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Turkish grammar

Turkish grammar (Turkish: Türkçe dil bilgisi), as described in this article, is the grammar of standard Turkish as spoken and written by educated people in the Republic of Turkey.

Turkish is a highly agglutinative language, in that much of the grammar is expressed by means of suffixes added to nouns and verbs. It is very regular compared with many European languages. For example, evlerden "from the houses" can be analysed as ev "house", -ler (plural suffix), -den (ablative case, meaning "from"); gidiyorum "I am going" as git "go", -iyor (present continuous tense), -um (1st person singular = "I").

Another characteristic of Turkish is vowel harmony. Most suffixes have two or four different forms, the choice between which depends on the vowel of the word's root or the preceding suffix: for example, the ablative case of evler is evlerden "from the houses" but, the ablative case of başlar "heads" is başlardan "from the heads".

Verbs have six grammatical persons (three singular and three plural), various voices (active and passive, reflexive, reciprocal, and causative), and a large number of grammatical tenses. Meanings such as "not", "be able", "should" and "if", which are expressed as separate words in most European languages, are usually expressed with verbal suffixes in Turkish. A characteristic of Turkish which is shared by neighboring languages such as Bulgarian and Persian is that the perfect tense suffix (in Turkish -miş-, -müş-, -mış-, or -muş-) often has an inferential meaning, e.g. geliyormuşum "it would seem (they say) that I am coming".

Verbs also have a number of participial forms, which Turkish makes much use of. Clauses which begin with "who" or "because" in English are generally translated by means of participial phrases in Turkish.

In Turkish, verbs generally come at the end of the sentence or clause; adjectives and possessive nouns come before the noun they describe; and meanings such as "behind", "for", "like/similar to" etc. are expressed as postpositions following the noun rather than prepositions before it.

Introduction

Suffixes

A suffix (ek) is attached to a stem (gövde). A stem may be a root (kök) or further analyzable. The suffixes used in Turkish fall roughly into two classes: constructive suffixes (yapım ekleri) and inflectional suffixes (çekim ekleri). A constructive suffix makes a new word from an old one, that is, it is a derivational suffix. An inflectional suffix indicates how a word is used in a sentence. The article on Turkish grammar pertains chiefly to inflectional suffixes. The article on Turkish vocabulary treats the constructive suffixes.

The vowels of suffixes undergo vowel harmony. When a suffix is attached to a stem, the vowel in the suffix generally agrees in frontness or backness and in roundedness with the last vowel in the stem or of the preceding suffix.

Some suffixes show two-way vowel harmony between e and a, for example the plural suffix -ler/-lar. The e form is found after a syllable with i, e, ö or ü (e.g. evler "houses", günler "days"), and also after certain Arabic or French borrowings such as saatler "hours, clocks", kalpler "hearts". Other suffixes show four-way vowel harmony between i, ı, u, ü, for example the possessive ending -im/-ım/-um/-üm "my". These endings are found after syllables containing their own vowels or after e, a, o, ö respectively (e.g. evim "my house", gözüm "my eye", etc.)

A Turkish suffix can be called enclitic if its vowel undergoes vowel harmony, agreeing with the last vowel of the stem the suffix is attached to.

Gender

Turkish is a gender-neutral language except for a few sex-specific words (mostly naming professions or different sexes of livestock). The English third-person singular pronouns she, he, and it all correspond to a single Turkish pronoun, o. Many given names in Turkish are also gender-neutral, so it is entirely possible to describe someone in the Turkish language without their gender identity being made known.

Person

Turkish has a strong T–V distinction, using the second-person plural as the formal form, as in French and many other languages.

Turkish also uses various honorifics.

T–V distinction

Family members and friends speak to one another using the second singular person sen, and adults use sen to address minors. In formal situations (meeting people for the first time, business, customer-clerk, colleagues) plural second-person siz is used almost exclusively. In very formal situations, double plural second-person sizler may refer to a much-respected person. Rarely, third-person plural conjugation of the verb (but not the pronoun) may be used to emphasize utmost respect. In the imperative, there are three forms: second person singular for informal, second person plural for formal, and double plural second person for very formal situations. Thus, the imperative forms of the verb gelmek, "to come", are gel (second person singular, informal), gelin (second person plural, formal), and geliniz (double second-person plural, very formal). The very formal forms are not frequently used.

Honorifics

Turkish honorifics generally follow the first name, especially if they refer to gender or particular social statuses (e.g. <name> Bey (Mr.), <name> Hanım (Ms.), <name> Öğretmen (teacher)). Such honorifics are used both in formal and informal situations. A newer honorific is Sayın, which precedes the surname or full name, and is not gender-specific. (e.g. Sayın Name Surname, or Sayın Surname, or Sayın Name Bey/Hanım). They are generally used in very formal situations. While these honorifics are normally used in pre-position to Turkish first names, for foreigners, names are preceded by Bay (Mr.) or Bayan (Ms.): Bay [Fox] Mulder, Bayan [Dana] Scully (cf. Fox [Mulder] Bey, Dana [Scully] Hanım, if these names were Turkish).[1]

Turkish terminology

In the Turkish terms for the constructive and inflectional endings, three roots are involved:

  • ek "supplement, affix" (notably Turkish has no prefixes)
  • yap- "make"
  • çek- "pull, draw"

For the last two verbal roots, the constructive suffix -im can be added to form nouns for instances of the actions denoted by the roots:

  • yapım "construction";
  • çekim "[a] pull or draw" (or a "take" in cinema).

Either of these nouns can be compounded with the noun ek, resulting in an indefinite compound (belirtisiz tamlama), the sign of which is the inflectional suffix -i attached to ek:

  • yapım eki "structure-suffix";
  • çekim eki "inflection-suffix".

The inflectional suffix -ler comes before the -i to form the plural, so yapım ekleri, çekim ekleri.

Many words in Turkish— particularly many grammatical terms— are neologisms invented to replace earlier words borrowed from Arabic or Persian, which have largely been successful at permanently superseding the previously used foreign terms. (See the main article on Turkish language.) In some cases, the foreign term continues to be in use alongside the neologism.

Parts of speech

There are nine parts of speech (söz türleri "word-kinds") in Turkish.

  1. noun (isim or ad "name");
  2. pronoun (zamir "inner being", or adıl from ad);
  3. adjective (sıfat "role, quality", or önad "front-noun");
  4. verb (fiil "act, deed", or eylem "action" from eyle- "make, do");
  5. adverb (zarf "envelope", or belirteç from belir- "determine");
  6. postposition (ilgeç from ilgi "interest, relation");
  7. conjunction (bağlaç from bağ "bond");
  8. particle (edat, or ilgeç);
  9. interjection (nidâ [obsolete], or ünlem from ün "fame, repute, sound").

Postpositions are analogous to prepositions in English, the main difference being that they follow their objects. Postpositions can be considered particles, but there are particles in Turkish that are not postpositions.

Only nouns, pronouns and verbs are inflected in Turkish. An adjective can usually be treated as a noun or pronoun, in which case it can also be inflected. Inflection can give a noun features of a verb such as person and tense. With inflection, a verb can become one of the following:

These have peculiarities not shared with other nouns, adjectives or adverbs. For example, some participles take a person the way verbs do. Also, a verbal noun or adverb can take a direct object. Some verbal nouns are not inflected forms in Turkish but are borrowed from Arabic or other languages.

In Turkish, an ascriptive clause can be composed of a common noun standing alone as the Predicative, both the Subject and the Predicator being implicit and assumed from the situation. Example:

köpek – "dog"
Köpek. – "It is a dog."

This means that both a noun and a verb can alone constitute an affirmative clause in Turkish, which is not the case in English.

There are two standards for listing verbs in dictionaries. Most dictionaries follow the tradition of spelling out the infinitive form of the verb as the headword of the entry, but others such as the Redhouse Turkish-English Dictionary are more technical and spell out the stem of the verb instead, that is, they spell out a string of letters that is useful for producing all other verb forms through morphological rules. Similar to the latter, this article follows the stem-as-citeword standard.

  • Infinitive: koşmak ("to run")
  • Stem: koş- ("run")

In Turkish, the verbal stem is also the second-person singular imperative form. Example:

koş- (stem meaning "run")
Koş! ("Run!")

Many verbs are formed from nouns by addition of -le. For example:

köpek – "dog"
köpekle – "dog paddle" (in any of several ways)

The aorist tense of a verb is formed by adding -(i/e)r. The plural of a noun is formed by suffixing -ler. Hence, the suffix -ler can indicate either a plural noun or a finite verb:

Köpek + ler – "(They are) dogs."
Köpekle + r – "S/he dog paddles."

Most adjectives can be treated as nouns or pronouns. For example, genç can mean "young", "young person", or "the young person being referred to".

An adjective or noun can stand, as a modifier, before a noun. If the modifier is a noun (but not a noun of material), then the second noun word takes the inflectional suffix -i:

ak diş – "white tooth"
altın diş – "gold tooth"
köpek dişi – "canine tooth"

Comparison of adjectives is not done by inflecting adjectives or adverbs, but by other means (described below).

Adjectives can serve as adverbs, sometimes by means of repetition:

yavaş – "slow"
yavaş yavaş – "slowly"

Word order

A general rule of Turkish word order is that the modifier precedes the modified:

  • adjective (used attributively) precedes noun;
  • adverb precedes verb;
  • object of postposition precedes postposition.

Although the most common order of Turkish transitive sentences is subject–object–verb (SOV), all six permutations are valid (the subject and object are distinguished by case suffixes). The word order serves to express the theme and focus (rheme) of the sentence: the sentence-initial portion is associated with the topic; the position just before the verb is used for the focus; and the post-verbal position is used for background or clarifying information.[2][3]

The following sentences illustrate how subject–object–verb order changes the meaning.

Word order Gloss Notes
SOV

Ali

Ali

eve

to-house

gidiyor.

is-going

Ali eve gidiyor.

Ali to-house is-going

Ali is going home.

OSV

Eve

to-house

Ali

Ali

gidiyor.

is-going

Eve Ali gidiyor.

to-house Ali is-going

Ali is going home.

SVO

Ali

Ali

gidiyor

is-going

eve.

to-house

Ali gidiyor eve.

Ali is-going to-house

Ali is going home.

OVS

Eve

to-house

gidiyor

is-going

Ali.

Ali

Eve gidiyor Ali.

to-house is-going Ali

Ali is going home.

Same as SOV (anacoluthon).
VSO

Gidiyor

is-going

Ali

Ali

eve.

to-house

Gidiyor Ali eve.

is-going Ali to-house

There goes Ali home.

Anacoluthon
VOS

Gidiyor

is-going

eve

to-house

Ali.

Ali

Gidiyor eve Ali.

is-going to-house Ali

There goes Ali home.

Anacoluthon

Meanings may be different depending on emphasis.

In one study, only about half of the transitive sentences used by a sample of Turkish speakers were found to be in the SOV order.[4]

When a sentence has multiple informational components, the stressed component is positioned just before the verb:

Ali

Ali

bugün

today

eve

to-house

arabayla

by-car

gidiyor.

is-going

Ali bugün eve arabayla gidiyor.

Ali today to-house by-car is-going

Today, Ali is going to the house by car.

Ali

Ali

eve

to-house

arabayla

by-car

bugün

today

gidiyor.

is-going

Ali eve arabayla bugün gidiyor.

Ali to-house by-car today is-going

Today, Ali is going to the house by car.

Ali

Ali

arabayla

by-car

bugün

today

eve

to-house

gidiyor.

is-going

Ali arabayla bugün eve gidiyor.

Ali by-car today to-house is-going

Today, Ali is going to the house by car.

Morpheme order

The order of morphemes in Turkish is often opposite to English:

Turkish English Comment
Avrupa Europe
Avrupalı of Europe / European adjective (European)
Avrupalılaş become European (intransitive) verb root
Avrupalılaştır Europeanise (transitive) verb root
Avrupalılaştırama be unable to Europeanise negated verb root
Avrupalılaştıramadık we couldn't Europeanise finite verb
Avrupalılaştıramadık one that is unable to be Europeanised noun
Avrupalılaştıramadıklar unable to be Europeanised ones plural
Avrupalılaştıramadıklarımız those whom we couldn't manage to Europeanise possessive, 1st person plural
Avrupalılaştıramadıklarımızdan of those whom we couldn't manage to Europeanise ablative case
Avrupalılaştıramadıklarımızdanmış is reportedly of those whom we couldn't manage to Europeanise copula in inferential tense
Avrupalılaştıramadıklarımızdanmışsınız you are reportedly of those whom we couldn't manage to Europeanise 2nd person plural/formal
Avrupalılaştıramadıklarımızdanmışsınızcasına as if you were reportedly of those whom we couldn't manage to Europeanise Adverb of equalization/possibility

The above example is also illustrative of the productive nature of Turkish suffixes in creating new verbs, nouns, etc. Note that the word Avrupalılaştıramadık can be a verb, a participle or a noun; in this parse, it is a participle, or verbal adjective, that is used as a noun.

The longest published word in Turkish, muvaffakiyetsizleştiricileştiriveremeyebileceklerimizdenmişsinizcesine, means "as if you are one of those that we cannot easily convert into an unsuccessful-person-maker" (i.e., someone who un-educates people to make them unsuccessful).

Inflectional suffixes

For case endings, see § Case

The plural suffix (çoğul eki) can be used with nouns and with third-person verbs:

  • -ler (front vowel harmony: e, i, ö, ü)
  • -lar (back vowel harmony: a, ı, o, u)

Nouns are derived from verbs in several ways. The number of ways of forming verbal nouns (fiil isimleri) from verb-stems can be debated; here are three:

Verbal-noun suffixes
description suffix
infinitive (mastar "template") -mek2
gerund -me2
"way of doing VERB" -(y)iş4

Several series of endings show distinctions of person (kişi); they are given here, along with the personal pronouns for comparison:

Indicators of person
person 1st 2nd 3rd
number sg pl sg pl sg/pl pl
personal pronouns ben biz sen siz o onlar
possessive suffixes
(iyelik ekleri)
-(i)m -(i)miz -(i)n -(i)niz -(s)i -leri
personal endings
(kişi ekleri)
predicative (I) -(y)im -(y)iz -sin -siniz -ler
verbal (II) -m -k -n -niz -ler
optative (III) -(y)eyim -(y)elim -(y)esin -(y)esiniz -(y)e -(y)eler
imperative (IV) -(y)in(iz) -sin -sinler

The names given to the personal endings here are not standard. These endings are often just referred to as type I, II, III, and IV respectively; but the order in which the types are numbered is also not standard. Lewis (1967) refers to the suffixes of possession as "personal" endings.

In the third person, plural number is not always explicitly marked, and the same form is used for both singular and plural. If the plural suffix -ler is used, it combines with the personal endings as indicated in the final column of the table.

A "suffix of possession" gives the person of the possessor of the object named by the noun to which the suffix is attached; it also indicates a subject for a participle. (See § Possession.)

A "predicative" ending can assign a person to a noun, thus creating a complete sentence:

insan "human" → İnsanım. "I am a human."

See also § Predication and Turkish copula.

All of the personal suffixes can be used in the formation of verbs. Verb-stems have been mentioned. A verb-base is obtained from a verb-stem by attachment of certain suffixes or characteristics given below. Then the personal endings here called "predicative" and "verbal" attach only to verb-bases; the optative and imperative endings attach to verb-stems.

Verb characteristics
with predicative endings progressive -mekte
necessitative -meli
aorist
(habitual)[5]
positive -(i/e)r
negative -mez
impotential -(y)emez
future -(y)ecek
inferential perfective -miş
imperfective[6] -iyor
with verbal endings perfective[7] -di
conditional -se

The first syllable of the present/imperfective tense suffix (-iyor) exhibits vowel harmony while the second is invariable. When suffixed to a stem ending in a vowel, that vowel is elided: ye- + -iyoryiyor. The aorist negative and impotential forms are given here because they are anomalous. Note, that the -z of the aorist negative (-mez) and impotential (-(y)emez) is dropped in the first-person singular and plural, in order to be able to suffix it (but is retained when the interrogative particle mi intervenes; see below). (Aorist negative first-person singular: -mem; but: aorist impotential third-person plural: -(y)emezler.)

See also Negation and potential in verb-stems under § Verbs below.

Some third-person verbs also function as participles. Participles can be classified as personal, if they take a suffix of possession, and impersonal, if they do not. The following suffixes attach to verb-stems:

Participial endings
  impersonal personal
aorist positive -(i/e)r  
negative -mez
impotential -(y)emez
imperfective -(y)en
future -(y)ecek
perfective -miş -dik

The interrogative particle (soru eki) is not written as a suffix, but phonetically it is enclitic; in particular, it exhibits vowel harmony:

  • mi (front-unrounded vowel harmony: i, after e and i)
  • (back-unrounded vowel harmony: ı, after a and ı)
  • mu (back-rounded vowel harmony: u, after o and u)
  • (front-rounded vowel harmony: ü, after ö and ü)

Nouns

Inflection

A Turkish noun has no gender. The dictionary-form of a noun can take up to four (kinds of) inflectional suffixes, generally in the following order:

  1. plural suffix;
  2. suffix of possession (iyelik eki from iye "owner");
  3. case-ending;
  4. personal suffix (kişi eki from kişi "person").

Through its presence or absence, the plural ending shows distinctions of number.

Number

A noun is made plural by addition of -ler or -lar (depending on the vowel harmony). When a numeral is used with a noun, however, the plural suffix is usually not used:

baş "head"
başlar "[some] heads"
beş baş "five head(s)", but
Beşevler "Five Houses" (district of Bursa)

The plural ending also allows a family (living in one house) to be designated by a single member:

Aliler "Ali and his family"
teyze "maternal aunt"
teyzem "my maternal aunt"
teyzemler "my maternal aunt and her family"

In the last example, the first-person singular suffix of possession comes before the plural ending; this is an exception to the order of suffixes given above. In the usual order, we have:

teyzelerim "my maternal aunts"

Nouns are pluralized in standard temporal greetings.

gün ("day") – İyi günler! ("Good day!")
yıl ("year") – Mutlu yıllar! ("Happy new year!")

Possession

As noted earlier, the suffixes of possession give the person (and number) of the possessor of what is named by the noun:

Suffixes of Possession (iyelik ekleri)
1st 2nd 3rd
singular -(i)m -(i)n -(s)i
plural -(i)miz -(i)niz -leri

When a word takes one of the endings of possession, the word becomes the name of something possessed, not possessing. The word for the possessor, if present, takes the genitive case ending.

Examples with teyze ("maternal aunt")
Example Composition Translation
teyzen teyze "maternal aunt" + -n "belonging to you (singular)" "your maternal aunt"
teyzeniz teyze "maternal aunt" + -niz "belonging to you (plural)" "your maternal aunt"
teyzelerin teyze "maternal aunt" + -ler- (plural suffix) + -in "belonging to you (singular)" "your maternal aunts"
teyzeleriniz teyze "maternal aunt" + -ler- (plural suffix) + -iniz "belonging to you (plural)" "your maternal aunts"

The plural ending will not be attached twice to the same word; therefore ambiguity is possible:

fikir "idea"
fikirleri "their idea" or "their ideas" or "his/her ideas"

Ambiguity can be resolved with #Pronouns.

Case

The Turkish language is normally described as having six cases, whose names in English are borrowed from Latin grammar. The case endings (durum ekleri 'ending condition') are regular and subject to vowel harmony.

The postposition ile is often absorbed onto the noun as -(y)le, and some authors analyse this as an instrumental and comitative case.[8] As it differs from the other case markers in several ways,[9] it may be considered as an "inflectional marker" but not a case marker.[10] In particular, unlike the other case endings, -(y)le is never accentuated.[11] Also, when combined with the personal pronouns, the demonstratives, or the interrogative kim, they are used in the genitive, e.g., kiminle 'with whom', not *kimle.

Cases and their endings
Case Turkish Name Ending Example Translation
Absolute yalın ("bare") durum -∅- ev ("house") adam ("man") "(the) house" "(the) man"
Definite accusative belirtme ("clarifying") durumu -(y)ı-, -(y)i-, -(y)u-, -(y)ü- evi adamı "the house" "the man"
Dative yönelme ("facing-towards") durumu -(y)a-, -(y)e- eve adama "to the house" "to the man"
Locative bulunma ("being-present") durumu -da-, -de-, -ta-, -te- evde adamda "at home" "in/on the man"
Ablative çıkma ("going-out") durumu -dan-, -den-, -tan-, -ten- evden adamdan "from the house" "from the man"
Genitive tamlayan ("compounding") eki -(n)ın-, -(n)in-, -(n)un-, -(n)ün- evin adamın "the house's" "the man's"
Instrumental aracılık ("mediation") halı -(y)le-, -(y)la- evle adamla "with the house" "with the man"

If a case ending is attached to a demonstrative pronoun (which ends in o or u), or to a noun that has already taken a third-person ending of possession, or to a compound noun where the second word is already suffixed, then the case ending is preceded by n (and the parenthetical y is not used). For instance: "Türk yemeklerini seviyorum.", "I love Turkish food."[12]

Cases and their endings (nouns already suffixed with third-person ending)
Case Turkish Name Ending Example Translation
Absolute yalın ("bare") durum -∅- evi ("his/her house") adamı ("his/her man") "(his/her) house" "(his/her) man"
Definite accusative belirtme ("clarifying") durumu -nı-, -ni-, -nu-, -nü- evini adamını "his/her house" "his/her man"
Dative yönelme ("going-towards") durumu -na-, -ne- evine adamına "to his/her house" "to his/her man"
Locative bulunma ("being-present") durumu -nda-, -nde- evinde adamında "at his/her home" "in/on his/her man"
Ablative çıkma ("going-out") durumu -ndan-, -nden- evinden adamından "from his/her house" "from his/her man"
Genitive tamlayan ("compounding") eki -nın-, -nin-, -nun-, -nün- evinin adamının "his/her house's" "his/her man's"
Absolute case

The absolute case combines the uses of the nominative, vocative, and (in part) accusative cases. It is for subjects, and for names of people being addressed. It is also used for indefinite direct objects. Definite direct objects are in the definite-accusative case:

şiir "poem" (absolute case)
Şiir okur. "S/he reads a poem/poetry." (absolute case, indefinite direct object)
Şiiri okur. "S/he reads the poem." (accusative case, definite direct object)
Dative case

The dative case tells the place to which. Thus it has roughly the meaning of the English prepositions "to" and "into", and also "in" when it can be replaced with "into":

Birayı

the-beer

buzdolabına

into-icebox

koy.

put

Birayı buzdolabına koy.

the-beer into-icebox put

"Put the beer in(to) the fridge."

The dative also is for objects, usually indirect objects, but sometimes objects that in English would be considered direct:

Güneşin

sun's

batışına

at-its-sinking

bak.

look

Güneşin batışına bak.

sun's at-its-sinking look

"Look at the sunset."

Hükümete

in-government

güven.

trust

Hükümete güven.

in-government trust

"Trust the government."

Locative case

The locative case tells where, hence corresponds to the English prepositions "at", "on", and "in" (when it does not mean "into").

ev "house" → evde "at home"
Buzdolabında dört bira var
in-icebox four beer exist
"There are four beers in the fridge."
Ablative case

The ablative case tells whence, that is, the place from which (or through which), hence:

  • material out of which something is made;

kumdan

of-sand

yapılmış

made

kale

castle

kumdan yapılmış kale

of-sand made castle

"castle made of sand"

  • a cause by which something is effected;

açlıktan

of-hunger

öl

die

açlıktan öl

of-hunger die

"die of hunger"

  • that to which other things are being compared (see #Adjectives below).
Genitive case

The genitive case indicates a "compounding" (tamlayan) word. The corresponding "compounded" (tamlanan) word will take the appropriate suffix of possession. The pair of these words is then a definite compound (belirtili tamlama):

anne "mother"
annesi "her mother"
Ayşe'nin annesi "Ayşe's mother"

(The apostrophe in Turkish is used before suffixes attached to proper nouns.)

However, if two nouns are connected, but not by ownership, then the second noun generally takes an ending of possession, while the first takes no ending. The result is an indefinite compound (belirtisiz tamlama):

Türkiye'nin Cumhurbaşkanı "The President of Turkey" (definite)
Türkiye Cumhuriyeti "The Republic of Turkey" (indefinite)

If one noun names a material, the other noun need not take an ending:

nikâh yüzüğü "wedding ring"
altın yüzük "gold ring"

The genitive case can also be used for the subject of some complement or adjunct clauses:[13]

  • Annemizin uzak bir semtte oturmasına rağmen, her gün ona uğruyoruz. // Although our mother lives in a remote neighborhood, we visit her every day."
  • Başkanın vermesi gerekiyor. // The president needs to give it.
  • Tuğçe bizim Ankara'ya gitmemizi istedi. // Tuğçe wanted us to go to Ankara.
  • Ben Ali'nin camı kırdığı zamanı biliyordum. // I knew when Ali broke the glass.
Instrumental case

The instrumental case functions as both an instrumental and a comitative.

Deniz'le konuştuk "Deniz and we spoke."[nb 1]
çekiçle vur "hit with a hammer"
Onunla konuştuk "He and we spoke."[nb 2]

Predication

If a noun is to be in the first or second person, one of the predicative suffixes (or type-I personal suffixes) will show this.

1st 2nd 3rd
singular -(y)im -sin
plural -(y)iz -siniz -ler

Examples

dünya "world" → Dünyayız. "We are the world."
çocuk "child" → Çocuklarsınız. "You are the children"

In the third person, no ending is required. However, the ending -dir can be used; it is said[14] to be the remnant of a verb turur "S/he stands". Again in the third person, the plural suffix may be used:

Türk or Türktür "S/he is Turkish"
Türkler or Türktürler "They are Turkish"
Türklerdir "They are the Turks" [15]

Several suffixes can be combined:

Evinizdeyim.

ev-

house

 

-iniz

your

PL

-de-

at

LOC

-yim

I am

1SG.PRED

ev- -iniz -de- -yim

house your at {I am}

{} PL LOC 1SG.PRED

"I am at your house."

Verbal nouns

The infinitive, formed with -mek as noted earlier, does not take a suffix of possession, or the genitive case-ending. It does take all other case-endings. In particular, the progressive characteristic given earlier is the infinitive ending with the locative ending:

Konuşmaktayız – "We are in (the act of) speaking."
Savaşmaktayız – "We are in warmaking", that is, "We are at war."

The verbal noun in -me is called a gerund above, since it corresponds roughly to the English gerund.

bekle "wait" → bekleme "waiting": bekleme odası "waiting room"

The verbal noun can take a suffix of possession and any case-ending:

Beklemeniz

your-waiting

lâzım.

necessary

Beklemeniz lâzım.

your-waiting necessary

"You have to wait."

Sesini

your-voice-ACC

duymayı

hearing-ACC

seviyorum.

I-love

Sesini duymayı seviyorum.

your-voice-ACC hearing-ACC I-love

"I like to hear your voice."

The dative form of a Turkish gerund can correspond precisely to an English infinitive with to:

Ülkemizde

In-our-country

nano

nano

teknolojik

technological

ürünler

products

üretilmeye

to-be-produced

başlandı.

began

Ülkemizde nano teknolojik ürünler üretilmeye başlandı.

In-our-country nano technological products to-be-produced began

"Nano-technological products began to be produced in our country."[16]

The suffix -iş can also be used to create verbal nouns:

Verb Noun
yürü- "walk" yürüyüş "walk, walking"
yağ- "rain" yağış "rain"
al- "take" + ver- "give/spend" alışveriş "shopping"
yara- "be of use", yaratıl- "be created" yaratılış "creation"

The verb et- "make, do" can be considered as an auxiliary verb, since for example it is often used with verbal nouns borrowed from other languages, such as Arabic:

kabul et- "accept" (kabul "[an] accepting"); reddet- "reject" (ret "[a] rejecting"); ziyaret et- "visit" (ziyaret "[a] visiting"). 

Considered as units, these are transitive verbs; but the nouns in them can also, by themselves, take direct objects:

Antalya'yı ziyaret "visit to Antalya". 

What looks like an ablative gerund is usually an adverb; the ending -meden usually has the sense of "without". See #Adverbs below.

An infinitive in the absolute case can be the object of a verb such as iste- "want":

Kimi

some-of-them

eğitime

towards-education

devam

continuation

etmek,

make

kimi

some-of-them

de

also

çalışmak

work

istiyor.

want

Kimi eğitime devam etmek, kimi de çalışmak istiyor.

some-of-them towards-education continuation make some-of-them also work want

Some want to continue their education, and some want to work" (source: Cumhuriyet Pazar Dergi, 14 August 2005, p. 1.)

Note here that the compound verb devam et- "continue, last" does not take a direct object, but is complemented by a dative noun.

Another way to express obligation (besides with lâzım as in the earlier example) is by means of zor "trouble, compulsion" and an infinitive:

Gitmek zoru "Go compulsion", Gitmek zorundayız "We must go". 

(Source: same as the last example.)

Both an infinitive and a gerund are objects of the postposition için "for" in the third sentence of the quotation within the following quotation:

A free translation is:

The facility authorities said: "The people of this district [namely Edremit, Van] are generally conservative. They cannot enter the lake comfortably, because the shore areas are near the road. So we are using a screen, both to close off the view of passersby on the road, and so that men will not cause discomfort." However, children cannot be prevented from spying on the other side through gaps in the screen.

Auxiliary verbs

Certain verbs in Turkish are used to enhance the meaning of other verbs, or to agglutinate verbs from nouns. These verbs are called auxiliary verbs. A concise list follows:

Verbs that are used with nouns to agglutinate new verbs

  • etmek (to do)
  • olmak (to be)
  • kılmak (to make)
  • eylemek (to make)

Examples

  • farz (assumption) → farz etmek (to assume)
  • hak (right) → hak etmek (to deserve)
  • af (amnesty) → affetmek (to excuse)
  • kayıp (loss) → kaybetmek (to lose)
  • terk (leaving) → terk etmek (to leave)
  • arz (submission, supply) → arz etmek (to submit, to supply)

If there is a change in the noun root through the process of agglutination, it is written adjacently. These are mostly Arabic loan-words, which switch to their more original form.

In Turkish words, two consonants of a syllable need a vowel to be pronounced. There are exceptions in loan words only, but those that lost their original form are more common. This occurs in two ways:

If a word ends in two identical consonants, one is dropped, e.g. hall ("state, status") becomes hal; aff ("amnesty, forgiving") becomes af.

If a syllable ends in two different consonants, a vowel is added between them; e.g., hükm ("judgement") becomes hüküm.

Exceptions: Words which end in nk, rt, rk, such as taht ("throne"), renk ("colour"), kart ("card"), do not add a vowel. Most of these are loan-words from Persian or Western languages (but zevk "pleasure" from Arabic ذَوْق).

Examples

Noun & Auxiliary Verb Verb Notes
kayıp + etmek kaybetmek ("to lose") kayıp ("lost") was originally kayb, an Arabic loanword
haciz + etmek haczetmek ("to sequester") haciz ("sequestration") was originally hacz, an Arabic loanword
haz + etmek hazzetmek ("to relish, enjoy") haz ("delight") was originally hazz, an Arabic loanword

Verbs that are used with other verbs to enhance the meaning:

  • -(i)vermek (implies urgency)
  • -(e)bilmek (implies ability)
  • -(e)durmak (implies continuity)
  • -(e)gelmek (implies repetition)
  • -(a)kalmak (implies continuity)
  • -(e)yazmak (implies a close escape)

Examples

  • düş- (fall) → düşeyazdım (I almost fell)
  • git- (go) → gidiverdim (I just went)
  • yavaşla- (slow down) → yavaşlayabilirim (I can slow down)
  • yaz- (write) → yazaduruyorlar (they keep on writing)
  • söylen- (be told) → söylenegelir (keeps being told)

Adjectives

Adjectives used attributively precede the noun; used predicatively, they follow, unless something other than word order shows that they are being used predicatively:

Attributive yeşil çim "[the] green grass"
Predicative Çim yeşil(dir). "Grass is green."
Yeşildir çim.

Descriptive adjectives

Most adjectives in the dictionary are descriptive. The two most fundamental descriptive adjectives are:

  • var ("existing")
  • yok ("not existing")

These are used only predicatively:

  • with the sense of the English "There is" and "There is not":

Gökte

in-the-sky

bir

a

bulut

cloud

yok.

not-existing

Gökte bir bulut yok.

in-the-sky a cloud not-existing

"There is not a cloud in the sky."

  • in the construction that supplies the lack of a verb "have":

Balcının

honey-seller's

var

exists

bal

honey

tası,

his-pot

Oduncunun

wood-cutter's

var

exists

baltası.

his-axe

Balcının var bal tası, Oduncunun var baltası.

honey-seller's exists honey his-pot wood-cutter's exists his-axe

"The honey-seller has a honey-pot; the wood-cutter has an axe."

(This is a proverbial expression; the more usual order would make the saying, Balcının bal tası var, oduncunun baltası var).

Indefinite adjectives

The cardinal number bir ("one") can be used as an indefinite article. Word order can make a difference:

güzel bir gün – "a nice day"
bir güzel gün – "one fine day"

Unless it is being used by itself, elliptically, the adjective hiç ("no") requires an additional word with negative force:

Hiç

no

param

my-money

yok.

there-is-not

Hiç param yok.

no my-money there-is-not

"I have no money."

Hiçbir

no-one

adam

man

ada

island

değildir.

is-not

Hiçbir adam ada değildir.

no-one man island is-not

"No man is an island."

Compare:

  • Bir şey görüyorum. – "I see something."
  • Hiçbir şey görmüyorum. – "I don't see anything."

Comparison

In a positive comparison, the object takes the ablative case; the adverb daha ("more") is optional, unless the object is left out.

tüyden

feather-ABL

(daha)

(more)

hafif

light

tüyden (daha) hafif

feather-ABL (more) light

"lighter than a feather"

In a negative comparison, the adverb az ("less") is needed; the object still takes the ablative; daha can still be used as well.

kurşundan

lead-ABL

(daha)

(more)

az

less

ağır

heavy

kurşundan (daha) az ağır

lead-ABL (more) less heavy

"less heavy than lead"

The superlative degree is expressed by the adverb en ("most").

en

most

büyük

big

yalancı

liar

en büyük yalancı

most big liar

"the biggest liar"

en

most

az

less

güvenilir

trust-

en az güvenilir

most less trust-

"the least trustworthy"

Participles

It is noted under #Parts of speech that Turkish participles (sıfat-fiiller) can be classified as

  • personal, if they take a suffix of possession;
  • impersonal, if they do not.

In a personal participle, the suffix of possession signifies the subject of the underlying verb; if this possessor is third person, then the possessor may be further specified with a noun in the genitive case.

The noun modified by a personal participle as an adjective may be the direct object of the underlying verb; the connection may also be more vague.

The noun modified by an impersonal participle is generally the subject of the underlying verb (but see Lewis (1967: IX,2)).

The aorist tense (geniş zaman "broad time") is for habitual actions; the present tense (şimdiki zaman "time that is now") is for actions ongoing or contemplated.

Aorist

Present

that is, "No legal process has begun concerning the AKP members who pulled out guns and fired them in the air"; for -ip see #Adverbs below.

that is, "last week";

Future

Past/present

A personal participle can be construed as a noun and used in parallel with verbal nouns:

that is, "Children are working, 68% to provide for their family's needs, 21% because their family wants it, 6% to learn a job or profession, 4% to meet their [own] needs."

The following sentence from a newspaper headline contains twenty-two words, nine derived from verbs, four of these as participles, three as gerunds. Note also the use of kontrol from French as a verbal noun with et-:

In other words:

Saying that, by not joining the EU and by drawing close to the Islamic world, Turkey would be pushed into the lap of those who favor sharia, French senator Duireux made clear that it was necessary to control the Islamic tide.

Intensification

Turkish adjectives can be intensified with intensifying (pekiştirme) prefixes.[17]

If the adjective begins with a consonant the prefix is the consonant + the following vowel + m, p, r, or s.[17] p operates as the default, and is the most common form. Forms in r and m are rare. There is no single rule that governs the choice of the final consonant. This choice tends to minimize featural similarity with consonants in the base adjective, in particular, the first and second consonants:[18]

  • siyah ("black") → simsiyah ("pitch black")
  • güzel ("pretty") → güpgüzel ("very pretty")
  • temiz ("clean") → tertemiz ("clean as a pin")
  • katı ("hard") → kaskatı ("hard as a rock")

If the adjective begins with a vowel, the prefix consists of this vowel + p:[17]

  • uzun ("long") → upuzun ("very long")

The vowel is sometimes also added after the consonant:[17]

  • sağlam ("healthy") → sapasağlam ("very healthy") (sapsağlam also exists)
  • yalnız ("alone") → yapayalnız ("all alone") (yapyalnız also exists)
  • gündüz ("daytime") → güpegündüz ("") (güpgündüz also exists)
  • çevre ("") → çepeçevre ("") (çepçevre also exists)
  • tıp ("medical") → tıpatıp ("exactly")

There are also some irregular suffixes:[17][19]

  • çıplak ("naked") → çırılçıplak ("stark naked") (çırçıplak and çırçıplak also exist)
  • sıklam ("") → sırılsıklam ("") (sırsıklam also exists)
  • karışık ("complex") → karmakarışık ("totally complex")
  • dağınık ("untidy") → darmadağınık ("very untidy") (dapdağınık and dasdağınık also exist)
  • renk ("colored") → rengârenk ("multicolored")
  • deli ("mad") → zırdeli ("raving mad")
  • parça ("piece") → paramparça ("in pieces")

Some adjectives have more than one intensified form:[20]

  • düz ("flat"): düpdüz (24.1%), dümdüz (78.1%) ("very flat", 2 forms) (the irregular düpedüz also exists)
  • yaş ("fresh"): yapyaş (44.8%), yamyaş (58.6%) ("very fresh", 2 forms)
  • sefil ("miserable"): sepsefil (24.1%), semsefil (6.8%), sersefil (66.6%) ("very miserable", 3 forms)
  • geniş ("large"): gepgeniş (77%), gemgeniş (9.15%), gesgeniş (6.8%), gergeniş (5.7%) ("very large", 4 forms)
  • topaç (""): toptopaç (47.15%), tomtopaç (5.75%), tostopaç (33.3%), tortopaç (3.4%) ("very ", 4 forms)

This process is also called emphatic reduplication. It is only applied to particular common adjectives (between 100[21] and 215 depending on sources[22]), and not to new adjectives which enter Turkish. However, native speakers are able to produce novel forms when asked to do so.[18]

Adverbs

The adverb of negation is değil. It is used to negate sentences that are without verb or var; then it takes the appropriate personal ending:

Evde değilim "I am not at home." 

A number of adverbs are derived from verbs:

The ending -e is seen in:

Güle güle "[Go] smilingly" (said to somebody departing); Güle güle kullanın "Use [it] smilingly" (said to somebody with a new acquisition); Beşe çeyrek kala kalktım "To-five a-quarter remaining I-got-up", that is, "I got up at a quarter to five"; Onu yirmi geçe uyudun "You slept at twenty past ten" (uyu- "sleep", although uy- "heed"). 

The ending -erek denotes action at the same time as, or preceding, that of another verb:

Geceyi

the-night

konuşarak

talking

geçirdik

we-caused-to-pass

Geceyi konuşarak geçirdik

the-night talking we-caused-to-pass

"We spent the night talking."

Akıl

yürüterek

bu

sonuca

ulaşıyorum

Akıl yürüterek bu sonuca ulaşıyorum

"By using reason, I arrived at this conclusion" [the latter is Bülent Ecevit as quoted in Cumhuriyet, 20 July 2005].

Doğaya

en

az

zarar

vererek

yaşamak

Doğaya en az zarar vererek yaşamak

"To live while giving the least harm to nature" [Buğday magazine, 7–8/2005, no 32].

From ol- "be, become", olarak forms adverbial phrases corresponding to those in English with "as":

Size

To-you

bir

a

dost

friend

olarak

as

söylüyorum

I'm-telling

Size bir dost olarak söylüyorum

To-you a friend as I'm-telling

"I'm telling you this as a friend"

ciddi olarak "seriously" (ciddi "serious"). 

The ending -meden on a verb-stem looks like the ablative gerund, but it is not (Lewis [XI,12]). It indicates an action not occurring at all, or following that of the main verb:

Bakmadan atlama "Don't leap without looking"; Bakmadan önce atlama "Don't leap before looking." 

Bir

A

soruyu

particular-question

cevaplamadan

without-answering

tartışmak,

to-debate

tartışmadan

without-debating

cevaplamaktan

from-to-answer

iyidir

is-good,

Bir soruyu cevaplamadan tartışmak, tartışmadan cevaplamaktan iyidir

A particular-question without-answering to-debate without-debating from-to-answer is-good,

"It is better to debate without answering than to answer without debating." (Source of the last sentence: Joseph Joubert as quoted on p. 20 of Gündelik Bilmeceler by Partha Ghose and Dipankar Home, translated by Özlem Özbal, Tübitak Popüler Bilim Kitapları 25, Ankara, 1996.)

Complementing önce "before" is sonra "after", which can follow a verb-stem given the ending -dikten:

Baktıktan sonra atla "After looking, leap"; Ayşe baktıktan sonra Neşe atladı "After Ayşe looked, Neşe leapt." 

Simultaneity is expressed by iken or its (not enclitic) suffixed form -(y)ken; but if it follows a verb, then the verb appears, not as a stem, but as a base; see #Bases of verbs:

Eve girmekteyken, bir şey hatırladım "As I was entering the house, I remembered something"; Ben eve girmekteyken, telefon çaldı "As I was entering the house, the telephone rang." 

If two verbs of the same grammatical form have the same subject, the endings on the first verb can be replaced by -ip; see the example under #Participles.

Pronouns

The third-person personal pronoun o "she/he/it" is declined as if it were the noun on. The other persons, ben "I", sen "you (singular/informal)", biz "we", siz "you (plural/formal)", are declined like nouns, except for a vowel change in the dative and an anomalous genitive. All personal pronouns aside from onlar form their instrumental with the genitive form.

singular plural
1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rd
absolute ben sen o biz siz onlar
accusative beni seni onu bizi sizi onları
dative bana sana ona bize size onlara
locative bende sende onda bizde sizde onlarda
ablative benden senden ondan bizden sizden onlardan
genitive benim senin onun bizim sizin onların
instrumental benimle seninle onunla bizimle sizinle onlarla

The absolute case is generally needed only for emphasis:

Nasılsınız? "How are you?"
İyiyim; siz nasılsınız? "I am fine; how are you?"
Ben de iyiyim. "I too am fine."

The third-person pronoun can clear up an ambiguity mentioned above:

onların fikri "their idea"
onların fikirleri "their ideas"
onun fikirleri "her [or his] ideas"

The pronoun o is also one of the demonstrative pronouns:

  • o "that";
  • bu "this";
  • şu "this or that" (thing pointed to).

The latter two are declined like o (that is, treated as if they were bun and şun, and formed to the instrumental with the genitive).

The interrogative pronouns (and adjectives) are:

  • kim "who";
  • ne "what";
  • hangi "which";
  • kaç "how many" or "how much".

These appear in embedded questions but do not serve as true relative pronouns:

Buzdolabında kaç tane var, o bilir. – "S/he knows how many are in the refrigerator."

There is a suffix -ki that acts as a relative pronoun in that it creates what, in English, would be called relative clauses. It does not display vowel harmony, except in a few common formations:

benimki – "mine (that which is mine)"
buzdolabındaki bira – "beer that is in the refrigerator" (no vowel harmony)
bugünkü – "today's (which is today)" (with vowel harmony)
dünkü – "yesterday's (which was yesterday)" (with vowel harmony)

The reflexive pronoun (dönüşlü zamir from dön- "turn") is kendi "own, self":

Kendi kendinden korkma – "Do not be afraid of thyself."

Many of the indefinite adjectives can function as pronouns, taking case-endings.

Verbs

Copula

Stems of verbs

Many stems in the dictionary are indivisible; others consist of endings attached to a root.

Verb-stems from nouns

The verb-stem temizle- "make clean" is the adjective temiz "clean" with the suffix -le; this suffix was mentioned earlier under #Parts of speech in connection with the verb köpekle-. Many verbs are formed from nouns or adjectives with -le:

Noun Verb
baş "head" başla- "make a head", that is, "begin"
kilit "lock" kilitle- "make locked", that is, "lock"
kir "dirt" kirle- "make dirty"

Voice

A verbal root, or a verb-stem in -le, can be lengthened with certain extensions. If present, they appear in the following order, and they indicate distinctions of voice:

Extensions for voice
Voice Ending Notes
Reflexive -(i)n  
Reciprocal -(i)ş
Causative -t after polysyllabic stems in -l, -r, or a vowel; and
-dir in other cases; except:
-ir, -er, -it after some monosyllabic stems; and
  there are some other exceptional forms as well.
Passive -il after stems ending in a consonant other than -l; otherwise, same as reflexive.

These endings might seem to be inflectional in the sense of the § Introduction above, but their meanings are not always clear from their particular names, and dictionaries do generally give the resulting forms, so in this sense they are constructive endings.

The causative extension makes an intransitive verb transitive, and a transitive verb factitive. Together, the reciprocal and causative extension make the repetitive extension -(i)ştir.

Verb Root/Stem New Verb Voice
bul "find" buluş "meet" -uş (reciprocal)
bulun "be found/present" -un (reflexive)
yıka "wash (something)" yıkan "wash oneself" -n (reflexive)
yıkanıl "be washed" -n (reflexive) + -ıl (passive)
kayna "(come to a) boil" kaynat "(bring to a) boil" -t (causitive)
öl "die" öldür "kill" -dür (causitive)
öldür "kill"
öldürt "have (someone) killed" -t (causitive, factitive)
ara "look for" araştır "investigate" (reciprocal) + -tır (causitive) = (repetitive)

Negation and potential in verb-stems

A dictionary-stem is positive; it can be made:

  • negative, by addition of -me;
  • impotential, by addition of -e and then -me.

Any of these three (kinds of) stems can be made potential by addition of -e and then -bil. The -bil is not enclitic, but represents the verb bil- "know, be able"; the first syllable of the impotential ending represents an obsolete verb u- "be powerful, able" Lewis [VIII,55]. So far then, there are six kinds of stems:

Paradigm for stems negative, impotential and potential
English infinitive English finite form
gel- "come" "come"
gelme- "not come" "do not come"
geleme- "be unable to come" "cannot come"
gelebil- "be able to come" "can come"
gelmeyebil- "be able to not come" "may not come"
gelemeyebil- "able to be unable to come" "may be unable to come"

Such stems are not used for aorist forms, which have their own peculiar means of forming negatives and impotentials.

Note that -ebil is one of several verbs that can be compounded to enhance meaning. See Auxiliary verbs.

Bases of verbs

The characteristics with which verb-bases are formed from stems are given under § Inflectional suffixes. Note again that aorist verbs have their own peculiar negative and impotential forms.

The progressive base in -mekte is discussed under § Verbal nouns. Another base, namely the necessitative (gereklilik), is formed from a verbal noun. The characteristic is -meli, where -li forms adjectives from nouns, and -me forms gerunds from verb-stems. A native speaker may perceive the ending -meli as indivisible; the analysis here is from #Lewis [VIII,30]).

The present base is derived from the ancient verb yorı- "go, walk" #Lewis [VIII,16]; this can be used for ongoing actions, or for contemplated future actions.

The meaning of the aorist base is described under #Adjectives from verbs: participles.

There is some irregularity in first-person negative and impotential aorists. The full form of the base -mez (or (y)emez) reappears before the interrogative particle mi:

Gelmem "I do not come" (cf. Gelmez miyim "Do I not come?");
Gelmeyiz "We do not come" (cf. Gelmez miyiz "Do we not come?")

The definite past or di-past is used to assert that something did happen in the past. The inferential past or miş-past can be understood as asserting that a past participle is applicable now; hence it is used when the fact of a past event, as such, is not important; in particular, the inferential past is used when one did not actually witness the past event.

A newspaper will generally use the di-past, because it is authoritative. The need to indicate uncertainty and inference by means of the miş-past may help to explain the extensive use of ki in the newspaper excerpt at Turkish vocabulary#The conjunction ki.

The conditional (şart) verb could also be called "hypothetical"; it is used for remote possibilities, or things one might wish for. (See also #Compound bases.)

The various bases thus give distinctions of tense, aspect and mood. These can be briefly tabulated:

First-person singular verbs
Form Suffix Verb English Translation
Progressive -mekte gelmekteyim "I am in the process of coming"
Necessitative -meli gelmeliyim "I must come"
Positive -(i/e)r gelirim "I come"
Negative -me(z) gelmem "I do not come"
Impotential -(y)eme(z) gelemem "I cannot come"
Future -(y)ecek geleceğim "I will come"
Inferential Past -miş gelmişim "It seems that I came"
Present/Imperfective -iyor geliyorum "I am coming"
Perfective/Definite Past -di geldim "I came"
Conditional -se gelsem "if only I came"

Questions

The interrogative particle mi precedes predicative (type-I) endings (except for the 3rd person plural -ler), but follows the complete verb formed from a verbal, type-II ending:

Geliyor musunuz? "Are you coming?" (but: Geliyorlar mı? "Are they coming?")
Geldiniz mi? "Did you come?"

Optative and imperative moods

Usually, in the optative (istek), only the first-person forms are used, and these supply the lack of a first-person imperative (emir). In common practice then, there is one series of endings to express something wished for:

Merged Optative & Imperative Moods
Number Person Ending Example English Translation
Singular 1st -(y)eyim Geleyim "Let me come"
2nd Gel "Come (you, singular)"
3rd -sin Gelsin "Let [her/him/it] come"
Plural 1st -(y)elim Gelelim "Let us come"
2nd -(y)in(iz) Gelin "Come (you, plural)"
3rd -sinler Gelsinler "Let them come"

The defective verb i-

The ancient verb er- #Lewis [VIII,2] survives in Turkish in three bases:

  • imiş,
  • idi,
  • ise.

The form iken given under #Adverbs from verbs is also descended from er-. Since no more bases are founded on the stem i-, this verb can be called defective. In particular, i- forms no negative or impotential stems; negation is achieved with the #Adverb of negation, değil, given earlier.

The i- bases are often turned into base-forming suffixes without change in meaning; the corresponding suffixes are

  • -(y)miş,
  • -(y)di,
  • -(y)se,

where the y is used only after vowels. For example, Hasta imiş and Hastaymış both mean, "Apparently/Reportedly, he/she/it is ill".

The verb i- serves as a copula. When a copula is needed, but the appropriate base in i- does not exist, then the corresponding base in ol- is used; when used otherwise this stem means "become".

The verb i- is irregular in the way it is used in questions: the particle mi always precedes it:

Kuş idi or Kuştu "It was a bird";
Kuş muydu? "Was it a bird?"

Compound bases

The bases so far considered can be called "simple". A base in i- can be attached to another base, forming a compound base. One can then interpret the result in terms of English verb forms by reading backwards. The following list is representative, not exhaustive:

  • Past tenses:
    • continuous past: Geliyordum "I was coming";
    • aorist past: Gelirdim "I used to come";
    • future past: Gelecektim "I was going to come";
    • pluperfect: Gelmiştim "I had come";
    • necessitative past: Gelmeliydim "I had to come";
    • conditional past: Gelseydim "If only I had come."
  • Inferential tenses:
    • continuous inferential: Geliyormuşum "It seems (they say) I am coming";
    • future inferential: Gelecekmişim "It seems I shall come";
    • aorist inferential: Gelirmişim "It seems I come";
    • necessitative inferential: Gelmeliymişim "They say I must come."

By means of ise or -(y)se, a verb can be made conditional in the sense of being the hypothesis or protasis of a complex statement:

önemli bir şey yapıyorsunuz "You are doing something important";
Önemli bir şey yapıyorsanız, rahatsız etmeyelim "If you are doing something important, let us not cause disturbance."

The simple conditional can be used for remote conditions:

Bakmakla öğrenilse, köpekler kasap olurdu "If learning by looking were possible, dogs would be butchers."

Notes

  1. ^ The literal "We spoke with Deniz" may be incorrect in this case.
  2. ^ The literal "We spoke with him" may be incorrect in this case.

References

  1. ^ Archived from the original on 2005-01-01.
  2. ^ E.E. Erguvanli 1984 The function of Word Order in Turkish Grammar. University of California Press. UCLA PhD Dissertation 1979
  3. ^ Hoffman, B. (1994) Generating Context-Appropriate Word Orders in Turkish in Proceedings of the Seventh International Workshop on Natural Language Generation Pages 117–126 https://arxiv.org/abs/cmp-lg/9407017v1
  4. ^ Slobin, D.I. and Bever, G.T. "Children use Canonical Sentence Schemas: A Cross-linguistic Study of Word Order and Inflections". Cognition, 12:229–265, 1982
  5. ^ The term "aorist" is often used in Turkish grammars for the habitual aspect. This is quite different from its use in Greek grammars, where it means perfective aspect: what is called "definite past" in Turkish.
  6. ^ The imperfective aspect is often called "present", though it is not actually present tense
  7. ^ The perfective aspect is often called "definite past", though it is not actually past tense
  8. ^ Gerjan van Schaaik, The Oxford Turkish Grammar, 2020, ISBN 0198851502, section 6.5.7, p. 53
  9. ^ Celia Kerslake, Asli Goksel, Turkish: An Essential Grammar, 2014, ISBN 1134042183, p. 47
  10. ^ Asli Galksel, Aslı Göksel, Celia Kerslake, Turkish: A Comprehensive Grammar, 2005, ISBN 041521761X, p. 67
  11. ^ G.L. Lewis, Turkish Grammar, 1967, ISBN 0198158386, p. 23
  12. ^ Pronouns & Nouns, Possession, Postpositions, Adjectives, Adverbs, Conjunctions, Basics of Turkish Grammar
  13. ^ Syntax and Semantics of Genitive Subject-Case in Turkic, N. Gulsat Aygen, Northern Illinois University
  14. ^ Lewis, 1967: VIII,3
  15. ^ Lewis, 1967: VIII,5
  16. ^ Cumhuriyet Bilim-Teknik 13 August 2005, p. 1
  17. ^ a b c d e Turkish Vocabulary Booster, Word Formation in Turkish, by Halit Demir, 15 September 2020, 3. "Intensifying prefixes for adjectives"
  18. ^ a b Turkish Emphatic Reduplication: Balancing Productive and Lexicalized Forms, Rajdip Dhillon, Yale University
  19. ^ Göksel, A., & Kerslake, C. (2005). Turkish: A comprehensive grammar. London: Routledge. p. 462
  20. ^ Koç, E . (2018). A Critical View on the Intensified Adjectives in Turkish. Ana Dili Eğitimi Dergisi, 6 (2), 314–324 . DOI: 10.16916/aded.311748
  21. ^ Kaufman, B. D. (2014). Learning an unproductive process: Turkish emphatic reduplication. UC Santa Cruz. ProQuest ID: Kaufman_ucsc_0036N_10640. Merritt ID: ark:/13030/m5tx4vkm. Retrieved from https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8mp2d399
  22. ^ Özçelik, S . (2012). m, p, r, s Ünsüzleriyle Yapılan Pekiştirme ve Kuralları Üzerine . Türk Dili Araştırmaları Yıllığı – Belleten, 60 (2), 29–42 . Retrieved from https://dergipark.org.tr/en/pub/belleten/issue/32746/363486

Grammars

  • Robert Underhill (1976). Turkish Grammar. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. "A classic, still used to teach Turkish grammar in many universities."
  • Kaya Can (1991). Yabancılar İçin Türkçe-İngilizce Açıklama Türkçe Dersleri. Ankara: Orta Doğu Teknik Üniversitesi, Fen ve Edebiyat Fakültesi. "Turkish lessons with Turkish-English explanation[s] for foreigners."
  • Ekrem Čaušević (1996). Gramatika suvremenoga turskog jezika. Zagreb, CRO: Sveučilišna naklada. "A classic, still used to teach Turkish grammar in many universities."
  • Aslı Göksel & Celia Kerslake (2005). Turkish: A Comprehensive Grammar. London: Routledge. "The most recent comprehensive grammar in English."
  • G. L. Lewis (1967). Turkish Grammar. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-815838-6.
  • G. L. Lewis (2000). Turkish Grammar. Oxford University Press. Second edition. Structural differences between the two editions are not named in the second, but appear to be as follows: IV,4 "-çe", VI,7 "Arithmetical terms", XI,16 "-diğinde", and XII,25 "" are new, while XV,1 "Nominal sentences and verbal sentences" in the first edition was dropped.
  • Eran Oyal (1986). Sözcüklerin Anlamsal ve Yapısal Özellikleri: Konular, Örnekler, Sorular, Açıklama Yanıtlar (ÖSS ve ÖYS için Dil Yeteneği Dizisi 2). Ankara. "Semantic and syntactic properties of words: subjects, examples, questions, answers with explanation (language ability for the university entrance examinations, 2)."
  • Atilla Özkırımlı (2001). Türk Dili, Dil ve Anlatım. İstanbul Bilgi Üniversitesi Yayınları. "The Turkish language, language, and expression."
  • Bengisu Rona (1989). Turkish in Three Months. Hugo's Language Books Limited.
  • Gerjan van Schaaik (2001). The Bosphorus Papers: Studies in Turkish Grammar 1996–1999. İstanbul: Boğaziçi University Press.
  • Gerjan van Schaaik (2020). The Oxford Turkish Grammar. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Dictionaries

  • İsmet Zeki Eyuboğlu (1991). Türk Dilinin Etimoloji Sözlüğü. "Etymological Dictionary of the Turkish Language." Expanded and revised second edition.
  • H.-J. Kornrumpf (1989). Langenscheidt's Universal Dictionary: English-Turkish, Turkish-English. Istanbul. New edition revised and updated by Resuhi Akdikmen.
  • Redhouse Yeni Türkçe-İngilizce Sözlük. New Redhouse Turkish-English Dictionary. Redhouse Yayınevi, İstanbul, 1968 (12th ed., 1991).
  • Redhouse Büyük Elsözlüğü İngilizce-Türkçe, Türkçe-İngilizce. The Larger Redhouse Portable Dictionary English-Turkish, Turkish-English. Redhouse Yayınevi, İstanbul 1997 (9th printing, 1998).
  • Türk Dil Kurumu [Turkish Language Foundation], Türkçe Sözlük, expanded 7th edition, 1983.

Other Grammars

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  • Banguoğlu, Tahsin (1986), Türkçenin Grameri, TDK, Ankara, 2. Baskı, 628 s.
  • Bilgegil, Kaya (1984), Türkçe Dilbilgisi, Dergâh Yayınları, İstanbul
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  • Burdurlu, İbrahim Zeki (1982), Uygulamalı Cümle Çözümlemeleri, İstanbul.
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  • Demiray, Kemal (1964), Türkçe Dilbilgisi, Ankara.
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  • Demircan (1977), Ömer, Türkiye Türkiye Türkçesinde Kök-Ek Bileşmeleri, TDK, Ankara
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  • Elöve, Ali Ulvi (Çeviren), (Jean Deny) (1941), Türk Dili Grameri (Osmanlı Lehçesi), TDK, İstanbul, XXII+1142+İlâve Doğru-Yanlış Cetveli)+XLI+A-G (İçindekiler).
  • Emecan, Neşe (1998), 1960'tan Günümüze Türkçe, İstanbul.
  • Emre, Ahmed Cevat (1945), Türk Dilbilgisi, TDK, İstanbul, XIX+613 s.
  • Ergin, Muharrem (1987), Osmanlıca Dersleri, Boğaziçi Yayınları, İstanbul, 9. Baskı, VIII+124+236+16 s.
  • Ergin, Muharrem (1985), Türk Dil Bilgisi, Boğaziçi Yayınları, İstanbul, 5. Baskı, XXVIII+407 s.
  • Gabain, Annamarie (1988), Eski Türkçenin Grameri, (Çeviren: Mehmet Akalın), TDK, Ankara, XXIII+313 s.
  • Gencan, Tahir Nejat (1966), Dilbilgisi, TDK, İstanbul, XV+412 s, (2001), Ayraç Yayınları .
  • Göğüş, Beşir (1969), Faydalı Dilbilgisi, I-II-II, İstanbul
  • Göknel, Yüksel (1974), Modern Türkçe Dilbilgisi, İzmir
  • Grönbech, K. (1995), Türkçenin Yapısı, (Çeviren: Mehmet Akalın), TDK, Ankara, 148 s.
  • Hacıeminoğlu, M. Necmettin (1984), Türk Dilinde Edatlar, Milli Eğitim Bak., İstanbul, 3. Baskı, VIII+335+1 s.
  • Hacıeminoğlu, Necmettin (1991), Türk Dilinde Yapı Bakımından Fiiller (En Eski Türkçeden Çağdaş Türk Şivelerine Kadar), Kültür Bak., Ankara, 279 s.
  • Hatiboğlu, Vecihe (1981), Türk Dilinde İkileme, TDK, Ankara, 2. Baskı, 120 s.
  • Hatiboğlu, Vecihe (1981), Türkçenin Ekleri, TDK, Ankara
  • Hatipoğlu, Vecihe (1972), Türkçenin Sözdizimi, Ankara
  • Karahan, Leyla (1991), Türkçede Söz Dizimi, Akçağ Yayınları, Ankara.
  • Karaağaç, Günay (2003), Çağatayca El Kitabı, Akçağ Yayınları.
  • Koç, Nurettin (1996), Yeni Dilbilgisi, İstanbul.
  • Kononov, A. N (1956)., Grammatika Sovremennogo Turetskogo Literaturnogo Yazıka, Akademiya Nauk SSSR Institut Vostokovedeniya, Moskva-Leningrad, 569 s.(Tıpıkbasım (2001), Multilingual, İstanbul)
  • Korkmaz, Zeynep (1994), Türkçede Eklerin Kullanılış Şekilleri ve Ek Kalıplaşması Olayları, TDK, Ankara, Üçüncü baskı, X+92 s.
  • Kornfilt, J. (1997), Turkish, London:Routledge.
  • Kutluk, İbrahim (1976), Sözcük Türleri I, (D. Aksan-N.Atabay-S.Özel ile), Ankara
  • Kükey, Mazhar (1975), Türkçenin Sözdizimi, Ankara
  • Lees, Robert B. (1961), The Phonology of Modern Standard Turkish, Indiana University, Bloomington, Mouton and Co. The Hague, Netherlands, VII+76 s.
  • Lewis, G.L. (1967), Turkish Language, Oxford University Press.
  • Mungan, Güler (2002), Türkçede Fiillerden Türetilmiş İsimlerin Morfolojik ve Semantik Yönden İncelenmesi, Simurg Yayınları.
  • Nash, Rose (1973), Turkish Intonation, Mouton.
  • Özden, Ragıp Hulusi (1938), Tarihsel Bakımdan Öztürkçe ve Yabancı Sözcüklerin Fonetik Ayraçlaır I, İstanbul, 21 s.
  • Özel, Sevgi (1976), Sözcük Türleri II, (D. Aksan-N.Atabay ile), Ankara.
  • Özel, Sevgi (1977), Türkiye Türkçesinde Sözcük Türetme ve Birleştirme, Ankara.
  • Selen, Nevin (1979), Söyleyiş Sesbilimi, Akustik Sesbilimi ve Türkiye Türkçesi, Türk Dil Kurumu Yayınları, Ankara.
  • Swift, Llyod B. (1963), A Reference Grammar of Modern Turkish, Indiana University, Bloomington, Mouton and Co. The Hague, Netherlands, 267 s.+4 Analyses (Tables).
  • Şimşek, Rasim (1987), Örneklerle Türkçe Sözdizimi, Trabzon.
  • Tansu, Muzaffer (1941), Türk Dilinin Entonasyonu: Tecrübi Etüd, Ankara.
  • Tansu, Muzaffer (1963), Durgun Genel Sesbilgisi ve Türkçe, Ankara.
  • Tekin, Talat (1988), Orhun Yazıtları, TDK, Ankara, XIV+200+23+4 s.(Yazıtların Kopyası)
  • Tekin, Talat (1994), Türkoloji Eleştirileri, Doruk Yayınları, Ankara.
  • Tekin, Talat (1995), Türk Dillerinde Birincil Uzun Ünlüler, Kültür Bak. Simurg, Ankara, 192 s.
  • Timurtaş, Faruk K. (1987), Osmanlı Türkçesi Giriş I (Eski Yazı—Gramer—Aruz—Metinler), Umur Reklamcılık ve Matbaacılık, İstanbul, 9. Baskı, XVI+232+176 s.
  • Timurtaş, Faruk K., Osmanlı Türkçesi Grameri III (Eski Yazı ve İmlâ—Arapça—Farsça—Eski Anadolu Türkçesi), Umur Reklamcılık ve Matbaacılık, İstanbul, 3. Baskı, XV+469 s.
  • Timurtaş, Faruk K. (1983), Osmanlı Türkçesi Grameri III, (5. Baskı), Umur Reklâmcılık, İstanbul
  • Timurtaş, Faruk Kadri (1994), Eski Türkiye Türkçesi XV. Yüzyıl (Gramer-Metin-Sözlük), Enderun Kitabevi, İstanbul.
  • Şahin, Hatice (2003), Eski Anadolu Türkçesi, Akçağ Yayınları.
  • Underhill, R. (1976), Turkish Grammar, Mass: The MIT Press.

External links

turkish, grammar, turkish, türkçe, bilgisi, described, this, article, grammar, standard, turkish, spoken, written, educated, people, republic, turkey, turkish, highly, agglutinative, language, that, much, grammar, expressed, means, suffixes, added, nouns, verb. Turkish grammar Turkish Turkce dil bilgisi as described in this article is the grammar of standard Turkish as spoken and written by educated people in the Republic of Turkey Turkish is a highly agglutinative language in that much of the grammar is expressed by means of suffixes added to nouns and verbs It is very regular compared with many European languages For example evlerden from the houses can be analysed as ev house ler plural suffix den ablative case meaning from gidiyorum I am going as git go iyor present continuous tense um 1st person singular I Another characteristic of Turkish is vowel harmony Most suffixes have two or four different forms the choice between which depends on the vowel of the word s root or the preceding suffix for example the ablative case of evler is evlerden from the houses but the ablative case of baslar heads is baslardan from the heads Verbs have six grammatical persons three singular and three plural various voices active and passive reflexive reciprocal and causative and a large number of grammatical tenses Meanings such as not be able should and if which are expressed as separate words in most European languages are usually expressed with verbal suffixes in Turkish A characteristic of Turkish which is shared by neighboring languages such as Bulgarian and Persian is that the perfect tense suffix in Turkish mis mus mis or mus often has an inferential meaning e g geliyormusum it would seem they say that I am coming Verbs also have a number of participial forms which Turkish makes much use of Clauses which begin with who or because in English are generally translated by means of participial phrases in Turkish In Turkish verbs generally come at the end of the sentence or clause adjectives and possessive nouns come before the noun they describe and meanings such as behind for like similar to etc are expressed as postpositions following the noun rather than prepositions before it Contents 1 Introduction 1 1 Suffixes 1 2 Gender 1 3 Person 1 3 1 T V distinction 1 3 2 Honorifics 1 4 Turkish terminology 2 Parts of speech 3 Word order 4 Morpheme order 5 Inflectional suffixes 6 Nouns 6 1 Inflection 6 1 1 Number 6 1 2 Possession 6 1 3 Case 6 1 3 1 Absolute case 6 1 3 2 Dative case 6 1 3 3 Locative case 6 1 3 4 Ablative case 6 1 3 5 Genitive case 6 1 3 6 Instrumental case 6 1 4 Predication 6 2 Verbal nouns 6 3 Auxiliary verbs 7 Adjectives 7 1 Descriptive adjectives 7 2 Indefinite adjectives 7 3 Comparison 7 4 Participles 7 4 1 Aorist 7 4 2 Present 7 4 3 Future 7 4 4 Past present 7 5 Intensification 8 Adverbs 9 Pronouns 10 Verbs 10 1 Copula 10 2 Stems of verbs 10 2 1 Verb stems from nouns 10 2 2 Voice 10 2 3 Negation and potential in verb stems 10 3 Bases of verbs 10 4 Questions 10 5 Optative and imperative moods 10 6 The defective verb i 10 7 Compound bases 11 Notes 12 References 12 1 Grammars 12 2 Dictionaries 12 3 Other Grammars 13 External linksIntroduction EditSuffixes Edit A suffix ek is attached to a stem govde A stem may be a root kok or further analyzable The suffixes used in Turkish fall roughly into two classes constructive suffixes yapim ekleri and inflectional suffixes cekim ekleri A constructive suffix makes a new word from an old one that is it is a derivational suffix An inflectional suffix indicates how a word is used in a sentence The article on Turkish grammar pertains chiefly to inflectional suffixes The article on Turkish vocabulary treats the constructive suffixes The vowels of suffixes undergo vowel harmony When a suffix is attached to a stem the vowel in the suffix generally agrees in frontness or backness and in roundedness with the last vowel in the stem or of the preceding suffix Some suffixes show two way vowel harmony between e and a for example the plural suffix ler lar The e form is found after a syllable with i e o or u e g evler houses gunler days and also after certain Arabic or French borrowings such as saatler hours clocks kalpler hearts Other suffixes show four way vowel harmony between i i u u for example the possessive ending im im um um my These endings are found after syllables containing their own vowels or after e a o o respectively e g evim my house gozum my eye etc A Turkish suffix can be called enclitic if its vowel undergoes vowel harmony agreeing with the last vowel of the stem the suffix is attached to Gender Edit Turkish is a gender neutral language except for a few sex specific words mostly naming professions or different sexes of livestock The English third person singular pronouns she he and it all correspond to a single Turkish pronoun o Many given names in Turkish are also gender neutral so it is entirely possible to describe someone in the Turkish language without their gender identity being made known Person Edit Turkish has a strong T V distinction using the second person plural as the formal form as in French and many other languages Turkish also uses various honorifics T V distinction Edit Family members and friends speak to one another using the second singular person sen and adults use sen to address minors In formal situations meeting people for the first time business customer clerk colleagues plural second person siz is used almost exclusively In very formal situations double plural second person sizler may refer to a much respected person Rarely third person plural conjugation of the verb but not the pronoun may be used to emphasize utmost respect In the imperative there are three forms second person singular for informal second person plural for formal and double plural second person for very formal situations Thus the imperative forms of the verb gelmek to come are gel second person singular informal gelin second person plural formal and geliniz double second person plural very formal The very formal forms are not frequently used Honorifics Edit Turkish honorifics generally follow the first name especially if they refer to gender or particular social statuses e g lt name gt Bey Mr lt name gt Hanim Ms lt name gt Ogretmen teacher Such honorifics are used both in formal and informal situations A newer honorific is Sayin which precedes the surname or full name and is not gender specific e g Sayin Name Surname or Sayin Surname or Sayin Name Bey Hanim They are generally used in very formal situations While these honorifics are normally used in pre position to Turkish first names for foreigners names are preceded by Bay Mr or Bayan Ms Bay Fox Mulder Bayan Dana Scully cf Fox Mulder Bey Dana Scully Hanim if these names were Turkish 1 Turkish terminology Edit In the Turkish terms for the constructive and inflectional endings three roots are involved ek supplement affix notably Turkish has no prefixes yap make cek pull draw For the last two verbal roots the constructive suffix im can be added to form nouns for instances of the actions denoted by the roots yapim construction cekim a pull or draw or a take in cinema Either of these nouns can be compounded with the noun ek resulting in an indefinite compound belirtisiz tamlama the sign of which is the inflectional suffix i attached to ek yapim eki structure suffix cekim eki inflection suffix The inflectional suffix ler comes before the i to form the plural so yapim ekleri cekim ekleri Many words in Turkish particularly many grammatical terms are neologisms invented to replace earlier words borrowed from Arabic or Persian which have largely been successful at permanently superseding the previously used foreign terms See the main article on Turkish language In some cases the foreign term continues to be in use alongside the neologism Parts of speech EditThere are nine parts of speech soz turleri word kinds in Turkish noun isim or ad name pronoun zamir inner being or adil from ad adjective sifat role quality or onad front noun verb fiil act deed or eylem action from eyle make do adverb zarf envelope or belirtec from belir determine postposition ilgec from ilgi interest relation conjunction baglac from bag bond particle edat or ilgec interjection nida obsolete or unlem from un fame repute sound Postpositions are analogous to prepositions in English the main difference being that they follow their objects Postpositions can be considered particles but there are particles in Turkish that are not postpositions Only nouns pronouns and verbs are inflected in Turkish An adjective can usually be treated as a noun or pronoun in which case it can also be inflected Inflection can give a noun features of a verb such as person and tense With inflection a verb can become one of the following verbal noun isim fiil verbal adjective sifat fiil or participle ortac verbal adverb zarf fiil called a gerund by Lewis 1967 citation needed These have peculiarities not shared with other nouns adjectives or adverbs For example some participles take a person the way verbs do Also a verbal noun or adverb can take a direct object Some verbal nouns are not inflected forms in Turkish but are borrowed from Arabic or other languages In Turkish an ascriptive clause can be composed of a common noun standing alone as the Predicative both the Subject and the Predicator being implicit and assumed from the situation Example kopek dog Kopek It is a dog This means that both a noun and a verb can alone constitute an affirmative clause in Turkish which is not the case in English There are two standards for listing verbs in dictionaries Most dictionaries follow the tradition of spelling out the infinitive form of the verb as the headword of the entry but others such as the Redhouse Turkish English Dictionary are more technical and spell out the stem of the verb instead that is they spell out a string of letters that is useful for producing all other verb forms through morphological rules Similar to the latter this article follows the stem as citeword standard Infinitive kosmak to run Stem kos run In Turkish the verbal stem is also the second person singular imperative form Example kos stem meaning run Kos Run Many verbs are formed from nouns by addition of le For example kopek dog kopekle dog paddle in any of several ways The aorist tense of a verb is formed by adding i e r The plural of a noun is formed by suffixing ler Hence the suffix ler can indicate either a plural noun or a finite verb Kopek ler They are dogs Kopekle r S he dog paddles Most adjectives can be treated as nouns or pronouns For example genc can mean young young person or the young person being referred to An adjective or noun can stand as a modifier before a noun If the modifier is a noun but not a noun of material then the second noun word takes the inflectional suffix i ak dis white tooth altin dis gold tooth kopek disi canine tooth Comparison of adjectives is not done by inflecting adjectives or adverbs but by other means described below Adjectives can serve as adverbs sometimes by means of repetition yavas slow yavas yavas slowly Word order EditA general rule of Turkish word order is that the modifier precedes the modified adjective used attributively precedes noun adverb precedes verb object of postposition precedes postposition Although the most common order of Turkish transitive sentences is subject object verb SOV all six permutations are valid the subject and object are distinguished by case suffixes The word order serves to express the theme and focus rheme of the sentence the sentence initial portion is associated with the topic the position just before the verb is used for the focus and the post verbal position is used for background or clarifying information 2 3 The following sentences illustrate how subject object verb order changes the meaning Word order Gloss NotesSOV AliAlieveto housegidiyor is goingAli eve gidiyor Ali to house is goingAli is going home OSV Eveto houseAliAligidiyor is goingEve Ali gidiyor to house Ali is goingAli is going home SVO AliAligidiyoris goingeve to houseAli gidiyor eve Ali is going to houseAli is going home OVS Eveto housegidiyoris goingAli AliEve gidiyor Ali to house is going AliAli is going home Same as SOV anacoluthon VSO Gidiyoris goingAliAlieve to houseGidiyor Ali eve is going Ali to houseThere goes Ali home AnacoluthonVOS Gidiyoris goingeveto houseAli AliGidiyor eve Ali is going to house AliThere goes Ali home AnacoluthonMeanings may be different depending on emphasis In one study only about half of the transitive sentences used by a sample of Turkish speakers were found to be in the SOV order 4 When a sentence has multiple informational components the stressed component is positioned just before the verb AliAlibuguntodayeveto housearabaylaby cargidiyor is goingAli bugun eve arabayla gidiyor Ali today to house by car is goingToday Ali is going to the house by car AliAlieveto housearabaylaby carbuguntodaygidiyor is goingAli eve arabayla bugun gidiyor Ali to house by car today is goingToday Ali is going to the house by car AliAliarabaylaby carbuguntodayeveto housegidiyor is goingAli arabayla bugun eve gidiyor Ali by car today to house is goingToday Ali is going to the house by car Morpheme order EditThe order of morphemes in Turkish is often opposite to English Turkish English CommentAvrupa EuropeAvrupali of Europe European adjective European Avrupalilas become European intransitive verb rootAvrupalilastir Europeanise transitive verb rootAvrupalilastirama be unable to Europeanise negated verb rootAvrupalilastiramadik we couldn t Europeanise finite verbAvrupalilastiramadik one that is unable to be Europeanised nounAvrupalilastiramadiklar unable to be Europeanised ones pluralAvrupalilastiramadiklarimiz those whom we couldn t manage to Europeanise possessive 1st person pluralAvrupalilastiramadiklarimizdan of those whom we couldn t manage to Europeanise ablative caseAvrupalilastiramadiklarimizdanmis is reportedly of those whom we couldn t manage to Europeanise copula in inferential tenseAvrupalilastiramadiklarimizdanmissiniz you are reportedly of those whom we couldn t manage to Europeanise 2nd person plural formalAvrupalilastiramadiklarimizdanmissinizcasina as if you were reportedly of those whom we couldn t manage to Europeanise Adverb of equalization possibilityThe above example is also illustrative of the productive nature of Turkish suffixes in creating new verbs nouns etc Note that the word Avrupalilastiramadik can be a verb a participle or a noun in this parse it is a participle or verbal adjective that is used as a noun The longest published word in Turkish muvaffakiyetsizlestiricilestiriveremeyebileceklerimizdenmissinizcesine means as if you are one of those that we cannot easily convert into an unsuccessful person maker i e someone who un educates people to make them unsuccessful Inflectional suffixes EditFor case endings see CaseThe plural suffix cogul eki can be used with nouns and with third person verbs ler front vowel harmony e i o u lar back vowel harmony a i o u Nouns are derived from verbs in several ways The number of ways of forming verbal nouns fiil isimleri from verb stems can be debated here are three Verbal noun suffixes description suffixinfinitive mastar template mek2gerund me2 way of doing VERB y is4Several series of endings show distinctions of person kisi they are given here along with the personal pronouns for comparison Indicators of person person 1st 2nd 3rdnumber sg pl sg pl sg pl plpersonal pronouns ben biz sen siz o onlarpossessive suffixes iyelik ekleri i m i miz i n i niz s i leripersonal endings kisi ekleri predicative I y im y iz sin siniz lerverbal II m k n niz leroptative III y eyim y elim y esin y esiniz y e y elerimperative IV y in iz sin sinlerThe names given to the personal endings here are not standard These endings are often just referred to as type I II III and IV respectively but the order in which the types are numbered is also not standard Lewis 1967 refers to the suffixes of possession as personal endings In the third person plural number is not always explicitly marked and the same form is used for both singular and plural If the plural suffix ler is used it combines with the personal endings as indicated in the final column of the table A suffix of possession gives the person of the possessor of the object named by the noun to which the suffix is attached it also indicates a subject for a participle See Possession A predicative ending can assign a person to a noun thus creating a complete sentence insan human Insanim I am a human See also Predication and Turkish copula All of the personal suffixes can be used in the formation of verbs Verb stems have been mentioned A verb base is obtained from a verb stem by attachment of certain suffixes or characteristics given below Then the personal endings here called predicative and verbal attach only to verb bases the optative and imperative endings attach to verb stems Verb characteristics with predicative endings progressive mektenecessitative meliaorist habitual 5 positive i e rnegative mezimpotential y emezfuture y ecekinferential perfective misimperfective 6 iyorwith verbal endings perfective 7 diconditional seThe first syllable of the present imperfective tense suffix iyor exhibits vowel harmony while the second is invariable When suffixed to a stem ending in a vowel that vowel is elided ye iyor yiyor The aorist negative and impotential forms are given here because they are anomalous Note that the z of the aorist negative mez and impotential y emez is dropped in the first person singular and plural in order to be able to suffix it but is retained when the interrogative particle mi intervenes see below Aorist negative first person singular mem but aorist impotential third person plural y emezler See also Negation and potential in verb stems under Verbs below Some third person verbs also function as participles Participles can be classified as personal if they take a suffix of possession and impersonal if they do not The following suffixes attach to verb stems Participial endings impersonal personalaorist positive i e r negative mezimpotential y emezimperfective y enfuture y ecekperfective mis dikThe interrogative particle soru eki is not written as a suffix but phonetically it is enclitic in particular it exhibits vowel harmony mi front unrounded vowel harmony i after e and i mi back unrounded vowel harmony i after a and i mu back rounded vowel harmony u after o and u mu front rounded vowel harmony u after o and u Nouns EditSee also Turkish vocabulary Nouns Inflection Edit A Turkish noun has no gender The dictionary form of a noun can take up to four kinds of inflectional suffixes generally in the following order plural suffix suffix of possession iyelik eki from iye owner case ending personal suffix kisi eki from kisi person Through its presence or absence the plural ending shows distinctions of number Number Edit A noun is made plural by addition of ler or lar depending on the vowel harmony When a numeral is used with a noun however the plural suffix is usually not used bas head baslar some heads bes bas five head s butBesevler Five Houses district of Bursa The plural ending also allows a family living in one house to be designated by a single member Aliler Ali and his family teyze maternal aunt teyzem my maternal aunt teyzemler my maternal aunt and her family In the last example the first person singular suffix of possession comes before the plural ending this is an exception to the order of suffixes given above In the usual order we have teyzelerim my maternal aunts Nouns are pluralized in standard temporal greetings gun day Iyi gunler Good day yil year Mutlu yillar Happy new year Possession Edit As noted earlier the suffixes of possession give the person and number of the possessor of what is named by the noun Suffixes of Possession iyelik ekleri 1st 2nd 3rdsingular i m i n s iplural i miz i niz leriWhen a word takes one of the endings of possession the word becomes the name of something possessed not possessing The word for the possessor if present takes the genitive case ending Examples with teyze maternal aunt Example Composition Translationteyzen teyze maternal aunt n belonging to you singular your maternal aunt teyzeniz teyze maternal aunt niz belonging to you plural your maternal aunt teyzelerin teyze maternal aunt ler plural suffix in belonging to you singular your maternal aunts teyzeleriniz teyze maternal aunt ler plural suffix iniz belonging to you plural your maternal aunts The plural ending will not be attached twice to the same word therefore ambiguity is possible fikir idea fikirleri their idea or their ideas or his her ideas Ambiguity can be resolved with Pronouns Case Edit The Turkish language is normally described as having six cases whose names in English are borrowed from Latin grammar The case endings durum ekleri ending condition are regular and subject to vowel harmony The postposition ile is often absorbed onto the noun as y le and some authors analyse this as an instrumental and comitative case 8 As it differs from the other case markers in several ways 9 it may be considered as an inflectional marker but not a case marker 10 In particular unlike the other case endings y le is never accentuated 11 Also when combined with the personal pronouns the demonstratives or the interrogative kim they are used in the genitive e g kiminle with whom not kimle Cases and their endings Case Turkish Name Ending Example TranslationAbsolute yalin bare durum ev house adam man the house the man Definite accusative belirtme clarifying durumu y i y i y u y u evi adami the house the man Dative yonelme facing towards durumu y a y e eve adama to the house to the man Locative bulunma being present durumu da de ta te evde adamda at home in on the man Ablative cikma going out durumu dan den tan ten evden adamdan from the house from the man Genitive tamlayan compounding eki n in n in n un n un evin adamin the house s the man s Instrumental aracilik mediation hali y le y la evle adamla with the house with the man If a case ending is attached to a demonstrative pronoun which ends in o or u or to a noun that has already taken a third person ending of possession or to a compound noun where the second word is already suffixed then the case ending is preceded by n and the parenthetical y is not used For instance Turk yemeklerini seviyorum I love Turkish food 12 Cases and their endings nouns already suffixed with third person ending Case Turkish Name Ending Example TranslationAbsolute yalin bare durum evi his her house adami his her man his her house his her man Definite accusative belirtme clarifying durumu ni ni nu nu evini adamini his her house his her man Dative yonelme going towards durumu na ne evine adamina to his her house to his her man Locative bulunma being present durumu nda nde evinde adaminda at his her home in on his her man Ablative cikma going out durumu ndan nden evinden adamindan from his her house from his her man Genitive tamlayan compounding eki nin nin nun nun evinin adaminin his her house s his her man s Absolute case Edit The absolute case combines the uses of the nominative vocative and in part accusative cases It is for subjects and for names of people being addressed It is also used for indefinite direct objects Definite direct objects are in the definite accusative case siir poem absolute case Siir okur S he reads a poem poetry absolute case indefinite direct object Siiri okur S he reads the poem accusative case definite direct object Dative case Edit The dative case tells the place to which Thus it has roughly the meaning of the English prepositions to and into and also in when it can be replaced with into Birayithe beerbuzdolabinainto iceboxkoy putBirayi buzdolabina koy the beer into icebox put Put the beer in to the fridge The dative also is for objects usually indirect objects but sometimes objects that in English would be considered direct Gunesinsun sbatisinaat its sinkingbak lookGunesin batisina bak sun s at its sinking look Look at the sunset Hukumetein governmentguven trustHukumete guven in government trust Trust the government Locative case Edit The locative case tells where hence corresponds to the English prepositions at on and in when it does not mean into ev house evde at home Buzdolabinda dort bira varin icebox four beer exist There are four beers in the fridge Ablative case Edit The ablative case tells whence that is the place from which or through which hence material out of which something is made kumdanof sandyapilmismadekalecastlekumdan yapilmis kaleof sand made castle castle made of sand a cause by which something is effected acliktanof hungeroldieacliktan olof hunger die die of hunger that to which other things are being compared see Adjectives below Genitive case Edit The genitive case indicates a compounding tamlayan word The corresponding compounded tamlanan word will take the appropriate suffix of possession The pair of these words is then a definite compound belirtili tamlama anne mother annesi her mother Ayse nin annesi Ayse s mother The apostrophe in Turkish is used before suffixes attached to proper nouns However if two nouns are connected but not by ownership then the second noun generally takes an ending of possession while the first takes no ending The result is an indefinite compound belirtisiz tamlama Turkiye nin Cumhurbaskani The President of Turkey definite Turkiye Cumhuriyeti The Republic of Turkey indefinite If one noun names a material the other noun need not take an ending nikah yuzugu wedding ring altin yuzuk gold ring The genitive case can also be used for the subject of some complement or adjunct clauses 13 Annemizin uzak bir semtte oturmasina ragmen her gun ona ugruyoruz Although our mother lives in a remote neighborhood we visit her every day Baskanin vermesi gerekiyor The president needs to give it Tugce bizim Ankara ya gitmemizi istedi Tugce wanted us to go to Ankara Ben Ali nin cami kirdigi zamani biliyordum I knew when Ali broke the glass Instrumental case Edit The instrumental case functions as both an instrumental and a comitative Deniz le konustuk Deniz and we spoke nb 1 cekicle vur hit with a hammer Onunla konustuk He and we spoke nb 2 Predication Edit If a noun is to be in the first or second person one of the predicative suffixes or type I personal suffixes will show this 1st 2nd 3rdsingular y im sin plural y iz siniz lerExamples dunya world Dunyayiz We are the world cocuk child Cocuklarsiniz You are the children In the third person no ending is required However the ending dir can be used it is said 14 to be the remnant of a verb turur S he stands Again in the third person the plural suffix may be used Turk or Turktur S he is Turkish Turkler or Turkturler They are Turkish Turklerdir They are the Turks 15 Several suffixes can be combined Evinizdeyim ev house inizyourPL de atLOC yimI am1SG PREDev iniz de yimhouse your at I am PL LOC 1SG PRED I am at your house Verbal nouns Edit The infinitive formed with mek as noted earlier does not take a suffix of possession or the genitive case ending It does take all other case endings In particular the progressive characteristic given earlier is the infinitive ending with the locative ending Konusmaktayiz We are in the act of speaking Savasmaktayiz We are in warmaking that is We are at war The verbal noun in me is called a gerund above since it corresponds roughly to the English gerund bekle wait bekleme waiting bekleme odasi waiting room The verbal noun can take a suffix of possession and any case ending Beklemenizyour waitinglazim necessaryBeklemeniz lazim your waiting necessary You have to wait Sesiniyour voice ACCduymayihearing ACCseviyorum I loveSesini duymayi seviyorum your voice ACC hearing ACC I love I like to hear your voice The dative form of a Turkish gerund can correspond precisely to an English infinitive with to UlkemizdeIn our countrynanonanoteknolojiktechnologicalurunlerproductsuretilmeyeto be producedbaslandi beganUlkemizde nano teknolojik urunler uretilmeye baslandi In our country nano technological products to be produced began Nano technological products began to be produced in our country 16 The suffix is can also be used to create verbal nouns Verb Nounyuru walk yuruyus walk walking yag rain yagis rain al take ver give spend alisveris shopping yara be of use yaratil be created yaratilis creation The verb et make do can be considered as an auxiliary verb since for example it is often used with verbal nouns borrowed from other languages such as Arabic kabul et accept kabul an accepting reddet reject ret a rejecting ziyaret et visit ziyaret a visiting Considered as units these are transitive verbs but the nouns in them can also by themselves take direct objects Antalya yi ziyaret visit to Antalya What looks like an ablative gerund is usually an adverb the ending meden usually has the sense of without See Adverbs below An infinitive in the absolute case can be the object of a verb such as iste want Kimisome of themegitimetowards educationdevamcontinuationetmek makekimisome of themdealsocalismakworkistiyor wantKimi egitime devam etmek kimi de calismak istiyor some of them towards education continuation make some of them also work wantSome want to continue their education and some want to work source Cumhuriyet Pazar Dergi 14 August 2005 p 1 Note here that the compound verb devam et continue last does not take a direct object but is complemented by a dative noun Another way to express obligation besides with lazim as in the earlier example is by means of zor trouble compulsion and an infinitive Gitmek zoru Go compulsion Gitmek zorundayiz We must go Source same as the last example Both an infinitive and a gerund are objects of the postposition icin for in the third sentence of the quotation within the following quotation Tesis yetkilileri Bolge insanlari genelde tutucu Sahil kesimleri yola yakin oldugu icin rahat bir sekilde gole giremiyorlar Biz de hem yoldan gecenlerin gorus acisini kapatmak hem de erkeklerin rahatsiz etmemesi icin paravan kullaniyoruz dedi Ancak paravanin aralarindan cocuklarin karsi tarafi gozetlemeleri engellenemedi Facility its authorities District its people in general conservative Shore its sections to road near their being for comfortable a in form to lake they cannot enter We also both from road of passers sight their angle to close and men s uncomfortable their not making for screen we are using they said But curtain s from its gaps children s other side their spying cannot be hindered Cumhuriyet 9 August 2005 p 1 A free translation is The facility authorities said The people of this district namely Edremit Van are generally conservative They cannot enter the lake comfortably because the shore areas are near the road So we are using a screen both to close off the view of passersby on the road and so that men will not cause discomfort However children cannot be prevented from spying on the other side through gaps in the screen Auxiliary verbs Edit Certain verbs in Turkish are used to enhance the meaning of other verbs or to agglutinate verbs from nouns These verbs are called auxiliary verbs A concise list follows Verbs that are used with nouns to agglutinate new verbs etmek to do olmak to be kilmak to make eylemek to make Examples farz assumption farz etmek to assume hak right hak etmek to deserve af amnesty affetmek to excuse kayip loss kaybetmek to lose terk leaving terk etmek to leave arz submission supply arz etmek to submit to supply If there is a change in the noun root through the process of agglutination it is written adjacently These are mostly Arabic loan words which switch to their more original form In Turkish words two consonants of a syllable need a vowel to be pronounced There are exceptions in loan words only but those that lost their original form are more common This occurs in two ways If a word ends in two identical consonants one is dropped e g hall state status becomes hal aff amnesty forgiving becomes af If a syllable ends in two different consonants a vowel is added between them e g hukm judgement becomes hukum Exceptions Words which end in nk rt rk such as taht throne renk colour kart card do not add a vowel Most of these are loan words from Persian or Western languages but zevk pleasure from Arabic ذ و ق Examples Noun amp Auxiliary Verb Verb Noteskayip etmek kaybetmek to lose kayip lost was originally kayb an Arabic loanwordhaciz etmek haczetmek to sequester haciz sequestration was originally hacz an Arabic loanwordhaz etmek hazzetmek to relish enjoy haz delight was originally hazz an Arabic loanwordVerbs that are used with other verbs to enhance the meaning i vermek implies urgency e bilmek implies ability e durmak implies continuity e gelmek implies repetition a kalmak implies continuity e yazmak implies a close escape Examples dus fall duseyazdim I almost fell git go gidiverdim I just went yavasla slow down yavaslayabilirim I can slow down yaz write yazaduruyorlar they keep on writing soylen be told soylenegelir keeps being told Adjectives EditAdjectives used attributively precede the noun used predicatively they follow unless something other than word order shows that they are being used predicatively Attributive yesil cim the green grass Predicative Cim yesil dir Grass is green Yesildir cim Descriptive adjectives Edit Most adjectives in the dictionary are descriptive The two most fundamental descriptive adjectives are var existing yok not existing These are used only predicatively with the sense of the English There is and There is not Goktein the skybirabulutcloudyok not existingGokte bir bulut yok in the sky a cloud not existing There is not a cloud in the sky in the construction that supplies the lack of a verb have Balcininhoney seller svarexistsbalhoneytasi his potOduncununwood cutter svarexistsbaltasi his axeBalcinin var bal tasi Oduncunun var baltasi honey seller s exists honey his pot wood cutter s exists his axe The honey seller has a honey pot the wood cutter has an axe This is a proverbial expression the more usual order would make the saying Balcinin bal tasi var oduncunun baltasi var Indefinite adjectives Edit The cardinal number bir one can be used as an indefinite article Word order can make a difference guzel bir gun a nice day bir guzel gun one fine day Unless it is being used by itself elliptically the adjective hic no requires an additional word with negative force Hicnoparammy moneyyok there is notHic param yok no my money there is not I have no money Hicbirno oneadammanadaislanddegildir is notHicbir adam ada degildir no one man island is not No man is an island Compare Bir sey goruyorum I see something Hicbir sey gormuyorum I don t see anything Comparison Edit In a positive comparison the object takes the ablative case the adverb daha more is optional unless the object is left out tuydenfeather ABL daha more hafiflighttuyden daha hafiffeather ABL more light lighter than a feather In a negative comparison the adverb az less is needed the object still takes the ablative daha can still be used as well kursundanlead ABL daha more azlessagirheavykursundan daha az agirlead ABL more less heavy less heavy than lead The superlative degree is expressed by the adverb en most enmostbuyukbigyalanciliaren buyuk yalancimost big liar the biggest liar enmostazlessguvenilirtrust en az guvenilirmost less trust the least trustworthy Participles Edit It is noted under Parts of speech that Turkish participles sifat fiiller can be classified as personal if they take a suffix of possession impersonal if they do not In a personal participle the suffix of possession signifies the subject of the underlying verb if this possessor is third person then the possessor may be further specified with a noun in the genitive case The noun modified by a personal participle as an adjective may be the direct object of the underlying verb the connection may also be more vague The noun modified by an impersonal participle is generally the subject of the underlying verb but see Lewis 1967 IX 2 The aorist tense genis zaman broad time is for habitual actions the present tense simdiki zaman time that is now is for actions ongoing or contemplated Aorist Edit akarsu cikmaz inilir surdurulebilir turizm flowing water from ak to flow cul de sac from cik to exit got down from sign at rear door of bus from in to go down tourism that can be continued i e sustainable tourism from sur to go on Present Edit Silahlari cekip havaya ates acan AKP liler hakkinda yasal islem baslatilmadi Guns pulling out and to air fire opening AKP members about them legal process was not begun Birgun Halkin Gazetesi 25 July 2005that is No legal process has begun concerning the AKP members who pulled out guns and fired them in the air for ip see Adverbs below Gecen hafta Passing weekthat is last week Future Edit gelecek hafta okuyacagim bir kitap okunacak bir kitap the week that will come that is next week a book that I shall read from oku to read a book that will be read from okun to be read Past present Edit okunmus bir kitap okudugum bir kitap Yasamin bittigi yer de hayat a book that was read a book that I read am reading Life in the place where life ends from bit to end A personal participle can be construed as a noun and used in parallel with verbal nouns Cocuklarin yuzde 68 i evinin ihtiyaclarina katkida bulunmak yuzde 21 i ailesi istedigi icin yuzde altisi is ogrenmek ve meslek edinmek icin yuzde 4 u ihtiyaclarini karsilamak icin calisiyor Children s in 100 their 68 house s for its needs in aid be found in 100 their 21 their family that they wanted for in 100 their six work learn and profession be made for in 100 their 4 their needs meet for are working Birgun Halkin Gazetesi 13 August 2005 p 1 that is Children are working 68 to provide for their family s needs 21 because their family wants it 6 to learn a job or profession 4 to meet their own needs The following sentence from a newspaper headline contains twenty two words nine derived from verbs four of these as participles three as gerunds Note also the use of kontrol from French as a verbal noun with et Turkiye nin AB ye girmemesi ve Islam dunyasina yaklasmasi halinde seriatciligin kucagina itilmis olacaginisoyleyen Fransiz senator Duireux Islami akimlarin kontrol edilmesigerektiginibelirtti Turkey s to the EU its not entering and Islam to its world its drawing near in its state sharia favorer ness s to its embrace pushed that it will besaying French senator Duireux Islamic current s control its being madethat it is necessaryhe made clear Cumhuriyet 17 July 2005 In other words Saying that by not joining the EU and by drawing close to the Islamic world Turkey would be pushed into the lap of those who favor sharia French senator Duireux made clear that it was necessary to control the Islamic tide Intensification Edit Turkish adjectives can be intensified with intensifying pekistirme prefixes 17 If the adjective begins with a consonant the prefix is the consonant the following vowel m p r or s 17 p operates as the default and is the most common form Forms in r and m are rare There is no single rule that governs the choice of the final consonant This choice tends to minimize featural similarity with consonants in the base adjective in particular the first and second consonants 18 siyah black simsiyah pitch black guzel pretty gupguzel very pretty temiz clean tertemiz clean as a pin kati hard kaskati hard as a rock If the adjective begins with a vowel the prefix consists of this vowel p 17 uzun long upuzun very long The vowel is sometimes also added after the consonant 17 saglam healthy sapasaglam very healthy sapsaglam also exists yalniz alone yapayalniz all alone yapyalniz also exists gunduz daytime gupegunduz gupgunduz also exists cevre cepecevre cepcevre also exists tip medical tipatip exactly There are also some irregular suffixes 17 19 ciplak naked cirilciplak stark naked circiplak and circiplak also exist siklam sirilsiklam sirsiklam also exists karisik complex karmakarisik totally complex daginik untidy darmadaginik very untidy dapdaginik and dasdaginik also exist renk colored rengarenk multicolored deli mad zirdeli raving mad parca piece paramparca in pieces Some adjectives have more than one intensified form 20 duz flat dupduz 24 1 dumduz 78 1 very flat 2 forms the irregular dupeduz also exists yas fresh yapyas 44 8 yamyas 58 6 very fresh 2 forms sefil miserable sepsefil 24 1 semsefil 6 8 sersefil 66 6 very miserable 3 forms genis large gepgenis 77 gemgenis 9 15 gesgenis 6 8 gergenis 5 7 very large 4 forms topac toptopac 47 15 tomtopac 5 75 tostopac 33 3 tortopac 3 4 very 4 forms This process is also called emphatic reduplication It is only applied to particular common adjectives between 100 21 and 215 depending on sources 22 and not to new adjectives which enter Turkish However native speakers are able to produce novel forms when asked to do so 18 Adverbs EditThe adverb of negation is degil It is used to negate sentences that are without verb or var then it takes the appropriate personal ending Evde degilim I am not at home A number of adverbs are derived from verbs The ending e is seen in Gule gule Go smilingly said to somebody departing Gule gule kullanin Use it smilingly said to somebody with a new acquisition Bese ceyrek kala kalktim To five a quarter remaining I got up that is I got up at a quarter to five Onu yirmi gece uyudun You slept at twenty past ten uyu sleep although uy heed The ending erek denotes action at the same time as or preceding that of another verb Geceyithe nightkonusaraktalkinggecirdikwe caused to passGeceyi konusarak gecirdikthe night talking we caused to pass We spent the night talking AkilyuruterekbusonucaulasiyorumAkil yuruterek bu sonuca ulasiyorum By using reason I arrived at this conclusion the latter is Bulent Ecevit as quoted in Cumhuriyet 20 July 2005 DogayaenazzararvererekyasamakDogaya en az zarar vererek yasamak To live while giving the least harm to nature Bugday magazine 7 8 2005 no 32 From ol be become olarak forms adverbial phrases corresponding to those in English with as SizeTo youbiradostfriendolarakassoyluyorumI m tellingSize bir dost olarak soyluyorumTo you a friend as I m telling I m telling you this as a friend ciddi olarak seriously ciddi serious The ending meden on a verb stem looks like the ablative gerund but it is not Lewis XI 12 It indicates an action not occurring at all or following that of the main verb Bakmadan atlama Don t leap without looking Bakmadan once atlama Don t leap before looking BirAsoruyuparticular questioncevaplamadanwithout answeringtartismak to debatetartismadanwithout debatingcevaplamaktanfrom to answeriyidiris good Bir soruyu cevaplamadan tartismak tartismadan cevaplamaktan iyidirA particular question without answering to debate without debating from to answer is good It is better to debate without answering than to answer without debating Source of the last sentence Joseph Joubert as quoted on p 20 of Gundelik Bilmeceler by Partha Ghose and Dipankar Home translated by Ozlem Ozbal Tubitak Populer Bilim Kitaplari 25 Ankara 1996 Complementing once before is sonra after which can follow a verb stem given the ending dikten Baktiktan sonra atla After looking leap Ayse baktiktan sonra Nese atladi After Ayse looked Nese leapt Simultaneity is expressed by iken or its not enclitic suffixed form y ken but if it follows a verb then the verb appears not as a stem but as a base see Bases of verbs Eve girmekteyken bir sey hatirladim As I was entering the house I remembered something Ben eve girmekteyken telefon caldi As I was entering the house the telephone rang If two verbs of the same grammatical form have the same subject the endings on the first verb can be replaced by ip see the example under Participles Pronouns EditThe third person personal pronoun o she he it is declined as if it were the noun on The other persons ben I sen you singular informal biz we siz you plural formal are declined like nouns except for a vowel change in the dative and an anomalous genitive All personal pronouns aside from onlar form their instrumental with the genitive form singular plural1st 2nd 3rd 1st 2nd 3rdabsolute ben sen o biz siz onlaraccusative beni seni onu bizi sizi onlaridative bana sana ona bize size onlaralocative bende sende onda bizde sizde onlardaablative benden senden ondan bizden sizden onlardangenitive benim senin onun bizim sizin onlarininstrumental benimle seninle onunla bizimle sizinle onlarlaThe absolute case is generally needed only for emphasis Nasilsiniz How are you Iyiyim siz nasilsiniz I am fine how are you Ben de iyiyim I too am fine The third person pronoun can clear up an ambiguity mentioned above onlarin fikri their idea onlarin fikirleri their ideas onun fikirleri her or his ideas The pronoun o is also one of the demonstrative pronouns o that bu this su this or that thing pointed to The latter two are declined like o that is treated as if they were bun and sun and formed to the instrumental with the genitive The interrogative pronouns and adjectives are kim who ne what hangi which kac how many or how much These appear in embedded questions but do not serve as true relative pronouns Buzdolabinda kac tane var o bilir S he knows how many are in the refrigerator There is a suffix ki that acts as a relative pronoun in that it creates what in English would be called relative clauses It does not display vowel harmony except in a few common formations benimki mine that which is mine buzdolabindaki bira beer that is in the refrigerator no vowel harmony bugunku today s which is today with vowel harmony dunku yesterday s which was yesterday with vowel harmony The reflexive pronoun donuslu zamir from don turn is kendi own self Kendi kendinden korkma Do not be afraid of thyself Many of the indefinite adjectives can function as pronouns taking case endings Verbs EditCopula Edit Main article Turkish copula Stems of verbs Edit Many stems in the dictionary are indivisible others consist of endings attached to a root Verb stems from nouns Edit The verb stem temizle make clean is the adjective temiz clean with the suffix le this suffix was mentioned earlier under Parts of speech in connection with the verb kopekle Many verbs are formed from nouns or adjectives with le Noun Verbbas head basla make a head that is begin kilit lock kilitle make locked that is lock kir dirt kirle make dirty Voice Edit A verbal root or a verb stem in le can be lengthened with certain extensions If present they appear in the following order and they indicate distinctions of voice Extensions for voice Voice Ending NotesReflexive i n Reciprocal i sCausative t after polysyllabic stems in l r or a vowel and dir in other cases except ir er it after some monosyllabic stems and there are some other exceptional forms as well Passive il after stems ending in a consonant other than l otherwise same as reflexive These endings might seem to be inflectional in the sense of the Introduction above but their meanings are not always clear from their particular names and dictionaries do generally give the resulting forms so in this sense they are constructive endings The causative extension makes an intransitive verb transitive and a transitive verb factitive Together the reciprocal and causative extension make the repetitive extension i stir Verb Root Stem New Verb Voicebul find bulus meet us reciprocal bulun be found present un reflexive yika wash something yikan wash oneself n reflexive yikanil be washed n reflexive il passive kayna come to a boil kaynat bring to a boil t causitive ol die oldur kill dur causitive oldur kill oldurt have someone killed t causitive factitive ara look for arastir investigate s reciprocal tir causitive repetitive Negation and potential in verb stems Edit A dictionary stem is positive it can be made negative by addition of me impotential by addition of e and then me Any of these three kinds of stems can be made potential by addition of e and then bil The bil is not enclitic but represents the verb bil know be able the first syllable of the impotential ending represents an obsolete verb u be powerful able Lewis VIII 55 So far then there are six kinds of stems Paradigm for stems negative impotential and potential English infinitive English finite formgel come come gelme not come do not come geleme be unable to come cannot come gelebil be able to come can come gelmeyebil be able to not come may not come gelemeyebil able to be unable to come may be unable to come Such stems are not used for aorist forms which have their own peculiar means of forming negatives and impotentials Note that ebil is one of several verbs that can be compounded to enhance meaning See Auxiliary verbs Bases of verbs Edit The characteristics with which verb bases are formed from stems are given under Inflectional suffixes Note again that aorist verbs have their own peculiar negative and impotential forms The progressive base in mekte is discussed under Verbal nouns Another base namely the necessitative gereklilik is formed from a verbal noun The characteristic is meli where li forms adjectives from nouns and me forms gerunds from verb stems A native speaker may perceive the ending meli as indivisible the analysis here is from Lewis VIII 30 The present base is derived from the ancient verb yori go walk Lewis VIII 16 this can be used for ongoing actions or for contemplated future actions The meaning of the aorist base is described under Adjectives from verbs participles There is some irregularity in first person negative and impotential aorists The full form of the base mez or y emez reappears before the interrogative particle mi Gelmem I do not come cf Gelmez miyim Do I not come Gelmeyiz We do not come cf Gelmez miyiz Do we not come The definite past or di past is used to assert that something did happen in the past The inferential past or mis past can be understood as asserting that a past participle is applicable now hence it is used when the fact of a past event as such is not important in particular the inferential past is used when one did not actually witness the past event A newspaper will generally use the di past because it is authoritative The need to indicate uncertainty and inference by means of the mis past may help to explain the extensive use of ki in the newspaper excerpt at Turkish vocabulary The conjunction ki The conditional sart verb could also be called hypothetical it is used for remote possibilities or things one might wish for See also Compound bases The various bases thus give distinctions of tense aspect and mood These can be briefly tabulated First person singular verbs Form Suffix Verb English TranslationProgressive mekte gelmekteyim I am in the process of coming Necessitative meli gelmeliyim I must come Positive i e r gelirim I come Negative me z gelmem I do not come Impotential y eme z gelemem I cannot come Future y ecek gelecegim I will come Inferential Past mis gelmisim It seems that I came Present Imperfective iyor geliyorum I am coming Perfective Definite Past di geldim I came Conditional se gelsem if only I came Questions Edit The interrogative particle mi precedes predicative type I endings except for the 3rd person plural ler but follows the complete verb formed from a verbal type II ending Geliyor musunuz Are you coming but Geliyorlar mi Are they coming Geldiniz mi Did you come Optative and imperative moods Edit Usually in the optative istek only the first person forms are used and these supply the lack of a first person imperative emir In common practice then there is one series of endings to express something wished for Merged Optative amp Imperative Moods Number Person Ending Example English TranslationSingular 1st y eyim Geleyim Let me come 2nd Gel Come you singular 3rd sin Gelsin Let her him it come Plural 1st y elim Gelelim Let us come 2nd y in iz Gelin Come you plural 3rd sinler Gelsinler Let them come The defective verb i Edit The ancient verb er Lewis VIII 2 survives in Turkish in three bases imis idi ise The form iken given under Adverbs from verbs is also descended from er Since no more bases are founded on the stem i this verb can be called defective In particular i forms no negative or impotential stems negation is achieved with the Adverb of negation degil given earlier The i bases are often turned into base forming suffixes without change in meaning the corresponding suffixes are y mis y di y se where the y is used only after vowels For example Hasta imis and Hastaymis both mean Apparently Reportedly he she it is ill The verb i serves as a copula When a copula is needed but the appropriate base in i does not exist then the corresponding base in ol is used when used otherwise this stem means become The verb i is irregular in the way it is used in questions the particle mi always precedes it Kus idi or Kustu It was a bird Kus muydu Was it a bird Compound bases Edit The bases so far considered can be called simple A base in i can be attached to another base forming a compound base One can then interpret the result in terms of English verb forms by reading backwards The following list is representative not exhaustive Past tenses continuous past Geliyordum I was coming aorist past Gelirdim I used to come future past Gelecektim I was going to come pluperfect Gelmistim I had come necessitative past Gelmeliydim I had to come conditional past Gelseydim If only I had come Inferential tenses continuous inferential Geliyormusum It seems they say I am coming future inferential Gelecekmisim It seems I shall come aorist inferential Gelirmisim It seems I come necessitative inferential Gelmeliymisim They say I must come By means of ise or y se a verb can be made conditional in the sense of being the hypothesis or protasis of a complex statement onemli bir sey yapiyorsunuz You are doing something important Onemli bir sey yapiyorsaniz rahatsiz etmeyelim If you are doing something important let us not cause disturbance The simple conditional can be used for remote conditions Bakmakla ogrenilse kopekler kasap olurdu If learning by looking were possible dogs would be butchers Notes Edit The literal We spoke with Deniz may be incorrect in this case The literal We spoke with him may be incorrect in this case References Edit The X Files Turkiye Senaryolar Emily Archived from the original on 2005 01 01 E E Erguvanli 1984 The function of Word Order in Turkish Grammar University of California Press UCLA PhD Dissertation 1979 Hoffman B 1994 Generating Context Appropriate Word Orders in Turkish in Proceedings of the Seventh International Workshop on Natural Language Generation Pages 117 126 https arxiv org abs cmp lg 9407017v1 Slobin D I and Bever G T Children use Canonical Sentence Schemas A Cross linguistic Study of Word Order and Inflections Cognition 12 229 265 1982 The term aorist is often used in Turkish grammars for the habitual aspect This is quite different from its use in Greek grammars where it means perfective aspect what is called definite past in Turkish The imperfective aspect is often called present though it is not actually present tense The perfective aspect is often called definite past though it is not actually past tense Gerjan van Schaaik The Oxford Turkish Grammar 2020 ISBN 0198851502 section 6 5 7 p 53 Celia Kerslake Asli Goksel Turkish An Essential Grammar 2014 ISBN 1134042183 p 47 Asli Galksel Asli Goksel Celia Kerslake Turkish A Comprehensive Grammar 2005 ISBN 041521761X p 67 G L Lewis Turkish Grammar 1967 ISBN 0198158386 p 23 Pronouns amp Nouns Possession Postpositions Adjectives Adverbs Conjunctions Basics of Turkish Grammar Syntax and Semantics of Genitive Subject Case in Turkic N Gulsat Aygen Northern Illinois University Lewis 1967 VIII 3 Lewis 1967 VIII 5 Cumhuriyet Bilim Teknik 13 August 2005 p 1 a b c d e Turkish Vocabulary Booster Word Formation in Turkish by Halit Demir 15 September 2020 3 Intensifying prefixes for adjectives a b Turkish Emphatic Reduplication Balancing Productive and Lexicalized Forms Rajdip Dhillon Yale University Goksel A amp Kerslake C 2005 Turkish A comprehensive grammar London Routledge p 462 Koc E 2018 A Critical View on the Intensified Adjectives in Turkish Ana Dili Egitimi Dergisi 6 2 314 324 DOI 10 16916 aded 311748 Kaufman B D 2014 Learning an unproductive process Turkish emphatic reduplication UC Santa Cruz ProQuest ID Kaufman ucsc 0036N 10640 Merritt ID ark 13030 m5tx4vkm Retrieved from https escholarship org uc item 8mp2d399 Ozcelik S 2012 m p r s Unsuzleriyle Yapilan Pekistirme ve Kurallari Uzerine Turk Dili Arastirmalari Yilligi Belleten 60 2 29 42 Retrieved from https dergipark org tr en pub belleten issue 32746 363486 Grammars Edit Robert Underhill 1976 Turkish Grammar Cambridge MA MIT Press A classic still used to teach Turkish grammar in many universities Kaya Can 1991 Yabancilar Icin Turkce Ingilizce Aciklama Turkce Dersleri Ankara Orta Dogu Teknik Universitesi Fen ve Edebiyat Fakultesi Turkish lessons with Turkish English explanation s for foreigners Ekrem Causevic 1996 Gramatika suvremenoga turskog jezika Zagreb CRO Sveucilisna naklada A classic still used to teach Turkish grammar in many universities Asli Goksel amp Celia Kerslake 2005 Turkish A Comprehensive Grammar London Routledge The most recent comprehensive grammar in English G L Lewis 1967 Turkish Grammar Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 815838 6 G L Lewis 2000 Turkish Grammar Oxford University Press Second edition Structural differences between the two editions are not named in the second but appear to be as follows IV 4 ce VI 7 Arithmetical terms XI 16 diginde and XII 25 ta are new while XV 1 Nominal sentences and verbal sentences in the first edition was dropped Eran Oyal 1986 Sozcuklerin Anlamsal ve Yapisal Ozellikleri Konular Ornekler Sorular Aciklama Yanitlar OSS ve OYS icin Dil Yetenegi Dizisi 2 Ankara Semantic and syntactic properties of words subjects examples questions answers with explanation language ability for the university entrance examinations 2 Atilla Ozkirimli 2001 Turk Dili Dil ve Anlatim Istanbul Bilgi Universitesi Yayinlari The Turkish language language and expression Bengisu Rona 1989 Turkish in Three Months Hugo s Language Books Limited Gerjan van Schaaik 2001 The Bosphorus Papers Studies in Turkish Grammar 1996 1999 Istanbul Bogazici University Press Gerjan van Schaaik 2020 The Oxford Turkish Grammar Oxford Oxford University Press Dictionaries Edit Ismet Zeki Eyuboglu 1991 Turk Dilinin Etimoloji Sozlugu Etymological Dictionary of the Turkish Language Expanded and revised second edition H J Kornrumpf 1989 Langenscheidt s Universal Dictionary English Turkish Turkish English Istanbul New edition revised and updated by Resuhi Akdikmen Redhouse Yeni Turkce Ingilizce Sozluk New Redhouse Turkish English Dictionary Redhouse Yayinevi Istanbul 1968 12th ed 1991 Redhouse Buyuk Elsozlugu Ingilizce Turkce Turkce Ingilizce The Larger Redhouse Portable Dictionary English Turkish Turkish English Redhouse Yayinevi Istanbul 1997 9th printing 1998 Turk Dil Kurumu Turkish Language Foundation Turkce Sozluk expanded 7th edition 1983 Other Grammars Edit Aksan Dogan Hazirlayan 1983 Sozcuk Turleri TDK Ankara 2 Baski 288 s Aksan Dogan 1978 Turkiye Turkcesinde Gelismeli Sesbilim Hazirlayanlar Atabay N Ozel S Cam A Pirali N TDK Ankara Atabay Nese Ozel Sevgi Cam Ayfer 1981 Turkiye Turkcesinin Sozdizimi TDK Ankara 131 s 2003 Papatya Yayinlari Atalay Besim Haz Bergamali Kadri 1946 Muyessiretu l Ulum Ibrahim Horoz Basimevi Istanbul Banguoglu Tahsin 1940 Ana Hatlari ile Turk Grameri Istanbul Banguoglu Tahsin 1959 Turk Grameri I Sesbilgisi TDK Ankara 306 s Banguoglu Tahsin 1986 Turkcenin Grameri TDK Ankara 2 Baski 628 s Bilgegil Kaya 1984 Turkce Dilbilgisi Dergah Yayinlari Istanbul Bozkurt Fuat 1995 Turkiye Turkcesi Cem Yayinevi Istanbul 552 s Burdurlu Ibrahim Zeki 1982 Uygulamali Cumle Cozumlemeleri Istanbul Delice H Ibrahim 2003 Turce Sozdizimi Kitabevi Istanbul 248s Demiray Kemal 1964 Turkce Dilbilgisi Ankara Demircan Omer 1996 Turkcenin Sesdizimi Der Yayinlari Istanbul X 196 s 2002 Der Yayinlari Demircan Omer 1979 Turkiye Turkcesinin Ses Duzeni Turkiye Turkcesinde Sesler Ankara Demircan 1977 Omer Turkiye Turkiye Turkcesinde Kok Ek Bilesmeleri TDK Ankara Deny Jean 1992 Grammaire de la Langue Turque Dialecte Osmanli Paris 1920 1216 s Develi Hayati 2001 Osmanli Turkcesi Kilavuzu 1 2 Kitabevi Deny Jean 1941 Turk Dili Grameri Osmanli Lehcesi Cev Elove A U Istanbul Deny Jean 1995 Turk Dili Gramerinin Temel Kurallari Ceviren Oytun SAHiN TDK Ankara XII 164 s Dilmen Ibrahim Necmi 1930 Turkce Gramer Istanbul 2 cilt Dizdaroglu Hikmet 1976 Tumcebilgisi TDK Ankara 522 2 s dogru yanlis cetveli Dizdaroglu Hikmet 1988 Turkcede Sozcuk Yapma Yollari Ankara 1962 Eckmann Janos Cagatayca El Kitabi Ceviren Gunay Karaagac Istanbul Universitesi Edebiyat Fakultesi Yay Istanbul XVI 288 s Ediskun Haydar 1992 Turk Dilbilgisi Remzi Kitabevi Istanbul 4 Baski 407 s Elove Ali Ulvi Ceviren Jean Deny 1941 Turk Dili Grameri Osmanli Lehcesi TDK Istanbul XXII 1142 Ilave Dogru Yanlis Cetveli XLI A G Icindekiler Emecan Nese 1998 1960 tan Gunumuze Turkce Istanbul Emre Ahmed Cevat 1945 Turk Dilbilgisi TDK Istanbul XIX 613 s Ergin Muharrem 1987 Osmanlica Dersleri Bogazici Yayinlari Istanbul 9 Baski VIII 124 236 16 s Ergin Muharrem 1985 Turk Dil Bilgisi Bogazici Yayinlari Istanbul 5 Baski XXVIII 407 s Gabain Annamarie 1988 Eski Turkcenin Grameri Ceviren Mehmet Akalin TDK Ankara XXIII 313 s Gencan Tahir Nejat 1966 Dilbilgisi TDK Istanbul XV 412 s 2001 Ayrac Yayinlari Gogus Besir 1969 Faydali Dilbilgisi I II II Istanbul Goknel Yuksel 1974 Modern Turkce Dilbilgisi Izmir Gronbech K 1995 Turkcenin Yapisi Ceviren Mehmet Akalin TDK Ankara 148 s Hacieminoglu M Necmettin 1984 Turk Dilinde Edatlar Milli Egitim Bak Istanbul 3 Baski VIII 335 1 s Hacieminoglu Necmettin 1991 Turk Dilinde Yapi Bakimindan Fiiller En Eski Turkceden Cagdas Turk Sivelerine Kadar Kultur Bak Ankara 279 s Hatiboglu Vecihe 1981 Turk Dilinde Ikileme TDK Ankara 2 Baski 120 s Hatiboglu Vecihe 1981 Turkcenin Ekleri TDK Ankara Hatipoglu Vecihe 1972 Turkcenin Sozdizimi Ankara Karahan Leyla 1991 Turkcede Soz Dizimi Akcag Yayinlari Ankara Karaagac Gunay 2003 Cagatayca El Kitabi Akcag Yayinlari Koc Nurettin 1996 Yeni Dilbilgisi Istanbul Kononov A N 1956 Grammatika Sovremennogo Turetskogo Literaturnogo Yazika Akademiya Nauk SSSR Institut Vostokovedeniya Moskva Leningrad 569 s Tipikbasim 2001 Multilingual Istanbul Korkmaz Zeynep 1994 Turkcede Eklerin Kullanilis Sekilleri ve Ek Kaliplasmasi Olaylari TDK Ankara Ucuncu baski X 92 s Kornfilt J 1997 Turkish London Routledge Kutluk Ibrahim 1976 Sozcuk Turleri I D Aksan N Atabay S Ozel ile Ankara Kukey Mazhar 1975 Turkcenin Sozdizimi Ankara Lees Robert B 1961 The Phonology of Modern Standard Turkish Indiana University Bloomington Mouton and Co The Hague Netherlands VII 76 s Lewis G L 1967 Turkish Language Oxford University Press Mungan Guler 2002 Turkcede Fiillerden Turetilmis Isimlerin Morfolojik ve Semantik Yonden Incelenmesi Simurg Yayinlari Nash Rose 1973 Turkish Intonation Mouton Ozden Ragip Hulusi 1938 Tarihsel Bakimdan Ozturkce ve Yabanci Sozcuklerin Fonetik Ayraclair I Istanbul 21 s Ozel Sevgi 1976 Sozcuk Turleri II D Aksan N Atabay ile Ankara Ozel Sevgi 1977 Turkiye Turkcesinde Sozcuk Turetme ve Birlestirme Ankara Selen Nevin 1979 Soyleyis Sesbilimi Akustik Sesbilimi ve Turkiye Turkcesi Turk Dil Kurumu Yayinlari Ankara Swift Llyod B 1963 A Reference Grammar of Modern Turkish Indiana University Bloomington Mouton and Co The Hague Netherlands 267 s 4 Analyses Tables Simsek Rasim 1987 Orneklerle Turkce Sozdizimi Trabzon Tansu Muzaffer 1941 Turk Dilinin Entonasyonu Tecrubi Etud Ankara Tansu Muzaffer 1963 Durgun Genel Sesbilgisi ve Turkce Ankara Tekin Talat 1988 Orhun Yazitlari TDK Ankara XIV 200 23 4 s Yazitlarin Kopyasi Tekin Talat 1994 Turkoloji Elestirileri Doruk Yayinlari Ankara Tekin Talat 1995 Turk Dillerinde Birincil Uzun Unluler Kultur Bak Simurg Ankara 192 s Timurtas Faruk K 1987 Osmanli Turkcesi Giris I Eski Yazi Gramer Aruz Metinler Umur Reklamcilik ve Matbaacilik Istanbul 9 Baski XVI 232 176 s Timurtas Faruk K Osmanli Turkcesi Grameri III Eski Yazi ve Imla Arapca Farsca Eski Anadolu Turkcesi Umur Reklamcilik ve Matbaacilik Istanbul 3 Baski XV 469 s Timurtas Faruk K 1983 Osmanli Turkcesi Grameri III 5 Baski Umur Reklamcilik Istanbul Timurtas Faruk Kadri 1994 Eski Turkiye Turkcesi XV Yuzyil Gramer Metin Sozluk Enderun Kitabevi Istanbul Sahin Hatice 2003 Eski Anadolu Turkcesi Akcag Yayinlari Underhill R 1976 Turkish Grammar Mass The MIT Press External links EditTurkish dictionaries at Curlie Turkish language at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Turkish grammar amp oldid 1125662896, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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