Possessive Suffixes (İyelik Ekleri)

Possessive suffixes indicate who owns an object. In Turkish, these suffixes are attached to the noun and change according to 4-Way Vowel Harmony ($I$).

Vowel Harmony Reminder ($I$):

  • Last vowel (a, ı) → suffix uses ı.

  • Last vowel (e, i) → suffix uses i.

  • Last vowel (o, u) → suffix uses u.

  • Last vowel (ö, ü) → suffix uses ü.


Possessive Suffixes Table

The suffix depends on whether the noun ends in a consonant or a vowel:

Pronoun (Owner)

Noun ends in Consonant

Noun ends in Vowel

Benim (My)

-Im

-m

Senin (Your)

-In

-n

Onun (His/Her/Its)

-I

-sI

Bizim (Our)

-ImIz

-mIz

Sizin (Your pl./formal)

-InIz

-nIz

Onların (Their)

-lArI

-lArI


Practical Examples

Pronoun

Okul (School) - Consonant end

Oda (Room) - Vowel end

Benim

Okulum (My school)

Odam (My room)

Senin

Okulun (Your school)

Odan (Your room)

Onun

Okulu (His school)

Oda (Her room)

Bizim

Okulumuz (Our school)

Odamız (Our room)

Sizin

Okulunuz (Your school)

Odanız (Your room)

Onların

Okulları (Their school)

Odaları (Their room)


Pro Tips:

  1. Suffix Order: The possessive suffix always comes before case markers (prepositions).

    • Example: Odamda (In my room) → [Oda + m + da].

  2. The "n" Buffer: When adding a case suffix (like "to" or "in") after the 3rd person possession (Onun/Onların), you MUST use n as a buffer letter.

    • Example: Onun evinde (In his house).

  3. Formal Address: Use Sizin (plural) to show respect when talking to a single person who is older or in a professional setting.


Mastering possessive suffixes is your key to building personal sentences and describing your relationship with the objects around you.