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Optative Mood in Turkish (İstek Kipi)

grammar

The İstek Kipi is used to express wishes, intentions, or to make suggestions. While it can technically be used with all pronouns, it is most commonly used with Ben (I) and Biz (We)...

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Imperative Mood in Turkish (Emir Kipi)

grammar

The Imperative is used to give orders, instructions, or make requests. In Turkish, there is no imperative form for "I" (Ben) or "We" (Biz). Interestingly, Turki...

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Superlatives in Turkish: The "Most" (En)

grammar

In the previous lesson, we used Daha for comparing two things. Today, we use En for superlatives to indicate the "most" or the "-est" (the best, the fastest, th...

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Making Comparisons in Turkish (Karşılaştırma)

grammar

To compare two people or objects in Turkish, we use the word Daha (More) combined with the ablative case suffix -DAn (From/Than). The adjective always describes the first subject m...

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Human Body Parts in Turkish (Vücut Kısımları)

Turkish Vocabulary

Mastering the vocabulary of the human body is essential for daily life and medical situations in Turkey. Here is the categorized list:Head and Face (Kafa ve Yüz)TurkishEnglishTurki...

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Suffix and Particle "ki": (Which, That, Who)

grammar

In Turkish, ki is a versatile tool used as a relative pronoun, a possessive pronoun, or a conjunction. Unlike most suffixes, ki is usually invariant (does not follow vowel harmony)...

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