounce O, o ; lips rounded, tongue at back,CHIN OPEN.
to pronounce U u; lips rounded, tongue at back, CHIN CLOSED
---------
2 WAY VOWEL HARMONY (OPEN VOWEL HARMONY)
tongue keeps being in back or front.
if suffix have open vowel (a,e) such as plural suffix ler,lar, then
if last vowel is back vowel (a,ı,o,u), then suffix will have "a" vowel
if last vowel is back vowel (e,i,ö,ü), then suffix will have "e" vowel
example; Ağaç, Ağaçlar
kedi, kediler
-
4 WAY VOWEL HARMONY (CLOSED VOWEL HARMONY)
in 4 way vowel harmony, tongue keeps being in back or front.
and also lips keep being unrounded or rounded.
only you close your chin to make closed version of last vowel of word.
if it was already closed vowel, then you keep your chin closed.
if suffix has closed vowel (ı,i,u,ü) such as "pronoun suffixes", then
if last vowel is a, ı suffix will have ı
if last volwel is e,i suffix will have i
if last vowel is o,u suffix will have u
if last vowel is ö,ü suffix will have ü
example;
iyisin
kötüsün
nasılsın
doktorsun
@@PimsleurTurkishLessons thank you a lot of your help, its very useful
I'll use this app for German. Thank you for suggestion:)
(Bu uygulamayı Almanca için kullanacağım. Önerin için teşekkür ederim.)
Yorumun için teşekkür ederim!!
"Naber" is also an informal alternative for "how u doin"
The cloze app is free or pay?
as a native turkish speaker I also couldnt grasp the sentence 'ne atinalı ne de bir yunanım' when I hear it 😄 sounds like the speaker of the app has a strict accent.
and yes, we use 'ne var ne yok' in daily conversations. That is a quite common way to ask whats up between friends
Hello! Can you please do a video about resources for Mexican Spanish? I am trying to learn but I’m not sure how
In my video about how I switched to Mexican Spanish i gave some resources. hope it helps!
I wanted to learn kurdish but ended up here
Can I know why do wanna learn it ?
@@googler5879 why u wanna know
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
You speak smart
dang that’s a nice compliment, thanks!
True, my friend
Hi
Simple question:
(Among all those languages)
Why türkish? :)
Why not!
@@elyssedavega
iI this seriously your answer now? 😎
I ask you why and your answer is why not?
So Elysse Babe; we're going to try it again and if it doesn't work we'll let it be for good:
Why turkish?
Been considering downloading clozemasters for such a long time for German but if I did it I would be replacing my quizlet usage because I definitely don’t have time or mental capacity for both. Curious how you’d compare this to quizlet learn for daily flash card use.
It couldn’t be more different haha, Quizlet does very little to cater to language learners specifically because it’s not specifically a language learning app. Clozemaster is. Further, you have to make all your own sets on Quizlet, whereas Clozemaster gives you sets to work with first. Clozemaster is always practicing words in context of sentences, Quizlet not always
"Fucking Boyle dude!" I felt that. That word is everywhere and I still don't really know what it means 😅
böyle is evvvherytjing
You are sooo sweet💙. l appreciate you.seni çooook seviyorum 💙
10:40 Who cares if you are using less words if you are still making the same amount of sounds? It is no more or less efficient at all.
Uykuda sounds very unnatural. As a Turkish I would probably just say "Uyuyor"
Also, I am a Translator and I highly recommend using Tureng :)
And yep, we really do say "ne var ne yok" as means of greeting someone, totally informal tho
I started using Closemaster after you recommended it for Portuguese and I think it's really useful. But I also should say there are some errors in the translations of some sentences. Like in the example "bile" the translation was wrong. In the English sentence it says "Tom is even more confused now." the app translates it " Tom bile şimdi daha şaşkın." bile (even) intensifies the word that comes before itself. But in this sentence it doesnt make sense for it to be there. You would use "daha" instead of "bile" to make the sentence make sense. So the correct translation would be "Tom şu an çok daha şaşkın."
"Bile" is equal to "even" semantically but the usage can differ a lot. Check out these examples:
Ayşe bile partiye gidiyor. -> Even Ayşe is going to the party.
Bana para bile vermedi. -> He didn't even give me money.
Bana para vermedi bile. -> He didn't even give me money.
See?
Thx for the video and congrats on your progress, you're doing really well !!
Thank you for this information, my friend
So please which app do you recommend us to use, and also how which Turkish/English dictionary is the best
Para tailandés me viene como anillo al dedo ajaja pero para coreano, dios mío, no entiendo prácticamente nada en las oraciones ajajjaja y eso hace que me confunda al querer responder aún conociendo/ sabiendo la palabra por la cuál me preguntan x.x
Sis in my country Türkiye everyone almost dead they are dying (kahramanmaraş 6 feb eartquake) because of the lack of equiments ,tecnic personal team,lack of heater and you know in here winter can you tell other people for help in there in a short video or something like that we re really sad all people s family are dying or waiting for rescue from underground please say to world for rescue our people .im waiting for your reply .loves from Turkey
I've had mostly bad experience with Clozemaster and wouldn't really recommend it, but it's difficult to find a learning APP that doesn't suck.
Busuu 👌
@@gabrielcarmnn I'll probably check it out at some point (maybe when I start learning Russian), since I've heard some good things about it!
Hi 👋🏼
Thanks 😊
I'm afraid the app mistranslated "this is such a relief!"
Okay the translation for the word "such" is "böyle" but as a sentence "this is such a relief" makes a daily expression.
So we should think for a side meaning of the word "such". The use of that expression is "bu çok büyük bir ferahlık." İn Turkish.
So "çok büyük" should have been the answer. You were actually partially right in your first guess.
6:25 bu böyle bir ferahlık? Ne? Benim sözlükte yok böyle bir cümle.
8:20 Tom bile şimdi daha şaşkın? Bu da garip bir cümle.
btw you pronunciation is overall better than the robot's so i wouldn't recommend to you practice with him
7.15 Don't worry I am Turkish and I didn't understand too auto speaker isn't reliable
Are you familiar with iclal? She's a Turkish polyglot youtuber
Yep! Love her channel
@@elyssedavega collab soon maybe?
I am a turkish person and the first listening in 07:00 is absolutely not something that is understandable, turkish listening should be improved
A lot of Turkish words are being used in Arabic.. so good for you choosing this language 👍❤️
Actually most of the arabic words are being used in almost all "turkic "languages
@@madameenmamadaliyev1727 i think any word that is pronounced as a turkish word is now turkish. I mean arabic people cant even understand those words when we use them. Because they are not totally same but similar.
Only 6% of Turkish is taken from Arabic and 5% is from French. Every Arab speaks as if the entire Turkish language is Arabic. Many of you say that you understand us, but we cannot understand anything from your smallest conversation. Leave the Turks and Turkish alone.
I love Clozemaster but for some languages they use quite unnatural sounding sentences. If they would change that, there would be no better app out there in my opinion. At least in terms of practicing.
they pull the sentences from an outside source, they do not generate them themselves. if you’re using Clozemaster with the intent of memorizing entire sentences (aside from smaller ones), you’re likely using it wrong. the point is to get to see words in context, not to learn sentences.
If you want an app that will teach you “useful” phrases (like for travel and stuff i guess), this probably isn’t the app for that. it’s not a course
@@elyssedavega Ich habe mich gerade erinnert, dass du auch sehr gut Deutsch kannst:) So kann ich direkt etwas üben. Also ich verstehe was du meinst, allerdings selbst wenn ich die Wörter in Kontext sehe, sie so aber nie benutzt werden, dann macht es für mich keinen Sinn. Und keine Sorge, ich lerne nicht ganze Sätze dort und habe schon verstanden für was die App geeignet ist. Ich finde auch, dass mit Sprachen wie z.B. Deutsch auch anders ist als mit anderen Sprachen. Meine Mutterspache ist Chinesisch und ich habe es etwas getestet und würde es nicht für Chinesisch empfehlen. Ich habe es auch für Thai benutzt und auch hier fand ich es nicht so gut. Für Schwedisch und Italienisch wiederum, ist es echt gut. Naja, ich lerne insgesamt lieber durch "echten" Kontent.
@@elyssedavega Sure, it isn't and you also stated that clearly in your video.
The German version seems a little unpolished still. Found a few mistakes in translations. And the speech is so robotic!
Hmm strange, at the 3,000 most common words i’ve never encountered mistakes. But they’re not generating the sentences themselves, they pull from an outside source
“They recommend duolingo or memrise for complete beginners”
Duolingo dont have a Serbian course 💀
as a native Turkish native speaker I don't understand what that robotic voice says
Uygurlu is wrong. even some Turks make this mistake. you can say " sen Uygur musun?"