Is the Turkish Language Hard to Learn?

🇹🇷 Turkish is a beautiful language spoken by over 80 million people (and NOT just in Turkey). But how difficult is Turkish for English speakers? Let's find out!
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The Turkish Language: The Magical Story of a 5,000 Year Old Language
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✍🏼 TURKISH BLOG POSTS:
Is Turkish Hard To Learn? An Honest Guide For Beginners
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11 Engaging Turkish Movies On Netflix For All Levels
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⏱ TIMESTAMPS:
0:15 - What does Turkish sound like?
0:56 - Turkish Alphabet and Pronunciation
3:13 - An Easy Structure
4:13 - Suffixes: Harder, But Fun
6:44 - Vowel Harmony
9:04 - Verb Conjugation
9:28 - So… What’s The Verdict?
📜 SOURCES & ATTRIBUTIONS:
Special thanks to Nuriye from @LearnTurkishWithTurkishCoffee for helping prepare this video.
🎬 Video Clips:
AMERICAN TRYING TURKISH PHRASES 🇹🇷 | LANGUAGE SERIES
• AMERICAN TRYING TURKIS...
Can Yaman and Demet Ozdemir ❖ Interview ❖ Erkenci Kus ❖ June 2018 ❖ Closed Captions
• Can Yaman and Demet Oz...
Turkish Alphabet: Letters & Pronunciation (Turkish for beginners - 1)
• Turkish Alphabet: Lett...
Speak Turkish Like a Native in 20 minutes!
• Speak Turkish Like a N...
Learn Turkish Vowels | For Beginners
• Learn Turkish Vowels |...
Turkish Pronunciation | Ö - Ü - İ (Most difficult letters in Turkish!)
• Turkish Pronunciation ...
Amazing Facts About Turkish Language Before You Start
• Amazing Facts About Tu...
Turkish for Beginners 🤩 | How To Learn Turkish
• Turkish for Beginners ...
mixcord.co/acapella/p/I9o5apM...
Turkish Grammar : 2 Way Vowel Harmony (Turkishwithcan)
• Turkish Grammar : 2 Wa...
🖼 Images:
“First Page of Siyer-i Nebi (1832), Ottoman Turkish Sira.jpg” by Muhammad Umair Mirza is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 via Wikimedia Commons commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...

Пікірлер: 5 900

  • @storylearning
    @storylearning Жыл бұрын

    🇹🇷 Learn the magical story of the Turkish language 👉🏼 kzread.info/dash/bejne/ZoCm1KakctKvXZc.html

  • @Zeyede_Shewangzou

    @Zeyede_Shewangzou

    Жыл бұрын

    When I was young I used to watch a Turkish series in Arabic and my mother used to translate it for me. So I used to think Turks spoke Arabic until I discovered on KZread it’s a completely different language 😅😅 I was shocked for a moment it sounded alien.

  • @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    Жыл бұрын

    prefix is only to emphasis, such as sarı=yellow, sapsarı=excessive (fully/too much) yellow yaşlı=old , yapyaşlı=too much old. kara=black kapkara=excessive (fully/too much) black kızıl=reddish kıpkızıl=excessive (fully/too much) reddish. ------------------------------------------------ li suffix means "with" (lı,li,lu,lü) tuz=salt tuzlu=salty (with salt) siz suffix means "without" (sız,siz,suz,süz) tuzsuz=saltless (without salt) bilgi=knowledge bilgili=informed (with info/knowledge) bilgisiz=ignorant (without info/knowledge) bilinç=the conscious/consciousness bilinçli=conscious (with conscious) bilinçsiz=unconscious (without conscious) ------------------------------- once you know root word's meaning and suffixes meanings you can guess new word's meaning. to make a new word suffixes are used (not prefixes). for example bil=know bilgi=knowledge bilgili=informed bilgisiz=ignorant bilgisizce=ignorantly bilgisizlik=ignorance bilim=science bilge=wise bilgelik=wisdom bilgece=wisely bilimci=sciencist bilgilen=get informed bilgilendir=inform bilgilendirme=informing bildir=notify bildirim=notification bildirge=proclamation bilinç=the conscious/consciousness bilinçli=conscious bilinçsiz=unconscious bilinçsizlik=unconsciousness bilinçsizce=unconsciously bilmece=brainteaser bilgin=scholar biliş=cognition there are more words that has bil root, but i did not write all.

  • @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    Жыл бұрын

    2 WAY VOWEL HARMONY (A,E) (keeping toung back or front) when you add suffix with open vowel (a , e ) , (such as plural suffix= -lar,-ler) if last letter of word is back vowel (a ı o u) then suffix with open vowel will have " a " if last letter of word is front vowel (e i ö ü ) then suffix with open vowel will have " e " example: ler / lar = plural suffix Türkler= Turks Doktorlar =Doctors 4 WAY VOWEL HARMONY (I, İ, U, Ü) (pronouncing closed version of last vowel) when you add suffix with closed vowel (ı i u ü) (such as subject suffixes) then, suffix will be closed version of last vowel, you do not have to think about which vowel to add because without changing your mouth shape (back-front and rounded-unrounded shapes) just closing your mouth a little will make sound of last vowel's closed version. for example if you close your mouth a little as you are pronouncing "a" it will sound " ı ", " o " will be " u " " ö " will be " ü " " e " will be " i " so if last vowel of the word is " a " or " ı " then suffix with closed vowel will have " ı " " e " or " i " then suffix with closed vowel will have " i " " o " or " u " then suffix with closed vowel will have " u " " ö " or " ü " then suffix with closed vowel will have " ü " example: sen=you, suffix form of sen is with closed vowels “ sın, sin, sun, sün Nasıl = how Nasılsın? = how are you? Türksün= You are Turk Doktorsun= You are doctor İyi=good İyisin= You are good To pronounce "A,a" letter, chin must be open, tongue must be at back, lips must be unrounded To pronounce "E,e" letter, chin must be open, tongue must be at front, lips must be unrounded To pronounce "I,ı" letter, chin must be closed, tongue must be at back, lips must be unrounded To pronounce "İ,i" letter, chin must be closed, tongue must be at front, lips must be unrounded To pronounce "O,o" letter, chin must be open, tongue must be at back, lips must be rounded To pronounce "Ö,ö" letter, chin must be open, tongue must be at front, lips must be rounded To pronounce "U,u" letter, chin must be closed, tongue must be at back, lips must be rounded To pronounce "Ü,ü" letter, chin must be closed, tongue must be at front, lips must be rounded

  • @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Zeyede_Shewangzou Turkish sounds splendid as thunder to me. and harmonious as river sound.

  • @Zeyede_Shewangzou

    @Zeyede_Shewangzou

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PimsleurTurkishLessons yes, it sounds sweet and unique. Btw I found the series translated to Amharic kzread.info/dash/bejne/pKiGj7WCgN2zoMY.html episode ፩

  • @kwangjinchai2859
    @kwangjinchai2859 Жыл бұрын

    As a Korean I want to say Turkish people have the most perfect Korean pronunciation when they learn Korean. Strangely even better than our neighbors Chinese and Japanese.

  • @chatnoir2788

    @chatnoir2788

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for your compliment💞

  • @Raidon8537

    @Raidon8537

    Жыл бұрын

    @Doruk Tikence you are talking about Japanese, not Korean. But yes you heard true that Korean and Japanese is easiest to learn for Turks.

  • @Raidon8537

    @Raidon8537

    Жыл бұрын

    @Doruk Tikence Turks are not religious society. Turkey is officially secular/doesn't have official religion. Turkish population is not even %70 Muslim.

  • @bamsbeyrek4939

    @bamsbeyrek4939

    Жыл бұрын

    Evet,Türkler Koreceyi hem kolay ögreniyorlar hem de iyi bir telaffuza sahipler Japonca da öyle ögrenmesi ve telaffuz etmesi daha kolay..

  • @manyakkedi6972

    @manyakkedi6972

    Жыл бұрын

    Heyyy buddy, i m now trying to learn Korean, this is amazing!

  • @EnesAslan
    @EnesAslan Жыл бұрын

    Türkçeyi öğrenmeye çalışan insanları görmek aşırı mutlu hissettiriyor

  • @trev247

    @trev247

    Жыл бұрын

    Aynen

  • @bocekreyiz76747

    @bocekreyiz76747

    Жыл бұрын

    Kesinlikle öyle artık Amerika'da arkadaş bulabiliriz :)

  • @Mehmet_Eren

    @Mehmet_Eren

    Жыл бұрын

    Türkçe öğrenmeyi çalışan insanları görünce kendimi zeki hissediyorum (Çünkü onlar öğreniyor ben biliyorum)

  • @onurerdemm3919

    @onurerdemm3919

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Mehmet_Eren İngilizceyi de onlar biliyor biz öğreniyoruz

  • @tfkoac

    @tfkoac

    Жыл бұрын

    aynen öyle. insanın içini bir gurur kaplıyor. bu çok güzel bir his

  • @ays7779
    @ays77797 ай бұрын

    Turkey is beautiful, Turkish language and Turkish people are fascinating. What a bridge between the east and the west! Love from London.

  • @AysinDevaAgar

    @AysinDevaAgar

    6 ай бұрын

    Hello, I am Turkish, I am trying to learn English, can we speak English and Turkish together?

  • @Squish_that_cat

    @Squish_that_cat

    4 ай бұрын

    Turks fought against europeans for centuries as Mongols, Seljhuks and Ottomans How were they even allowed in NATO

  • @obigoldengamer2782

    @obigoldengamer2782

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@AysinDevaAgarI want to talk to you I want to learn a bit of turkish and I'm good at English

  • @AysinDevaAgar

    @AysinDevaAgar

    4 ай бұрын

    @@obigoldengamer2782 ohh okey how old are you

  • @obigoldengamer2782

    @obigoldengamer2782

    4 ай бұрын

    @@AysinDevaAgar 24

  • @mdhadi4896
    @mdhadi48967 ай бұрын

    Ben hala Türkiye gitmedim... belki kısmet olmadı bilmiyorum... ama canımdan, içimden, Türkçeyi seviyorum...özellikle türk halk müziği çok dinliyorum ve zevk aliyorum.. Ben kendi kendime türkçeyi öğrendim. Kusuruma bakmayın lütfen ❤ Herkese iyi gün/geceler😊

  • @yasinboz5234

    @yasinboz5234

    7 ай бұрын

    önemli değil kardeşim

  • @enescan1552

    @enescan1552

    7 ай бұрын

    Seviliyorsun

  • @reel7279

    @reel7279

    7 ай бұрын

    gitme. verebiliceğim en iyi tavsiye

  • @Jeff.Hardy.

    @Jeff.Hardy.

    7 ай бұрын

    Hiç gitmediğin bir ülkenin dilini öğrenmek senin için epey zor olmuştur. Seni sarf ettiğin çaba için tebrik ediyorum.

  • @rhinstoneyes

    @rhinstoneyes

    7 ай бұрын

    çok güzel konuşuyorsun

  • @mikayil1
    @mikayil1 Жыл бұрын

    I am Azerbaijani. I know Turkish even without studying Turkish. 😁

  • @_Anatolian_

    @_Anatolian_

    Жыл бұрын

    Çünkü ikimiz de Türküz sadece kelimeleri söyleme şeklimiz farklı :)

  • @mikayil1

    @mikayil1

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@_Anatolian_evet doğru :) sadece mühim olan maruz kalmak. Bir süre maruz kaldıktan sonra otomatikman çözüyorsun. Güzel bir his

  • @emreaslan7222

    @emreaslan7222

    Жыл бұрын

    Normal 😂

  • @eceyalcnkaya2664

    @eceyalcnkaya2664

    Жыл бұрын

    Ben de aynısını düşünüyorum. Çok haklısınız.

  • @pro.G0

    @pro.G0

    Жыл бұрын

    😃

  • @HuaweiY-nt5gb
    @HuaweiY-nt5gb Жыл бұрын

    Videoyu seyrederken ana dilimin Türkçe oluşundan ötürü kendimi samimi şekilde şanslı hissettim ve refleks olarak zaten soluksuz şekilde telaffuz edebildiğim dilimi sonradan öğrenmenin hakikaten meşakkatli olabileceğini fark ettim.

  • @aabbcc66ty91

    @aabbcc66ty91

    Жыл бұрын

    knk senln dedeşpnp ben bşke tam anllamadum amk

  • @ANKAISIMURG

    @ANKAISIMURG

    Жыл бұрын

    Nokta atışı olmuş, fakat bence kolay bir dil yok..

  • @Saylon.

    @Saylon.

    Жыл бұрын

    Ne güzel bir dilimiz var ama. ❤

  • @codex7305

    @codex7305

    Жыл бұрын

    Benim de ana dilim Türkçe ve üç dil öğrendim ama garanti ederim hiçbirinin dil bilgisi Türkçe kadar başımı ağrıtmıyor kesinlikle 😅😅😅

  • @ekremguler6796

    @ekremguler6796

    Жыл бұрын

    Türkçeyi bilince öbür dilleri çok hızlı öğreniyorsun sırf duyarak ingilizce felan öğreniyorsun

  • @beslinoztekin1360
    @beslinoztekin136010 ай бұрын

    I think the most unique feature of Turkish is the "inferential part tense (-mişli geçmiş zaman)". There is a regular past tense but the inferential one has a completely different meaning. He called--> "O aradı" is the regular past tense, but if you say 'o aramış', you still mean that he called, but you either heard this from someone else, or you have some clues and you conclude it, but you haven't actually seen that he called.

  • @enesaykut408

    @enesaykut408

    10 ай бұрын

    Or sometimes we use it for satire as well based on context. "Güya beni aramış!" "He said that he called me(supposedly)!"

  • @luminewi

    @luminewi

    10 ай бұрын

    some kind of reported speech i suppose

  • @sinansezgin6475

    @sinansezgin6475

    10 ай бұрын

    Sadece -mış eki ile past perfect anlamı çıkarılmaz. -mış ve -dı yı beraber kullanmak gerekir. Bu özelliği Almancaya benziyor.

  • @Berillleee

    @Berillleee

    7 ай бұрын

    İt is present perfect tense,, as a turk i can say that these two tenses (mış/miş/muş/müş and ppt) are same things but with time it became past tense for native turk speakers. But in english it is still useful. This is still another tense for them but for us it is became same as past tense.

  • @1anne3kalp23

    @1anne3kalp23

    6 ай бұрын

    -miş li geçmiş zamanı çok güzel ifade etmişsiniz.

  • @merakli2022
    @merakli20226 ай бұрын

    The best part of Turkish it has rules and almost no exceptions to the rules. For example , once you know the root of a verb word you can produce all forms of it consistently, be it present, continuous, past, future anything. So you do not have to memorize all the irregular forms like in English, French, German and especially Spanish. Spanish verbs are really notorious to form, at least for me. That being said, I love all languages, including Spanish.

  • @TravelsWithTony
    @TravelsWithTony Жыл бұрын

    My son learned Turkish some years ago while on an NSLI-Y state department scholarship. He was fluent in less than six months. He loved how structured and strict it was. And since he is musical he found the vowel harmonies really nice. The language really sounds great !

  • @venomouspassion5744

    @venomouspassion5744

    Жыл бұрын

    @jhj All languages are mathematical as long as they're not your first language. They all use up the left hemisphere of your brain. You utilize different formules/rules for each foreign language you learn like a new code.

  • @celestialcolosseum

    @celestialcolosseum

    Жыл бұрын

    6 months ? That's really impressive! I like that it has no articles (there's no "the") and also it's genderless so no he/she/it as well. Plus the rules apply 99% of the time so no need to learn special cases or irregular stuff to keep in mind makes it easier as well!

  • @TravelsWithTony

    @TravelsWithTony

    Жыл бұрын

    @@celestialcolosseum he lives languages and works hard. He liked how systematic Turkish was. It was his fourth language. He was raised with English and Farsi and German. Then came Turkish. Now he lives in Spain and has learned Spanish.

  • @elvinmarvel7643

    @elvinmarvel7643

    Жыл бұрын

    your son must be a genius. Its very hard

  • @NerdGlassGamingPA

    @NerdGlassGamingPA

    Жыл бұрын

    Well DONE ! 6 months is a great time to be fluent in ANY language !

  • @DoraEmon-xf8br
    @DoraEmon-xf8br Жыл бұрын

    I started learning Turkish a few months ago as a Native French Speaker who knows kinda fluent Japanese (lived in Japan for 10 years). I expected it to be more challenging. Not that I’m especially good at Turkish but I ‘‘quickly’’ managed to understand basic song lyrics. I think it’s thank to my prior knowledge of Japanese, in the way that word order, agglutination and suffixes aren’t that ’’exotic/strange‘‘ to me anymore. Most of the time, if I learn a suffix or morpheme, I can use it straight away. My biggest concern is actually learning the vocabulary and retaining the amount of nuances these suffixes bring. Learning Turkish opened to me the world of Turkic languages like Azerbaijani or Turkmen. It’s like I opened a Pandora box with infinite marvels. Turkic languages are awesome.

  • @MrEmretti

    @MrEmretti

    Жыл бұрын

    Because Turkish and other Turkic languages strangely are close to Japanese language. Japanese is closer to us than Mongolian/Korean language. The most closest language to Turkish and Turkics is Hungarian language.

  • @Raidon8537

    @Raidon8537

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MrEmretti not really. Mongolian, Korean and Japanese are closer to Turkish than Hungarian close to Turkish. Turkish is considered as relative of Japanese, Korean and especially Mongolian language. However, as the idea that Turkic languages ​​have no relatives became widespread over time, these languages ​​are accepted as "Altaic Sprachbund" today. This does not include Hungarian, but includes Japanese, Korean, Mongolian, Tungusic and Turkic languages.

  • @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    Жыл бұрын

    Linguists' opinions on Turkish Grammar Prof. David Cuthell : “I know many foreign languages. Among these languages, Turkish is such a different language that it is as if a hundred high mathematics professors came together to create Turkish. A dozen words are produced from one root. Turkish is such a language that it is a language of emotion, thought, logic and philosophy in itself.” Max Müller :Even reading a Turkish grammar is a real pleasure, even if he hasn’t had the slightest desire to speak and write Turkish. Those who hear the skillful style in the mods, the compliance with the rules that dominate all the shots, the transparency seen throughout the productions, the marvelous power of the human intelligence that shines in the language will not fail to be amazed. This is such a grammar that we can watch the inner formations of thought in it, just as we can watch the formation of honeycombs in a crystal… The grammatical rules of the Turkish language are so orderly and flawless that a committee of linguists, an academy, approves this language. It is possible to think that it is a language made with consciousness. Prof. Dr. Johan Vandewalle;,now I have learned about 50 languages ​​. After learning languages ​​with very different systems, the language that I still admire the most, the language that I find most logical and mathematical is Turkish.” johan Vandewalle “…I think that a native Turkish speaker thinks in short sentences, and when speaking, he builds complex structures by connecting these short sentences in various ways. This "tendency to connect sentences" can be weak in some speakers, and strong in others, almost to the extent of a disease. The linguistic structures that emerged in this last situation reflect the superior possibilities of the human mind in the best way. Although I have studied many languages ​​belonging to different language groups, I can say that I have never come across a structure that fascinates me as much as complex sentence structures in Turkish. If you let me be a little sentimental, I sometimes say to myself, “I wish Chomsky had learned Turkish when he was younger too…”. I'm sure then modern linguistics would have been shaped according to Turkish, not English” Receiving the Babylonian World Award, Belgium's Ghent University Center for Eastern Languages and Cultures, Dr. Johann Van De Walle explains why he is interested in Turkish today: “Turkish can be learned in a very short time. The rules in chess are logical, simple and few in number. Even a seven-year-old can learn to play chess. Despite this convenience, the person playing chess does not get bored throughout his life. The game possibilities are endless. It is a very magical feature that the same situation exists in the Turkish grammar system. Turkish grammar is a language that has a regular and unexceptional character almost as much as mathematics. Paul Roux: "Turkish is a mathematical language full of thought and intellect." Moliere: "Turkish is language to be admired; you can express a great deal by a few words." French Turcologist Jean Deny : "The Turkish language suggests that it was formed as a result of the consultation and discussion of an elite committee of scholars. Turkish verbs have such a peculiarity that they cannot be found in any of the Arian languages. This feature is the power to form new words with affixes”. Jean Deny Herbert W. Duda:“Turkish, which expresses all thoughts and feelings in the most perfect way, has such a rich vocabulary that everyone admires this language and accepts it as the most perfect scientific language.'”. Herbert Jansky: “Turkish language is an extremely rich and easy-to-understand, easy-to-learn scientific language in terms of vocabulary, phonetics, orthography, syntax and vocabulary.” page 257 (261 in pdf) in book (The Science of Language by Max Müller in 1861) It is a real pleasure to read a Turkish grammar, even though one may have no wish to acquire it practically. The ingenious manner in which the numerous grammatical forms are brought out, the regularity which pervades the system of declension and conjugation, the transparency and intelligibility of the whole structure, must strike all who have a sense of that wonderful power of the human mind which has displayed itself in language. Given so small a number of graphic and demonstrative roots as would hardly suffice to express the commonest wants of human beings, to produce an instrument that shall render the faintest shades of feeling and thought;-given a vague infinitive or a stern imperative, to derive from it such moods as an optative or subjunctive, and tenses as an aorist or paulo-post future;-given incoherent utterances, to arrange them into a system where all is uniform and regular, all combined and harmonious;-such is the work of the human mind which we see realized in “language.” But in most languages nothing of this early process remains visible. They stand before us like solid rocks, and the microscope of the philologist alone can reveal the remains of organic life with which they are built up. In the grammar of the Turkic languages, on the contrary, we have before us a language of perfectly transparent structure, and a grammar the inner workings of which we can study, as if watching the building of cells in a crystal bee-hive. An eminent orientalist remarked “we might imagine Turkish to be the result of the deliberations of some eminent society of learned men;” but no such society could have devised what the mind of man produced, left to itself in the steppes , and guided only by its innate laws, or by an instinctive power as wonderful as any within the realm of nature. page 260 (264 in pdf). there is one feature so peculiar to the Turkish verb, that no analogy can be found in any of the Aryan languages-the power of producing new verbal bases by the mere addition of certain letters, which give to every verb a negative, or causative, or reflexive, or reciprocal meaning Sev-mek, for instance, as a simple root, means to love. By adding in, we obtain a reflexive verb, sev-in-mek, which means to love oneself, or rather, to rejoice, to be happy. This may now be conjugated through all moods and tenses, sevin being in every respect equal to a new root. To each of these three forms a causative sense may be imparted by the addition of the syllable dir. Thus, I. sev-mek, to love, becomes IV. sev-dir-mek, to cause to love. II. sev-in-mek, to rejoice, becomes V. sev-in-dir-mek, to cause to rejoice.

  • @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    Жыл бұрын

    Short way to learn Kazakh Turkic is; (these rules are only for Turkish/Turkic orginal words. These rules are Not for foreign words such as Arabic, Persian loan words. 1.rule= First Y letter of Turkish words turn into J in Kazakh. Such as Yol = Jol Yok =jok Yaz=jaz Yat =jat Yürek=jürek --- 2. Rule= Turkish Ç letter turns into Ş letter (in Kazakh) İç =iş Aç =aş Uç=uş -- 3.Rule= Turkish Ş letter turns into S (in Kazakh) Aş=As İş =İs Baş=Bas Başka= Baska -- 4. Rule= First G letter (if its vowel is front vowel e i ö ü) of Turkish words turns into K in Kazakh. Gel =Kel Gerek= Kerek Güç =Küş (ç also turns into ş as i told above) -- 5.Rule= First D letter of Turkish words turns into T in Kazakh Deniz =Teniz Döşek =Tösek (ş turns into s as i told above) Diş =Tis -- 6.Rule= First V letter of Turkish words turns into B letter in Kazakh. Var =Bar Ver =Ber Varlık = Barlıq (K=Q they have same sounds but Kazakh alphabet shows it with Q letter). -- 7.Rule This rule is for foreign loan words from Arabic. First Ve, Va syllables turn into Ö,O in Kazakh. Vatan =Otan Vasiyet=Ösiyet Vekil =Ökil

  • @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    Жыл бұрын

    I came=English translation of the example sentence An example of sound changes among some Turkic dialects. Turkish =Geldim Kyrgyz= Keldim Azerbayjan=Geldim Kazakh=Keldim Uzbek =Keldim Uyghur=Keldim Türkmenistan=Geldim Tatar =Kildem - Q=K q=k same sound y=ı, i same sound just alphabet difference Long girl came=English translation of example sentence Uzun kız geldi=Türkiye uzun qız gəldi= Azerbayjan uzın qız keldi= Kazakh uzın qız keldi= Kyrgyz uzun qiz keldi =Uzbek uzyn gyz geldi=Türkmenistan Uzun kiz geldi = Uyghur ozyn kyz kilde = Tatar (Kypchak)

  • @Myleneee327
    @Myleneee32710 ай бұрын

    YAŞASIN YA TÜRKÇE ÖĞRENMEYE ÇALIŞAN İNSANLAR

  • @amirmohammadrezaei8074
    @amirmohammadrezaei80745 ай бұрын

    I am a Turk from Iran. As someone who speaks both Farsi and Turkish, I can say that learning Turkish is difficult, but learning Farsi is even more difficult.

  • @ipekayaz4597
    @ipekayaz4597 Жыл бұрын

    Bir Türk olarak insanların Türkçeyi öğrenmeye çalışmalarını okumak/izlemek çok keyif veriyor bana kalırsa Türkçe gibi zor bir dili öğrenmek gerçekten emek istiyor Edit: Ben sadece kendi fikrimi söylemek istemiştim tutacağını da düşünmedim herkes istediğini düşünebilir benim kastettiğim Türkçede ğ,ç gibi harfleri telaffuz etmede insanlar zorlanabilir ya da bir kelimenin birden çok anlamı oluyor genelde ya da Arapçadan Farsçadan geçmiş çok kelime var

  • @furkan6402

    @furkan6402

    Жыл бұрын

    ben 3 yaşında öğrendim.

  • @ferhankadircan6113

    @ferhankadircan6113

    Жыл бұрын

    @@furkan6402 are you serious? you are kidding

  • @ImperatorisAurei

    @ImperatorisAurei

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ferhankadircan6113 Adam Türk kanka

  • @ferhankadircan6113

    @ferhankadircan6113

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ImperatorisAurei farkındayım

  • @burakbr7789

    @burakbr7789

    Жыл бұрын

    türkçe zor değil. kanka sadece farklı bir dil

  • @jenniferodonnell4394
    @jenniferodonnell4394 Жыл бұрын

    I've lived in Turkey for 13 years and I'm married to a turk. I have learned Turkish through immersion and a little bit of studying. I still have more to learn but the suffixes and vowel harmony eventually become automatic. I still struggle with the different vowels! My daughter, who is a native turkish speaker, unlike me, says my pronunciation is like nails on a chalkboard to her, but I usually get compliments from strangers. Not many foreigners learn Turkish as a second language, so they are always very delighted and flattered that you made the effort.

  • @zikoraifenneli

    @zikoraifenneli

    Жыл бұрын

    Well done dear.I am going through the same thing.My Turkish Mother always says that my Turkish sounds a bit strange to her because she is a native speaker and I am an Italian but I still continue to study it irrespective of the difficulties involved.But all the same, Congratulations!

  • @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    Жыл бұрын

    @@zikoraifenneli Linguists' opinions on Turkish Grammar Prof. David Cuthell : “I know many foreign languages. Among these languages, Turkish is such a different language that it is as if a hundred high mathematics professors came together to create Turkish. A dozen words are produced from one root. Turkish is such a language that it is a language of emotion, thought, logic and philosophy in itself.” Max Müller :Even reading a Turkish grammar is a real pleasure, even if he hasn’t had the slightest desire to speak and write Turkish. Those who hear the skillful style in the mods, the compliance with the rules that dominate all the shots, the transparency seen throughout the productions, the marvelous power of the human intelligence that shines in the language will not fail to be amazed. This is such a grammar that we can watch the inner formations of thought in it, just as we can watch the formation of honeycombs in a crystal… The grammatical rules of the Turkish language are so orderly and flawless that a committee of linguists, an academy, approves this language. It is possible to think that it is a language made with consciousness. Prof. Dr. Johan Vandewalle;,now I have learned about 50 languages ​​. After learning languages ​​with very different systems, the language that I still admire the most, the language that I find most logical and mathematical is Turkish.” johan Vandewalle “…I think that a native Turkish speaker thinks in short sentences, and when speaking, he builds complex structures by connecting these short sentences in various ways. This "tendency to connect sentences" can be weak in some speakers, and strong in others, almost to the extent of a disease. The linguistic structures that emerged in this last situation reflect the superior possibilities of the human mind in the best way. Although I have studied many languages ​​belonging to different language groups, I can say that I have never come across a structure that fascinates me as much as complex sentence structures in Turkish. If you let me be a little sentimental, I sometimes say to myself, “I wish Chomsky had learned Turkish when he was younger too…”. I'm sure then modern linguistics would have been shaped according to Turkish, not English” Receiving the Babylonian World Award, Belgium's Ghent University Center for Eastern Languages and Cultures, Dr. Johann Van De Walle explains why he is interested in Turkish today: “Turkish can be learned in a very short time. The rules in chess are logical, simple and few in number. Even a seven-year-old can learn to play chess. Despite this convenience, the person playing chess does not get bored throughout his life. The game possibilities are endless. It is a very magical feature that the same situation exists in the Turkish grammar system. Turkish grammar is a language that has a regular and unexceptional character almost as much as mathematics. Paul Roux: "Turkish is a mathematical language full of thought and intellect." Moliere: "Turkish is language to be admired; you can express a great deal by a few words." French Turcologist Jean Deny : "The Turkish language suggests that it was formed as a result of the consultation and discussion of an elite committee of scholars. Turkish verbs have such a peculiarity that they cannot be found in any of the Arian languages. This feature is the power to form new words with affixes”. Jean Deny Herbert W. Duda:“Turkish, which expresses all thoughts and feelings in the most perfect way, has such a rich vocabulary that everyone admires this language and accepts it as the most perfect scientific language.'”. Herbert Jansky: “Turkish language is an extremely rich and easy-to-understand, easy-to-learn scientific language in terms of vocabulary, phonetics, orthography, syntax and vocabulary.” page 257 (261 in pdf) in book (The Science of Language by Max Müller in 1861) It is a real pleasure to read a Turkish grammar, even though one may have no wish to acquire it practically. The ingenious manner in which the numerous grammatical forms are brought out, the regularity which pervades the system of declension and conjugation, the transparency and intelligibility of the whole structure, must strike all who have a sense of that wonderful power of the human mind which has displayed itself in language. Given so small a number of graphic and demonstrative roots as would hardly suffice to express the commonest wants of human beings, to produce an instrument that shall render the faintest shades of feeling and thought;-given a vague infinitive or a stern imperative, to derive from it such moods as an optative or subjunctive, and tenses as an aorist or paulo-post future;-given incoherent utterances, to arrange them into a system where all is uniform and regular, all combined and harmonious;-such is the work of the human mind which we see realized in “language.” But in most languages nothing of this early process remains visible. They stand before us like solid rocks, and the microscope of the philologist alone can reveal the remains of organic life with which they are built up. In the grammar of the Turkic languages, on the contrary, we have before us a language of perfectly transparent structure, and a grammar the inner workings of which we can study, as if watching the building of cells in a crystal bee-hive. An eminent orientalist remarked “we might imagine Turkish to be the result of the deliberations of some eminent society of learned men;” but no such society could have devised what the mind of man produced, left to itself in the steppes , and guided only by its innate laws, or by an instinctive power as wonderful as any within the realm of nature. page 260 (264 in pdf). there is one feature so peculiar to the Turkish verb, that no analogy can be found in any of the Aryan languages-the power of producing new verbal bases by the mere addition of certain letters, which give to every verb a negative, or causative, or reflexive, or reciprocal meaning Sev-mek, for instance, as a simple root, means to love. By adding in, we obtain a reflexive verb, sev-in-mek, which means to love oneself, or rather, to rejoice, to be happy. This may now be conjugated through all moods and tenses, sevin being in every respect equal to a new root. To each of these three forms a causative sense may be imparted by the addition of the syllable dir. Thus, I. sev-mek, to love, becomes IV. sev-dir-mek, to cause to love. II. sev-in-mek, to rejoice, becomes V. sev-in-dir-mek, to cause to rejoice.

  • @zikoraifenneli

    @zikoraifenneli

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PimsleurTurkishLessons Yes, Turkish is agglutinative just like Japanese but even so,it is still a fun language to learn

  • @yildiraykomurcu

    @yildiraykomurcu

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@zikoraifenneli To an Italian, I think learning Turkish is easier than to a French or German or English. If an Italian speaks and says a sentence in his/her language slowly, a Turkish person can repeat it, irrespective of the meaning of the sentence. However, if a French or German speaks, he/she will not probably repeat it. To a Turkish ear, Italian sounds like they speak "syllable by syllable". That's also the case in Turkish. Even prepositions, words without a self-meaning, are treated/emphasized equally in Turkish language. Turkish ear wants to hear all the words syllable by syllable. However, these are all generalizations and in colloquial speech, people often murmur unintelligible.

  • @zikoraifenneli

    @zikoraifenneli

    Жыл бұрын

    @@yildiraykomurcu You are unbelievably accurate and it's quite true.When spoken slowly and clearly, Turkish and Italian bring out the best in every syllable

  • @savasturkoglu7569
    @savasturkoglu756911 ай бұрын

    As a programmer and a native Turkish spearker, Turkish seems like a flexible computer language to me. The Turkish language structure can convey the emotion you want to convey very well, which ensures that the bond between people is strong in a positive or negative way

  • @Ogtrc333

    @Ogtrc333

    11 ай бұрын

    Evet program diline çok uygun

  • @htraindogs

    @htraindogs

    3 ай бұрын

    I hope you are right! I programmed in many languages for many years and was very good and quick to learn; but now in my old age, I am embarking on this adventure to learn Turkish and it is daunting! Wish me to not give up!

  • @zhandauletduisen
    @zhandauletduisen Жыл бұрын

    Turkish is indeed a beautiful language! And for me, a Kazakh guy, it's a bit easier to learn, cuz our language follows most of these rules. I'm planning to learn Turkish soon

  • @kaankahraman1341

    @kaankahraman1341

    Жыл бұрын

    Мен түрікпін, Қазақстанда тұрамын. Қазақ тілін тез үйрендім, сен де түрік тілін тез үйренесің. Сәттілік бауырым!

  • @zhandauletduisen

    @zhandauletduisen

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kaankahraman1341 Teşekkürler kardeşim! Umarım ben de sizin dilinizi öğrenmeyi başarırım!

  • @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kaankahraman1341 Short way to learn Kazakh Turkic is; (these rules are only for Turkish/Turkic orginal words. These rules are Not for foreign words such as Arabic, Persian loan words. 1.rule= First Y letter of Turkish words turn into J in Kazakh. Such as Yol = Jol Yok =jok Yaz=jaz Yat =jat Yürek=jürek --- 2. Rule= Turkish Ç letter turns into Ş letter (in Kazakh) İç =iş Aç =aş Uç=uş -- 3.Rule= Turkish Ş letter turns into S (in Kazakh) Aş=As İş =İs Baş=Bas Başka= Baska -- 4. Rule= First G letter (if its vowel is front vowel e i ö ü) of Turkish words turns into K in Kazakh. Gel =Kel Gerek= Kerek Güç =Küş (ç also turns into ş as i told above) -- 5.Rule= First D letter of Turkish words turns into T in Kazakh Deniz =Teniz Döşek =Tösek (ş turns into s as i told above) Diş =Tis -- 6.Rule= First V letter of Turkish words turns into B letter in Kazakh. Var =Bar Ver =Ber Varlık = Barlıq (K=Q they have same sounds but Kazakh alphabet shows it with Q letter). -- 7.Rule This rule is for foreign loan words from Arabic. First Ve, Va syllables turn into Ö,O in Kazakh. Vatan =Otan Vasiyet=Ösiyet Vekil =Ökil

  • @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    Жыл бұрын

    @@zhandauletduisen Linguists' opinions on Turkish Grammar Prof. David Cuthell : “I know many foreign languages. Among these languages, Turkish is such a different language that it is as if a hundred high mathematics professors came together to create Turkish. A dozen words are produced from one root. Turkish is such a language that it is a language of emotion, thought, logic and philosophy in itself.” Max Müller :Even reading a Turkish grammar is a real pleasure, even if he hasn’t had the slightest desire to speak and write Turkish. Those who hear the skillful style in the mods, the compliance with the rules that dominate all the shots, the transparency seen throughout the productions, the marvelous power of the human intelligence that shines in the language will not fail to be amazed. This is such a grammar that we can watch the inner formations of thought in it, just as we can watch the formation of honeycombs in a crystal… The grammatical rules of the Turkish language are so orderly and flawless that a committee of linguists, an academy, approves this language. It is possible to think that it is a language made with consciousness. Prof. Dr. Johan Vandewalle;,now I have learned about 50 languages ​​. After learning languages ​​with very different systems, the language that I still admire the most, the language that I find most logical and mathematical is Turkish.” johan Vandewalle “…I think that a native Turkish speaker thinks in short sentences, and when speaking, he builds complex structures by connecting these short sentences in various ways. This "tendency to connect sentences" can be weak in some speakers, and strong in others, almost to the extent of a disease. The linguistic structures that emerged in this last situation reflect the superior possibilities of the human mind in the best way. Although I have studied many languages ​​belonging to different language groups, I can say that I have never come across a structure that fascinates me as much as complex sentence structures in Turkish. If you let me be a little sentimental, I sometimes say to myself, “I wish Chomsky had learned Turkish when he was younger too…”. I'm sure then modern linguistics would have been shaped according to Turkish, not English” Receiving the Babylonian World Award, Belgium's Ghent University Center for Eastern Languages and Cultures, Dr. Johann Van De Walle explains why he is interested in Turkish today: “Turkish can be learned in a very short time. The rules in chess are logical, simple and few in number. Even a seven-year-old can learn to play chess. Despite this convenience, the person playing chess does not get bored throughout his life. The game possibilities are endless. It is a very magical feature that the same situation exists in the Turkish grammar system. Turkish grammar is a language that has a regular and unexceptional character almost as much as mathematics. Paul Roux: "Turkish is a mathematical language full of thought and intellect." Moliere: "Turkish is language to be admired; you can express a great deal by a few words." French Turcologist Jean Deny : "The Turkish language suggests that it was formed as a result of the consultation and discussion of an elite committee of scholars. Turkish verbs have such a peculiarity that they cannot be found in any of the Arian languages. This feature is the power to form new words with affixes”. Jean Deny Herbert W. Duda:“Turkish, which expresses all thoughts and feelings in the most perfect way, has such a rich vocabulary that everyone admires this language and accepts it as the most perfect scientific language.'”. Herbert Jansky: “Turkish language is an extremely rich and easy-to-understand, easy-to-learn scientific language in terms of vocabulary, phonetics, orthography, syntax and vocabulary.” page 257 (261 in pdf) in book (The Science of Language by Max Müller in 1861) It is a real pleasure to read a Turkish grammar, even though one may have no wish to acquire it practically. The ingenious manner in which the numerous grammatical forms are brought out, the regularity which pervades the system of declension and conjugation, the transparency and intelligibility of the whole structure, must strike all who have a sense of that wonderful power of the human mind which has displayed itself in language. Given so small a number of graphic and demonstrative roots as would hardly suffice to express the commonest wants of human beings, to produce an instrument that shall render the faintest shades of feeling and thought;-given a vague infinitive or a stern imperative, to derive from it such moods as an optative or subjunctive, and tenses as an aorist or paulo-post future;-given incoherent utterances, to arrange them into a system where all is uniform and regular, all combined and harmonious;-such is the work of the human mind which we see realized in “language.” But in most languages nothing of this early process remains visible. They stand before us like solid rocks, and the microscope of the philologist alone can reveal the remains of organic life with which they are built up. In the grammar of the Turkic languages, on the contrary, we have before us a language of perfectly transparent structure, and a grammar the inner workings of which we can study, as if watching the building of cells in a crystal bee-hive. An eminent orientalist remarked “we might imagine Turkish to be the result of the deliberations of some eminent society of learned men;” but no such society could have devised what the mind of man produced, left to itself in the steppes , and guided only by its innate laws, or by an instinctive power as wonderful as any within the realm of nature. page 260 (264 in pdf). there is one feature so peculiar to the Turkish verb, that no analogy can be found in any of the Aryan languages-the power of producing new verbal bases by the mere addition of certain letters, which give to every verb a negative, or causative, or reflexive, or reciprocal meaning Sev-mek, for instance, as a simple root, means to love. By adding in, we obtain a reflexive verb, sev-in-mek, which means to love oneself, or rather, to rejoice, to be happy. This may now be conjugated through all moods and tenses, sevin being in every respect equal to a new root. To each of these three forms a causative sense may be imparted by the addition of the syllable dir. Thus, I. sev-mek, to love, becomes IV. sev-dir-mek, to cause to love. II. sev-in-mek, to rejoice, becomes V. sev-in-dir-mek, to cause to rejoice.

  • @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kaankahraman1341 KAŞGARLI MAHMUD'UN TÜRKLER VE TÜRKÇE İLE İLGİLİ SÖZLERİ: Tanrının devlet güneşini Türk burçlarında doğdurmuş olduğunu ve onların mülkleri üzerinde göklerin bütün teğre-lerini döndürmüş bulunduğunu gördüm.. Tanrı onlara Türk adını verdi ve onları yeryüzüne ilbeyi kıldı. Zamanımızın hakanlarını onlardan çıkardı. Dünya uluslarını yönetim yularını onların ellerine verdi. Onları herkese üstün eyledi. Kendilerini hak üzere güçlendirdi. Onlarla birlikte çalışanı, onlardan yana olanı aziz kıldı ye Türkler yüzünden onları her dilediklerine eriştirdi. Bu kimseleri kötülerin, Ayaktakımının şerrinden korudu. Okları dokunmaktan korunabilmek için, aklı olana düşen şey, bu adamların tuttuğu yolu tutmak oldu. Derdini dinletebilmek ve Türklerin gönlünü almak için onların dilleriyle konuşmaktan başka yol yoktur… And içerek söylüyorum: Ben Buhara’nın sözüne güvenilir, imamlarının birinden ve başkaca Nişabur’lu bir imamdan işittim. İkisi de senetleriyle bildiriyorlar ki, Peygamberimiz kıyamet alâmetlerini, ahir zaman karışıklıklarını ve Oğuz Türkleri’nin ortaya çıkacaklarını söylediği sırada : "Türk dilini öğreniniz, çünkü onlar için uzun sürecek egemenlik vardır. Buyurmuştur. … Biz ad olarak Türk adını ulu Tanrı vermiştir, dedik. Çünkü bize, Kaşgarlı Halef oğlu İmam Şeyh Hüseyin, ona da İbnül Garkî denilen kişi, İbnü Ebüddünya olarak ünlü Eş Şeyh Ebu Bekir El Müfidül Cerceraî’nin dünyanın sonu üzerine yazdığı kitabında ulu Peygambere tanıkla varan bir HADİS yazmış. Hadis şöyledir : «Yüce Tanrı «BENİM BİR ORDUM VARDIR, ONA TÜRK ADINI VERDİM. Onları Doğuda birleştirdim. Bir ulusa kızarsam TÜRKLERİ O ULUSUN ÜZERİNE GÖNDERİRİM» diyor.» İşte bu, Türkler için bütün insanlara karşı bir üstünlüktür. Onları yeryüzünün en yüksek yerinde, havası en temiz ülkelerinde yerleştirmiş, onlara «KENDİ ORDUM» demiştir. Bununla beraber Türkler’de güzellik, sevimlilik, tatlılık, edep, büyükleri ağırlamak, sözünü yerine getirmek, sadelik, öğünmemek, yiğitlik, mertlik gibi öğülmeye değer sayısız iyilikler görülmektedir

  • @socialservice576
    @socialservice576 Жыл бұрын

    Turkish is one of the most beautiful languages in the world. Phonetics and grammar are similar to Japanese and Korean.

  • @msdos4410

    @msdos4410

    Жыл бұрын

    Japanese, Korean and Turkic languages belong to the Altaic language family. It's all penultimate additional.

  • @w00tz4ibanez

    @w00tz4ibanez

    Жыл бұрын

    @@msdos4410 the Altaic language family idea is controversial, so not proven to be true. But there are definitely similarities. Japanese makes a ton of sense to me naturally (well apart from needing to learn vocab and a few other details of course) the backbone logic is similar if not the same. I’ve heard that Japanese have an easy time learning Turkish for the same reasons & each can learn each others language very fast compared to other language groups.

  • @umi1903

    @umi1903

    Жыл бұрын

    @@w00tz4ibanez how can there be so called proven Indo European language family but no Altaic language family? So absurd

  • @aixle3590

    @aixle3590

    Жыл бұрын

    @@w00tz4ibanez It is proven again by a study of 20 years published last year. It has almost undeniable proof of commonality of root words when the later interaction was proven to be not the case for it. Ural-Altai is still debated. Altaic however exists for sure.

  • @bythemoonlight

    @bythemoonlight

    Жыл бұрын

    @@umi1903 tüm eklemeli diller turanic dillerdir. asimilasyon dil ailesi olan hint-avrupa dil ailesi dünyaya yayılmadan önce dünyadaki tüm kadim uluslar eklemeli büyük ünlü uyumlu dil konuşuyorlardı. dünya haritasını açıp keşif öncesi kıtalara bakın, afrikadaki bantu dillerine, hindistandaki tamil diline bakın hepsi turanic tir. bu mantıukla diğer tüm dil grupları bu gruptan çıkmıştır, yani yapay bir şekilde oluşturulmuşlardır. ve eklemeli diller asimile edemez. hint avrupa dil grubu asimile özelliği ile ünlüdür. kökeni belirsizdir. batılı bilim adamları çok zorlasa da yapay bir dil grubu olduğu için kökenini bulamamaktadırlar. yani yukarıda altaik dil grubu yok diyenin dediğinin tam tersi geçerli. hatta ural altaik(turanic) diye bir dil grubu ve ulusu vardır(çünkü asimile edemez) hint avrupa ulusu diye bir ulus yoktur çünkü bu dil grubu "asimile ediyor," yayılıyor ve kökeni belirsiz,(yüksek ihtimal hint tibet arası bir bölgede insanlar tarafından "yaratıldı") denizaşırı(hatta çıktığı iddia edilen yer asya ve hatta avrupa) hiçbir antik medeniyet bu dili konuşmuyor. antik derken en eski yerleşimcilerden bahsediyorum. eklemeli dil konuşan ve herşeyden önemlisi dilleri çözeceğimiz alfabeyi bulan mezopotamya ya çok sonraları geliyorlar ve öyle haberimiz oluyor onlardan. nazi kafalı batılı bilim adamları hiyerogliften dil çözdük saçmalığı ile tarih yaratmaya çalışıyorlar. şu iran kayıtlarında geçen bir iki isim ile tüm iskitleri irani yaptıkları gibi. halbuki iskitler in bir alfabesi ve yazılı geleneği yoktur. hiçbir zaman olmamıştır. dil grupları alfabe ile çözülür ve sümerlerin alfabeyi bulduğu(tıpkı kadim mezopotamya uygarlıkları gibi turani bir dil konuşurlar. videodaki anlatılan türkçe kuralları bilen bir insan sadece kelime ezberleyerek rahatça sümerce yi öğrenebilir) tarih bellidir. bunun öncesi hakkında "teori" adı altında algı yönetimiyle tarih yaratmaya çalışmak saçmalıktır.

  • @MarriLoo
    @MarriLoo6 ай бұрын

    I've learned Turkish from TV-shows only and then got hired for a job that required speaking Turkish. After 2 months of torture and misunderstandings, I just turned out to be speaking Turkish very well 😅 Şimdi hala doğru yazmayı öğrenmeye çalışıyorum 😂

  • @emrethedeveloper

    @emrethedeveloper

    6 ай бұрын

    Good job sir 😅👏💯

  • @MarriLoo

    @MarriLoo

    6 ай бұрын

    @@emrethedeveloper kadın, ama teşekkür ederim 😄

  • @-BurningKeizereditzYT-

    @-BurningKeizereditzYT-

    6 ай бұрын

    ben de ingilizceyi senin gibi öğrendim

  • @KurbagaPepe.

    @KurbagaPepe.

    6 ай бұрын

    @@MarriLookonuşabiliyor musun hâlâ

  • @benyoruldumhayad

    @benyoruldumhayad

    5 ай бұрын

    Tebrik ederim ♡♡♡

  • @krslnenes
    @krslnenes5 ай бұрын

    As a person who speaks Turkish, you may not believe it in Turkish, but words in Turkish can go on forever by adding suffixes, if you don't believe it, you can search.

  • @marian8910
    @marian891011 ай бұрын

    İngilizce anadilimdir. İyi derecede Urduca konuşuyorum ve orta düzeyde Fransızca biliyorum. Fonetik olması, nadir istisnalar dışında tutarlı gramer kuralları olması ve Fransızca, Urduca ve bazı İngilizce'ye benzer pek çok kelime içermesi nedeniyle Türkçe'yi öğrenmeyi oldukça kolay buldum. Türkçeyi resmi olarak öğrenmeye çalışmadan önce birkaç yıl Türk dizileri izlediğim ve Türk müziği dinlediğim için sesli harf uyumunu bile kolay buldum. O noktada içgüdüsel olarak biliyordum.Türkçenin zor yanı bazen ekler nedeniyle kelimelerin çok uzun olabilmesidir.

  • @allienmecaca

    @allienmecaca

    11 ай бұрын

    Yazdığınız yorum neredeyse anadil seviyesinde, tebrik ederim. Hiç dil bilgisi/gramer hatası yok gibi görünüyor. Ufak nüanslar dışında mükemmel diyebiliriz. Dilimizi öğrenmeye harcadığınız emek ve zaman için teşekkür ederim.

  • @allienmecaca

    @allienmecaca

    11 ай бұрын

    @@AtHirsiziTimoti Öyle görünüyor.

  • @hknssi

    @hknssi

    11 ай бұрын

    En az bir Türk kadar iyi yazmışsın, tebrik ederim.

  • @SYlmaz-wb1wb

    @SYlmaz-wb1wb

    11 ай бұрын

    Sen gel birde, benim karşımda konuş bakalım Türk-çeyi, bakalım yazdığın kadar iyi konuşabiliyormusun. Çok Pakistanlı gördüm, Türk-çeyi öğrenmek isteyipte doğru düzgün konuşamayan.

  • @hknssi

    @hknssi

    11 ай бұрын

    @@SYlmaz-wb1wb Dayı Türkçeyi yanlış yazmışsın:d, keske millete laf etmeden önce kendimize baksak

  • @tayron5136
    @tayron513611 ай бұрын

    As a Turk, it makes us very happy that you spread our language to the world with videos like this 🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷

  • @user-ky1rq4ct7l

    @user-ky1rq4ct7l

    10 ай бұрын

    yeah.(Bende türküm =D)

  • @Mafia_2-Definitive-Edition

    @Mafia_2-Definitive-Edition

    10 ай бұрын

    Wp copy and paste

  • @just_sooya

    @just_sooya

    10 ай бұрын

    Evett

  • @antoniovivaldi941

    @antoniovivaldi941

    10 ай бұрын

    Dünya da 300 milyondan fazla Türk var ve çok fazla dil ve lehçe var.Videoda ki dil Çağdaş Türkiye türkçesi.Türkiye Cumhuriyeti Devletinde kullanılan dil. Türkçe bir çınar ve Türkiye türkçesi bir dalı sadece...

  • @SunRuf

    @SunRuf

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@antoniovivaldi941Adam Türkçe derken Türkiye Türkçesi demek istemiş zaten bunu yazmaya gerek mi var yine de genel kültürdür bilgi için teşekkürler

  • @fusunozcelik
    @fusunozcelik11 ай бұрын

    I just discovered your channel, and I appreciate that you give credit everytime you use someone else’s clips👏🏼✨

  • @EkremKurtcu
    @EkremKurtcu10 ай бұрын

    Wow, you are a perfect explainer and a teacher, well done!

  • @o.429
    @o.429 Жыл бұрын

    Best thing about Turkish is it is a very rule based language. When you learn a rule you can generalise it and understand a new word even when you hear it the first time.

  • @levitanno

    @levitanno

    Жыл бұрын

    That is correct!🙌

  • @Okyanusun_Melodisi
    @Okyanusun_Melodisi Жыл бұрын

    Vay canına bizim ülkemizde genellikle ingilizce almanca ve fransızca öğrenmeye ilgi vardır ama bu insanlarında bizim güzel dilimizi öğrenmeye çalıştığını görmek çok güzel

  • @XxweirdosxX

    @XxweirdosxX

    Жыл бұрын

    Almancada var bende mesela

  • @Okyanusun_Melodisi

    @Okyanusun_Melodisi

    Жыл бұрын

    Bendede var .Ich sprahe deutsch und türkishc und englishc ( mesela)

  • @Nehir077

    @Nehir077

    Жыл бұрын

    Katılıyorum

  • @chuchu24.

    @chuchu24.

    11 ай бұрын

    Bide ülkenin ekonomisi iyi olsa tadından yenmezdi

  • @g.a.2473

    @g.a.2473

    11 ай бұрын

    ​​​@@Okyanusun_Melodisi "Ich spreche deutsch "! E ve yaninda C var Und Englisch ! Und Türkisch ! C S nin yaninda 😊

  • @Sondikik
    @Sondikik9 ай бұрын

    Â is used to indicate the consonant before "a" is palatalized, as in "kâr" (profit). It is also used to indicate /aː/ in words for which the long vowel changes the meaning, as in "adet" (pieces) and "âdet" (tradition) / "hala" (aunt) and "hâlâ" (still).

  • @BRUH_AND_RONALDO
    @BRUH_AND_RONALDO9 ай бұрын

    Çok mutlu oldum Dilimize değer verilmesinden onur duyuyorum Bu arada video için teşekürler iyiki varsınız KZread kanalınızın başarılarının devamını dilerim

  • @nerd26373
    @nerd26373 Жыл бұрын

    The Turkish language is certainly fascinating. We all love to see more content like this.

  • @storylearning

    @storylearning

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s great :)

  • @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    Жыл бұрын

    Linguists' opinions on Turkish Grammar Prof. David Cuthell : “I know many foreign languages. Among these languages, Turkish is such a different language that it is as if a hundred high mathematics professors came together to create Turkish. A dozen words are produced from one root. Turkish is such a language that it is a language of emotion, thought, logic and philosophy in itself.” Max Müller :Even reading a Turkish grammar is a real pleasure, even if he hasn’t had the slightest desire to speak and write Turkish. Those who hear the skillful style in the mods, the compliance with the rules that dominate all the shots, the transparency seen throughout the productions, the marvelous power of the human intelligence that shines in the language will not fail to be amazed. This is such a grammar that we can watch the inner formations of thought in it, just as we can watch the formation of honeycombs in a crystal… The grammatical rules of the Turkish language are so orderly and flawless that a committee of linguists, an academy, approves this language. It is possible to think that it is a language made with consciousness. Prof. Dr. Johan Vandewalle;,now I have learned about 50 languages ​​. After learning languages ​​with very different systems, the language that I still admire the most, the language that I find most logical and mathematical is Turkish.” johan Vandewalle “…I think that a native Turkish speaker thinks in short sentences, and when speaking, he builds complex structures by connecting these short sentences in various ways. This "tendency to connect sentences" can be weak in some speakers, and strong in others, almost to the extent of a disease. The linguistic structures that emerged in this last situation reflect the superior possibilities of the human mind in the best way. Although I have studied many languages ​​belonging to different language groups, I can say that I have never come across a structure that fascinates me as much as complex sentence structures in Turkish. If you let me be a little sentimental, I sometimes say to myself, “I wish Chomsky had learned Turkish when he was younger too…”. I'm sure then modern linguistics would have been shaped according to Turkish, not English” Receiving the Babylonian World Award, Belgium's Ghent University Center for Eastern Languages and Cultures, Dr. Johann Van De Walle explains why he is interested in Turkish today: “Turkish can be learned in a very short time. The rules in chess are logical, simple and few in number. Even a seven-year-old can learn to play chess. Despite this convenience, the person playing chess does not get bored throughout his life. The game possibilities are endless. It is a very magical feature that the same situation exists in the Turkish grammar system. Turkish grammar is a language that has a regular and unexceptional character almost as much as mathematics. Paul Roux: "Turkish is a mathematical language full of thought and intellect." Moliere: "Turkish is language to be admired; you can express a great deal by a few words." French Turcologist Jean Deny : "The Turkish language suggests that it was formed as a result of the consultation and discussion of an elite committee of scholars. Turkish verbs have such a peculiarity that they cannot be found in any of the Arian languages. This feature is the power to form new words with affixes”. Jean Deny Herbert W. Duda:“Turkish, which expresses all thoughts and feelings in the most perfect way, has such a rich vocabulary that everyone admires this language and accepts it as the most perfect scientific language.'”. Herbert Jansky: “Turkish language is an extremely rich and easy-to-understand, easy-to-learn scientific language in terms of vocabulary, phonetics, orthography, syntax and vocabulary.” page 257 (261 in pdf) in book (The Science of Language by Max Müller in 1861) It is a real pleasure to read a Turkish grammar, even though one may have no wish to acquire it practically. The ingenious manner in which the numerous grammatical forms are brought out, the regularity which pervades the system of declension and conjugation, the transparency and intelligibility of the whole structure, must strike all who have a sense of that wonderful power of the human mind which has displayed itself in language. Given so small a number of graphic and demonstrative roots as would hardly suffice to express the commonest wants of human beings, to produce an instrument that shall render the faintest shades of feeling and thought;-given a vague infinitive or a stern imperative, to derive from it such moods as an optative or subjunctive, and tenses as an aorist or paulo-post future;-given incoherent utterances, to arrange them into a system where all is uniform and regular, all combined and harmonious;-such is the work of the human mind which we see realized in “language.” But in most languages nothing of this early process remains visible. They stand before us like solid rocks, and the microscope of the philologist alone can reveal the remains of organic life with which they are built up. In the grammar of the Turkic languages, on the contrary, we have before us a language of perfectly transparent structure, and a grammar the inner workings of which we can study, as if watching the building of cells in a crystal bee-hive. An eminent orientalist remarked “we might imagine Turkish to be the result of the deliberations of some eminent society of learned men;” but no such society could have devised what the mind of man produced, left to itself in the steppes , and guided only by its innate laws, or by an instinctive power as wonderful as any within the realm of nature. page 260 (264 in pf). there is one feature so peculiar to the Turkish verb, that no analogy can be found in any of the Aryan languages-the power of producing new verbal bases by the mere addition of certain letters, which give to every verb a negative, or causative, or reflexive, or reciprocal meaning Sev-mek, for instance, as a simple root, means to love. By adding in, we obtain a reflexive verb, sev-in-mek, which means to love oneself, or rather, to rejoice, to be happy. This may now be conjugated through all moods and tenses, sevin being in every respect equal to a new root. To each of these three forms a causative sense may be imparted by the addition of the syllable dir. Thus, I. sev-mek, to love, becomes IV. sev-dir-mek, to cause to love. II. sev-in-mek, to rejoice, becomes V. sev-in-dir-mek, to cause to rejoice.

  • @zemx2rw

    @zemx2rw

    Жыл бұрын

    Hi I'm Turkish You can ask somethings about Turkish

  • @williamafton2962

    @williamafton2962

    Жыл бұрын

    Ne diyonuz olm

  • @turgangs2979

    @turgangs2979

    Жыл бұрын

    @@williamafton2962 ne bileyim aq

  • @cicikus437
    @cicikus43711 ай бұрын

    I have a friend who learned many languages to the point where he can compare them. I guess he learned, 14 languages but he forgot them mostly as he switched his focus on Turkish only. He says It's the best sounding language he tried, most logical one and best for maths and science. "Let's switch to Turkish from English as global language. Like, why do we use it still?" he says. He's from Britain also. I guess I should be proud of my language ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ I don't say a thing as I am a native Turkish speaker but I know English from childhood thanks to games, learning German now and going to learn Russian next, but none of them has that appeal to me. I feel discomfort using them as Turkish is far simpler to speak when you get the hang of it. Cheers!

  • @noobpreve

    @noobpreve

    10 ай бұрын

    Cickus 😂

  • @nazanfidan9417

    @nazanfidan9417

    10 ай бұрын

    nice to see that idea:)

  • @ozlemozcangaz9286

    @ozlemozcangaz9286

    10 ай бұрын

    Cici kuş türkce yazsaydin

  • @yaren_ypc

    @yaren_ypc

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@ozlemozcangaz9286 bu video yabancı biri tarafından yabancılar için yapıldığı için o da doğal olarak yabancı yazmış, yani İngilizce

  • @barxx100

    @barxx100

    10 ай бұрын

    As a Turkish I think english is still simpler 😂.

  • @AniqtsOffical
    @AniqtsOffical10 ай бұрын

    Its so nice to see people learning my language. Im currently trying to learn russian, love from turkey❤❤

  • @Songbird12
    @Songbird127 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much for this video. I’m currently learning Turkish for nostalgic reasons and it’s a very unique and beautiful language.

  • @gamyeong6217
    @gamyeong6217 Жыл бұрын

    I think Turkish language is so logical. It's like mathematics. Almost all rules make sense. If you get the logic, you do it well. Also I love that it sounds so kind. I think it sounds like Korean + Japanese. Most people near me do not understand why I find them similar but sometimes I notice the sentences I make and say "Wow, this really sounded like Japanese." For example: "O çayı sen taze san." Even "çay" in Japanese is "oça" and Korean is "ça"

  • @mehmetertan2019

    @mehmetertan2019

    Жыл бұрын

    Its because they're in the same language family 🙂

  • @tharkas3077

    @tharkas3077

    Жыл бұрын

    Both chai and tea are chinese words btw. xD For all the branding let's say people around the world got to know it from chinese.

  • @gamyeong6217

    @gamyeong6217

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tharkas3077 Yea, but the languages or sounds are nothing alike .

  • @lordshitpost31

    @lordshitpost31

    Жыл бұрын

    Really, I've always wondered how it sounded to foreigners, cheers :)

  • @gamyeong6217

    @gamyeong6217

    Жыл бұрын

    @hurryup mate It doesn’t. Turkish sounds kind, Arabic doesn’t.

  • @xiaoluima8327
    @xiaoluima83278 ай бұрын

    I'm Turkish and im just here to see if people are being respectful and wanting to learn Turkish, or there are some people that came to Türkiye before and they explain their short memories they made in Türkiye. It makes me so happy that people are willing to learn our language and ACTUALLY giving effort in learning it. Thank you for all the people that is supporting our language and country. Good luck to learners! And I also thank Olly for giving information about our language!

  • @BmwM8competition2023
    @BmwM8competition202311 ай бұрын

    How happy is the one who says I am Turkish 🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷

  • @joaninha3484
    @joaninha3484 Жыл бұрын

    Türkçeyi öğreniyorum ve çok ilginç bir dil. It is so logical and fun to add on lots of suffixes, each with its own vowel harmony rule. Every sentence is like an algebraic equation! I love ❤️ it, and was influenced to learn it by you and Elysse Speaks.

  • @kaankahraman1341

    @kaankahraman1341

    Жыл бұрын

    Beginners tend to make mistakes in the "algebra" part but it will come naturally over time with immersion. The most important thing is to keep expanding your vocabulary! I am so grateful to see you learning my language. Başarılar dilerim!!

  • @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    Жыл бұрын

    Linguists' opinions on Turkish Grammar Prof. David Cuthell : “I know many foreign languages. Among these languages, Turkish is such a different language that it is as if a hundred high mathematics professors came together to create Turkish. A dozen words are produced from one root. Turkish is such a language that it is a language of emotion, thought, logic and philosophy in itself.” Max Müller :Even reading a Turkish grammar is a real pleasure, even if he hasn’t had the slightest desire to speak and write Turkish. Those who hear the skillful style in the mods, the compliance with the rules that dominate all the shots, the transparency seen throughout the productions, the marvelous power of the human intelligence that shines in the language will not fail to be amazed. This is such a grammar that we can watch the inner formations of thought in it, just as we can watch the formation of honeycombs in a crystal… The grammatical rules of the Turkish language are so orderly and flawless that a committee of linguists, an academy, approves this language. It is possible to think that it is a language made with consciousness. Prof. Dr. Johan Vandewalle;,now I have learned about 50 languages ​​. After learning languages ​​with very different systems, the language that I still admire the most, the language that I find most logical and mathematical is Turkish.” johan Vandewalle “…I think that a native Turkish speaker thinks in short sentences, and when speaking, he builds complex structures by connecting these short sentences in various ways. This "tendency to connect sentences" can be weak in some speakers, and strong in others, almost to the extent of a disease. The linguistic structures that emerged in this last situation reflect the superior possibilities of the human mind in the best way. Although I have studied many languages ​​belonging to different language groups, I can say that I have never come across a structure that fascinates me as much as complex sentence structures in Turkish. If you let me be a little sentimental, I sometimes say to myself, “I wish Chomsky had learned Turkish when he was younger too…”. I'm sure then modern linguistics would have been shaped according to Turkish, not English” Receiving the Babylonian World Award, Belgium's Ghent University Center for Eastern Languages and Cultures, Dr. Johann Van De Walle explains why he is interested in Turkish today: “Turkish can be learned in a very short time. The rules in chess are logical, simple and few in number. Even a seven-year-old can learn to play chess. Despite this convenience, the person playing chess does not get bored throughout his life. The game possibilities are endless. It is a very magical feature that the same situation exists in the Turkish grammar system. Turkish grammar is a language that has a regular and unexceptional character almost as much as mathematics. Paul Roux: "Turkish is a mathematical language full of thought and intellect." Moliere: "Turkish is language to be admired; you can express a great deal by a few words." French Turcologist Jean Deny : "The Turkish language suggests that it was formed as a result of the consultation and discussion of an elite committee of scholars. Turkish verbs have such a peculiarity that they cannot be found in any of the Arian languages. This feature is the power to form new words with affixes”. Jean Deny Herbert W. Duda:“Turkish, which expresses all thoughts and feelings in the most perfect way, has such a rich vocabulary that everyone admires this language and accepts it as the most perfect scientific language.'”. Herbert Jansky: “Turkish language is an extremely rich and easy-to-understand, easy-to-learn scientific language in terms of vocabulary, phonetics, orthography, syntax and vocabulary.” page 257 (261 in pdf) in book (The Science of Language by Max Müller in 1861) It is a real pleasure to read a Turkish grammar, even though one may have no wish to acquire it practically. The ingenious manner in which the numerous grammatical forms are brought out, the regularity which pervades the system of declension and conjugation, the transparency and intelligibility of the whole structure, must strike all who have a sense of that wonderful power of the human mind which has displayed itself in language. Given so small a number of graphic and demonstrative roots as would hardly suffice to express the commonest wants of human beings, to produce an instrument that shall render the faintest shades of feeling and thought;-given a vague infinitive or a stern imperative, to derive from it such moods as an optative or subjunctive, and tenses as an aorist or paulo-post future;-given incoherent utterances, to arrange them into a system where all is uniform and regular, all combined and harmonious;-such is the work of the human mind which we see realized in “language.” But in most languages nothing of this early process remains visible. They stand before us like solid rocks, and the microscope of the philologist alone can reveal the remains of organic life with which they are built up. In the grammar of the Turkic languages, on the contrary, we have before us a language of perfectly transparent structure, and a grammar the inner workings of which we can study, as if watching the building of cells in a crystal bee-hive. An eminent orientalist remarked “we might imagine Turkish to be the result of the deliberations of some eminent society of learned men;” but no such society could have devised what the mind of man produced, left to itself in the steppes , and guided only by its innate laws, or by an instinctive power as wonderful as any within the realm of nature. page 260 (264 in pdf). there is one feature so peculiar to the Turkish verb, that no analogy can be found in any of the Aryan languages-the power of producing new verbal bases by the mere addition of certain letters, which give to every verb a negative, or causative, or reflexive, or reciprocal meaning Sev-mek, for instance, as a simple root, means to love. By adding in, we obtain a reflexive verb, sev-in-mek, which means to love oneself, or rather, to rejoice, to be happy. This may now be conjugated through all moods and tenses, sevin being in every respect equal to a new root. To each of these three forms a causative sense may be imparted by the addition of the syllable dir. Thus, I. sev-mek, to love, becomes IV. sev-dir-mek, to cause to love. II. sev-in-mek, to rejoice, becomes V. sev-in-dir-mek, to cause to rejoice.

  • @ULYS5ES

    @ULYS5ES

    Жыл бұрын

    As a native Turkish and also an English and German language teacher as profession for almost a decade now, I can help anyone those who would like to take online Turkish, English or German private lessons.

  • @blossom4479

    @blossom4479

    Жыл бұрын

    Kolay gelsin ✨️🌿

  • @oguzliebert

    @oguzliebert

    Жыл бұрын

    @Ayı Yiyen Armut PUAHAHSHAHJAHS

  • @jb0502
    @jb0502 Жыл бұрын

    There are millions of people learning Turkish just from Turkish tv series and movies in a few months. It is one of the most logical languages esp after modernisation in 20th century. Also its fundamental structure makes it easier to adapt to any new terminology or language.

  • @Tomioka_giyuu14
    @Tomioka_giyuu1410 ай бұрын

    It makes me happy to see you learn Turkish because I am Turkish.😊

  • @jokeral.8152
    @jokeral.81527 ай бұрын

    As a Turkish speaker, I started to learn Japanese a few weeks ago and I must say that based on pronunciation, Japanese is more similar than I thought it would be. I feel privileged to be a Turkish speaker now :D

  • @Native_Creation

    @Native_Creation

    2 ай бұрын

    Interestingly Spanish has words of Turkish origins (similar to some Arabic and Persian loanwords), I find the pronunciation of Spanish similar to Japanese as well.

  • @gokhanozgen3325
    @gokhanozgen3325 Жыл бұрын

    Here is a Turkish tongue twister from back when I was a kid: "Çekoslovakyalılaştırabildiklerimizden misin?" English translation is something like this: "Are you amongst those whom we were able to naturalize as Czechoslovakians?". Truly a fascinating language. By the way, thank you for bringing attention to our native language.

  • @sedasoysal4086

    @sedasoysal4086

    Жыл бұрын

    Better, "çekoslovakyalılaştıramadıklarımızdan mısınız" which is the negative form, and thus longer because of the negative suffixes !

  • @saidtekin3812

    @saidtekin3812

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@alperenk.5760 Acaba bunu yazan kişi bunu Türkçeye de çevirebilir mi? Anladığımı söylesem yalan söylemiş olurum. Ve neden orda "ever" yazıyor. Tüm Türkçe ek bilgimi gözden geçirdim.

  • @furkangozdag8796

    @furkangozdag8796

    Жыл бұрын

    @@alperenk.5760 iki defa leştiri yazmışsın

  • @furkangozdag8796

    @furkangozdag8796

    Жыл бұрын

    @@alperenk.5760 as if you are one of those we may not be able to fail

  • @CptFabio

    @CptFabio

    Жыл бұрын

    @@saidtekin3812 It's also pretty hard to understand for me as a native turkish speaker don't worry

  • @keremylmaz8423
    @keremylmaz8423 Жыл бұрын

    In Turkish, idioms are insanely important. We have over ten thousand of them and they are commonly used. You should definitely mention them if you make another video about learning Turkish.

  • @altugcetin8967

    @altugcetin8967

    11 ай бұрын

    Deyimler kullanılmıyor ki :D

  • @cankervan7219

    @cankervan7219

    11 ай бұрын

    @@altugcetin8967 "ödüm koptu" sık kullanılan bir deyim mesela. O kadar sık kullanıyoruz ki deyim olup olmadığı çok umurumuzda olmuyor.

  • @ssoo8215

    @ssoo8215

    11 ай бұрын

    @@altugcetin8967 Nasıl kullanılmıyor

  • @galardem19

    @galardem19

    11 ай бұрын

    Canı yanmak da oluyor değil mi

  • @cankervan7219

    @cankervan7219

    11 ай бұрын

    @@galardem19 evet, gözden düşmek, göze girmek, canı yanmak, ödü kopmak, canı çekmek, tadı kaçmak vs vs vs

  • @burcaksanda
    @burcaksanda7 ай бұрын

    just wow. seeing people trying to learn Turkish makes me remember that even tho I'm Turkish I still struggle in Turkish lesson about suffixes cause they are REALLY hard to learn and thank you Olly for making it easier for people who wants to learn it. Also I studied English for 4 years and now I'm level B1 so what I am trying to say is that if you work hard and fight for that thing there is only a little bit of things that you can't do...

  • @fatmaunal8862
    @fatmaunal88626 ай бұрын

    Merhaba. I am a Turkish woman working as an English teacher and trying to learn Japanese. I loved your video! Tesekkurler ❤

  • @bilgisaray123
    @bilgisaray123 Жыл бұрын

    dilim Türkçe ye aşığım. eklendikçe anlam yitirmeyen aksine anlamla zenginleşen mükemmel bir dildir Türkçe.

  • @j.burgess4459
    @j.burgess4459 Жыл бұрын

    Turkish is a _delight_ to learn! 🤓

  • @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    Жыл бұрын

    Linguists' opinions on Turkish Grammar Prof. David Cuthell : “I know many foreign languages. Among these languages, Turkish is such a different language that it is as if a hundred high mathematics professors came together to create Turkish. A dozen words are produced from one root. Turkish is such a language that it is a language of emotion, thought, logic and philosophy in itself.” Max Müller :Even reading a Turkish grammar is a real pleasure, even if he hasn’t had the slightest desire to speak and write Turkish. Those who hear the skillful style in the mods, the compliance with the rules that dominate all the shots, the transparency seen throughout the productions, the marvelous power of the human intelligence that shines in the language will not fail to be amazed. This is such a grammar that we can watch the inner formations of thought in it, just as we can watch the formation of honeycombs in a crystal… The grammatical rules of the Turkish language are so orderly and flawless that a committee of linguists, an academy, approves this language. It is possible to think that it is a language made with consciousness. Prof. Dr. Johan Vandewalle;,now I have learned about 50 languages ​​. After learning languages ​​with very different systems, the language that I still admire the most, the language that I find most logical and mathematical is Turkish.” johan Vandewalle “…I think that a native Turkish speaker thinks in short sentences, and when speaking, he builds complex structures by connecting these short sentences in various ways. This "tendency to connect sentences" can be weak in some speakers, and strong in others, almost to the extent of a disease. The linguistic structures that emerged in this last situation reflect the superior possibilities of the human mind in the best way. Although I have studied many languages ​​belonging to different language groups, I can say that I have never come across a structure that fascinates me as much as complex sentence structures in Turkish. If you let me be a little sentimental, I sometimes say to myself, “I wish Chomsky had learned Turkish when he was younger too…”. I'm sure then modern linguistics would have been shaped according to Turkish, not English” Receiving the Babylonian World Award, Belgium's Ghent University Center for Eastern Languages and Cultures, Dr. Johann Van De Walle explains why he is interested in Turkish today: “Turkish can be learned in a very short time. The rules in chess are logical, simple and few in number. Even a seven-year-old can learn to play chess. Despite this convenience, the person playing chess does not get bored throughout his life. The game possibilities are endless. It is a very magical feature that the same situation exists in the Turkish grammar system. Turkish grammar is a language that has a regular and unexceptional character almost as much as mathematics. Paul Roux: "Turkish is a mathematical language full of thought and intellect." Moliere: "Turkish is language to be admired; you can express a great deal by a few words." French Turcologist Jean Deny : "The Turkish language suggests that it was formed as a result of the consultation and discussion of an elite committee of scholars. Turkish verbs have such a peculiarity that they cannot be found in any of the Arian languages. This feature is the power to form new words with affixes”. Jean Deny Herbert W. Duda:“Turkish, which expresses all thoughts and feelings in the most perfect way, has such a rich vocabulary that everyone admires this language and accepts it as the most perfect scientific language.'”. Herbert Jansky: “Turkish language is an extremely rich and easy-to-understand, easy-to-learn scientific language in terms of vocabulary, phonetics, orthography, syntax and vocabulary.” page 257 (261 in pdf) in book (The Science of Language by Max Müller in 1861) It is a real pleasure to read a Turkish grammar, even though one may have no wish to acquire it practically. The ingenious manner in which the numerous grammatical forms are brought out, the regularity which pervades the system of declension and conjugation, the transparency and intelligibility of the whole structure, must strike all who have a sense of that wonderful power of the human mind which has displayed itself in language. Given so small a number of graphic and demonstrative roots as would hardly suffice to express the commonest wants of human beings, to produce an instrument that shall render the faintest shades of feeling and thought;-given a vague infinitive or a stern imperative, to derive from it such moods as an optative or subjunctive, and tenses as an aorist or paulo-post future;-given incoherent utterances, to arrange them into a system where all is uniform and regular, all combined and harmonious;-such is the work of the human mind which we see realized in “language.” But in most languages nothing of this early process remains visible. They stand before us like solid rocks, and the microscope of the philologist alone can reveal the remains of organic life with which they are built up. In the grammar of the Turkic languages, on the contrary, we have before us a language of perfectly transparent structure, and a grammar the inner workings of which we can study, as if watching the building of cells in a crystal bee-hive. An eminent orientalist remarked “we might imagine Turkish to be the result of the deliberations of some eminent society of learned men;” but no such society could have devised what the mind of man produced, left to itself in the steppes , and guided only by its innate laws, or by an instinctive power as wonderful as any within the realm of nature. page 260 (264 in pdf). there is one feature so peculiar to the Turkish verb, that no analogy can be found in any of the Aryan languages-the power of producing new verbal bases by the mere addition of certain letters, which give to every verb a negative, or causative, or reflexive, or reciprocal meaning Sev-mek, for instance, as a simple root, means to love. By adding in, we obtain a reflexive verb, sev-in-mek, which means to love oneself, or rather, to rejoice, to be happy. This may now be conjugated through all moods and tenses, sevin being in every respect equal to a new root. To each of these three forms a causative sense may be imparted by the addition of the syllable dir. Thus, I. sev-mek, to love, becomes IV. sev-dir-mek, to cause to love. II. sev-in-mek, to rejoice, becomes V. sev-in-dir-mek, to cause to rejoice.

  • @ULYS5ES

    @ULYS5ES

    Жыл бұрын

    As a native Turkish and also an English and German language teacher as profession for almost a decade now, I can help anyone those who would like to take online Turkish, English or German private lessons.

  • @lordshitpost31

    @lordshitpost31

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PimsleurTurkishLessons Dude stop spamming already, we wanna read foreigners' thoughts and ideas not see your stupid shit, you're pestering.

  • @lordshitpost31

    @lordshitpost31

    Жыл бұрын

    How come, I really am curious.

  • @ChadKakashi
    @ChadKakashi11 ай бұрын

    4:57 this guy’s clearly a native Turkish speaker and his English is perfect (to me anyway, I’m not a native English speaker). He also has the best Turkish pronunciation when he’s giving examples. He sounds like he’s just regularly talking like he would in everyday life, just a tad slower and clearer for the benefit of the listeners. Good job sir!

  • @SussyGamer88
    @SussyGamer8810 ай бұрын

    it makes me proud and happy seeing people trying to learn my language ❤

  • @myleshenehan8112
    @myleshenehan8112 Жыл бұрын

    I started learning Turkish back during the first lockdown as a way to keep myself busy and ended up spending 9 months in Istanbul after that. When people ask me if it's difficult to learn, I always say it's not difficult, just very different. As a native English speaker it's nice to learn another language without gender, and since the language was standardised not so long ago there are very few exceptions to the grammatical rules. However, once you get to a more advanced stage it becomes more tricky as the sentences get longer and it can be hard to pick the sentence apart to keep up a fuĺl conversation.

  • @ULYS5ES

    @ULYS5ES

    Жыл бұрын

    As a native Turkish and also an English and German language teacher as profession for almost a decade now, I can help anyone those who would like to take online Turkish, English or German private lessons.

  • @Mustafassos_Vaslos

    @Mustafassos_Vaslos

    Жыл бұрын

    Dude, give up its not that easy to learn im a Turkish and i barely know my own language its kinda weird thought but it's real

  • @gulsahciner9808

    @gulsahciner9808

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Mustafassos_Vaslos Mate, don't scare him. If he wants to learn, then let it be.

  • @benitomussolini3121

    @benitomussolini3121

    Жыл бұрын

    🇬🇧He she it fan vs 🇹🇷O O O enjoyer

  • @ozlemklc6202

    @ozlemklc6202

    Жыл бұрын

    I have been learning english for 6 month. ıf you want to pactice with a native turkish speaker like me :d let me know 🥰

  • @m.c.m6279
    @m.c.m6279 Жыл бұрын

    I am Swahili, from Kenya,,,I started learning Turkish and I swear to God it's the most beautiful thing I chose to do...one thing I noticed there are some swahili words we share with Turkish people just that the pronunciation and spellings may differ a little bit. For instance We call a pen Kalamu ,they call it Kelam We call a book Kitabu they call it Kitap We call pineapples Manasi they call them Ananasi We call a notebook daftari, they call it deftar We call tea Chai, they call it Çay We call the world dunia, they call it dünya We call a miracle Miujiza they call it Mucize We call an angel Malaika, they call it Melek The list is endless,,it's the reason I developed a deeper interest in Turkish, It's indeed a beautiful language,,I hope to one day travel to Turkey and meet the natives as well😊💯

  • @jmwild22

    @jmwild22

    Жыл бұрын

    Interesting!

  • @cankervan7219

    @cankervan7219

    11 ай бұрын

    It really is interesting, also we are happy to know that you like our language. Apart from that, I would like to make a few kind corrections. Kelam is another word, the correct correspondence of pen is "kalem" We call pineapple as "ananas" without an i at the end of it. the corresponding word for notebook is "defter". the rest of them are true. Thanks for pointing the similarity

  • @emregoktas2019

    @emregoktas2019

    10 ай бұрын

    Merhaba dostum. Söylediğin kelimelerin neredeyse hepsi Arapça kökenli kelimelerdir. Bu kelimeler sizin de bizim de dilimize geçmiştir :)

  • @esserhendi

    @esserhendi

    6 ай бұрын

    This words origin is arabic bro :)

  • @-CBA-7

    @-CBA-7

    5 ай бұрын

    Its kalem not kelam❤

  • @B.M.Gambaz
    @B.M.Gambaz5 ай бұрын

    Çok güzel ve anlaşılır açıklanmış ❤

  • @Cejii.
    @Cejii.10 ай бұрын

    As a Turkish guy, this video impressed me cuz you explained it very well

  • @Gmz9191
    @Gmz9191 Жыл бұрын

    Birkaç sene yabancılara Türkçe öğrettim. En çok zorlandığı konulardan birisi kaynaştırma harfleriydi. Mantığını kavramakta çok zorlandılar fakat öğretmekten faydalı bir şeyler yapmaktan haz aldığım yıllardı cidden keyifli yabancılarla çalışmak. Dil öğrenmek bir seyin dilbilgisi ve kelime boyutuyla sınırlı kalmıyor aynı zamanda hem öğreten hem öğrenen kişiye farklı bir vizyon kültür bakış açısı katıyor. Ekleme: ben öğrencilerim için Yunus Emre Enstitüsü Türkçe Öğretim Seti Ders Kitabı'nı kullanmıştım fakat üzerinden uzun zaman geçti hâlâ yeterli mi bilemiyorum tavsiye ederim benim kullandığım sene en iyi ders materyallerinden birisiydi Hitit serisi çok ağır gelmişti öğrencilerime.

  • @elvnrae

    @elvnrae

    Жыл бұрын

    kaynastirma harflerine ornek verebilirmisin bilmiyorum da

  • @metmela204

    @metmela204

    Жыл бұрын

    @@elvnrae araba yönelme hal eki alınca “araba+a” ama yabancı sözcükler haricinde iki sesli harf bir araya gelmediğinden dolayı “arabaya” oluyor y kaynaştırma harfi

  • @Sekulerevelynn

    @Sekulerevelynn

    Жыл бұрын

    @@m.g.4043 Hayır kaynaştırma harfleri Y,S,N,Ş harfleridir. I dediğiniz ise yardımcı ünlüdür ve kelimenin okunmasına yardım eder. Bu ses olayına "ünlü türemesi" denir. İnsanlara yanlış bilgi vermeyin lütfen İki-ş-er Kapı-n-ın Su-y-u Küpe-s-i

  • @spiderh

    @spiderh

    Жыл бұрын

    Onların abuk ve bir ton yardımcı fiil ve edatlarından daha zor olamaz. Bir girdin mi başlarsın düşünmeye at, to, for, of, onto, into, which, what vs. vs. Hangisini nerede kullanacağın belli olmaz, çünkü her biri 50 yerde farklı amaçla kullanılır, ortaya gelse başka manası olur başa gelse başka manası olur, şöyle olsa böyle olur, böyle olsa şöyle olur derken adama kafayı yedirtir. Bizde ise misal "-lar" ya da "-dan" ya da "-da" amacı bellidir, kullanılacağı yer bellidir, 70 milyon manaya gelmez, cümledeki konumuna göre anlamı değişmez, konuştuğumuz gibi anlarız, anladığımız gibi yazarız. Pratik bir milletiz vesselam ve dilimiz de pratik haliyle.

  • @m.g.4043

    @m.g.4043

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Sekulerevelynn Amacım insanlara yanlış bilgi vermek değildi. Bildiğimin doğru olduğunu düşünüyordum. Yorumumu sildim. Beni düzelttiğiniz için çok teşekkür ederim.

  • @PimsleurTurkishLessons
    @PimsleurTurkishLessons Жыл бұрын

    Linguists' opinions on Turkish Grammar SOURCE: in recent 2nd video of my channel, Prof. Dr. Johan Vandewalle is telling his opinions on Turkish. also you can find source book there (The Science of Language by Max Müller) page 257 (261 onpdf ) and page 260 (264 onpdf). Linguists' opinions on Turkish Grammar Prof. David Cuthell : “I know many foreign languages. Among these languages, Turkish is such a different language that it is as if a hundred high mathematics professors came together to create Turkish. A dozen words are produced from one root. Turkish is such a language that it is a language of emotion, thought, logic and philosophy in itself.” Max Müller :Even reading a Turkish grammar is a real pleasure, even if he hasn’t had the slightest desire to speak and write Turkish. Those who hear the skillful style in the mods, the compliance with the rules that dominate all the shots, the transparency seen throughout the productions, the marvelous power of the human intelligence that shines in the language will not fail to be amazed. This is such a grammar that we can watch the inner formations of thought in it, just as we can watch the formation of honeycombs in a crystal… The grammatical rules of the Turkish language are so orderly and flawless that a committee of linguists, an academy, approves this language. It is possible to think that it is a language made with consciousness. Prof. Dr. Johan Vandewalle;,now I have learned about 50 languages ​​. After learning languages ​​with very different systems, the language that I still admire the most, the language that I find most logical and mathematical is Turkish.” johan Vandewalle “…I think that a native Turkish speaker thinks in short sentences, and when speaking, he builds complex structures by connecting these short sentences in various ways. This "tendency to connect sentences" can be weak in some speakers, and strong in others, almost to the extent of a disease. The linguistic structures that emerged in this last situation reflect the superior possibilities of the human mind in the best way. Although I have studied many languages ​​belonging to different language groups, I can say that I have never come across a structure that fascinates me as much as complex sentence structures in Turkish. If you let me be a little sentimental, I sometimes say to myself, “I wish Chomsky had learned Turkish when he was younger too…”. I'm sure then modern linguistics would have been shaped according to Turkish, not English” Receiving the Babylonian World Award, Belgium's Ghent University Center for Eastern Languages and Cultures, Dr. Johann Van De Walle explains why he is interested in Turkish today: “Turkish can be learned in a very short time. The rules in chess are logical, simple and few in number. Even a seven-year-old can learn to play chess. Despite this convenience, the person playing chess does not get bored throughout his life. The game possibilities are endless. It is a very magical feature that the same situation exists in the Turkish grammar system. Turkish grammar is a language that has a regular and unexceptional character almost as much as mathematics. Paul Roux: "Turkish is a mathematical language full of thought and intellect." Moliere: "Turkish is language to be admired; you can express a great deal by a few words." French Turcologist Jean Deny : "The Turkish language suggests that it was formed as a result of the consultation and discussion of an elite committee of scholars. Turkish verbs have such a peculiarity that they cannot be found in any of the Arian languages. This feature is the power to form new words with affixes”. Jean Deny Herbert W. Duda:“Turkish, which expresses all thoughts and feelings in the most perfect way, has such a rich vocabulary that everyone admires this language and accepts it as the most perfect scientific language.'”. Herbert Jansky: “Turkish language is an extremely rich and easy-to-understand, easy-to-learn scientific language in terms of vocabulary, phonetics, orthography, syntax and vocabulary.” page 257 (261 in pdf) in book (The Science of Language by Max Müller in 1861) It is a real pleasure to read a Turkish grammar, even though one may have no wish to acquire it practically. The ingenious manner in which the numerous grammatical forms are brought out, the regularity which pervades the system of declension and conjugation, the transparency and intelligibility of the whole structure, must strike all who have a sense of that wonderful power of the human mind which has displayed itself in language. Given so small a number of graphic and demonstrative roots as would hardly suffice to express the commonest wants of human beings, to produce an instrument that shall render the faintest shades of feeling and thought;-given a vague infinitive or a stern imperative, to derive from it such moods as an optative or subjunctive, and tenses as an aorist or paulo-post future;-given incoherent utterances, to arrange them into a system where all is uniform and regular, all combined and harmonious;-such is the work of the human mind which we see realized in “language.” But in most languages nothing of this early process remains visible. They stand before us like solid rocks, and the microscope of the philologist alone can reveal the remains of organic life with which they are built up. In the grammar of the Turkic languages, on the contrary, we have before us a language of perfectly transparent structure, and a grammar the inner workings of which we can study, as if watching the building of cells in a crystal bee-hive. An eminent orientalist remarked “we might imagine Turkish to be the result of the deliberations of some eminent society of learned men;” but no such society could have devised what the mind of man produced, left to itself in the steppes , and guided only by its innate laws, or by an instinctive power as wonderful as any within the realm of nature. page 260 (264 in pdf). there is one feature so peculiar to the Turkish verb, that no analogy can be found in any of the Aryan languages-the power of producing new verbal bases by the mere addition of certain letters, which give to every verb a negative, or causative, or reflexive, or reciprocal meaning Sev-mek, for instance, as a simple root, means to love. By adding in, we obtain a reflexive verb, sev-in-mek, which means to love oneself, or rather, to rejoice, to be happy. This may now be conjugated through all moods and tenses, sevin being in every respect equal to a new root. To each of these three forms a causative sense may be imparted by the addition of the syllable dir. Thus, I. sev-mek, to love, becomes IV. sev-dir-mek, to cause to love. II. sev-in-mek, to rejoice, becomes V. sev-in-dir-mek, to cause to rejoice.

  • @zaboybagoi8636

    @zaboybagoi8636

    Жыл бұрын

    31

  • @biyiklialperen1923

    @biyiklialperen1923

    Жыл бұрын

    @@zaboybagoi8636 "you can express a big deal by a few words."

  • @vante7875

    @vante7875

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks a lot for the comment my friend! I feel very proud of being a Turkish speaker thanks to this video and this comment. I have confidence in my linguistic skills and I think I'm more intelligent, more talented thanks to you. 😅😅😅

  • @anilkarakaya9343

    @anilkarakaya9343

    Жыл бұрын

    Turkish weak spot is vocabulary. Its a great system but due to history, you simply cant do philosophy or be as expressive as using a language with better written history.

  • @vante7875

    @vante7875

    Жыл бұрын

    @@anilkarakaya9343 that's true. We didn't say oo the Turkish are great or the Community is improved unfortunately 😔 We have a great language only but if we could use the way we think effectively we might have done better philosophy or something instead of being ashamed of values we have or the language we speak by saying "Sunny Side Up" (😑😑)

  • @levent8311
    @levent83117 ай бұрын

    Turkish is designed to be understood quickly while fighting on horseback. It is a language full of intelligence.

  • @siradann
    @siradann4 ай бұрын

    Bu video sayesinde Türkçe öğrendim en hızlı öğrendiğim dildi teşekkürler 🙏🏼

  • @muratcoskun4498
    @muratcoskun4498 Жыл бұрын

    Türk insanı grammerine takılmaz, seni her türlü anlar ve ilgiyle dinler kendi içimizde de birçok şive vardır. Gelmek de desen gelmak de desen anlaşılırsın. Ancak ingilizce de grammer hatası yapınca karşındaki seni anlamakta gerçekten güçlük çekiyor.

  • @feaster4545

    @feaster4545

    Жыл бұрын

    çk hkalı bri omluş yorum

  • @w00tz4ibanez

    @w00tz4ibanez

    Жыл бұрын

    Evet. Ingilizce pek mantikli bir dil olmadigndan oyle oluyor. Turkcede bir kelimenin icinde cok “context” (turkcesini bilmiyorum kelimenin) ve mantik var. Ingilizcede kurallar karmasik oldugu icin, uymayinca kelime hic anlasilmiyor

  • @emiripek1247

    @emiripek1247

    Жыл бұрын

    @@w00tz4ibanez context yerine galiba bağlam kelimesini kullanabilirsin

  • @w00tz4ibanez

    @w00tz4ibanez

    Жыл бұрын

    @@emiripek1247 tesekkurler 😊

  • @Ilovekavehsm.

    @Ilovekavehsm.

    Жыл бұрын

    kesinlikle katiliyorum ingilizce karisik ve anlam bozukluklari olasi ama ogrenmesi sahsen kolay bir dil

  • @chesslaux1529
    @chesslaux1529 Жыл бұрын

    Binlerce yıllık tarihiyle, kültürüyle ve zenginlikleriyle Türkçe çok kıymetli bir dildir. Araştıran ve öğrenmek için adım atan herkes görecektir ki bu dil; matematiksel yapısıyla, kurallarıyla ve terim türetme yeteneğiyle mükemmeldir. Bilim, sanat, edebiyat ve teknolojik alanda (bilgisayar dilleri) yapısı itibariyle de en uygun dildir.

  • @chuchu24.

    @chuchu24.

    11 ай бұрын

    Birde ülkenin kendi sorunlarını çözse mükemmel olurdu

  • @Autohunter06

    @Autohunter06

    11 ай бұрын

    @@chuchu24.zamana birak, hersey guzel olacak kanko

  • @TheHus0_

    @TheHus0_

    11 ай бұрын

    @@chuchu24. ne alaka amk her türkiye ile alakalı bişey görünce kendi ülkenizi yermeyin adam türkçeden bahsediyor gelmişsin ekonomiden bahsediyorsun

  • @hayatnrenkleri777
    @hayatnrenkleri7776 ай бұрын

    Çok teşekkürler hocam, güzel bir program...

  • @esedullahyagli
    @esedullahyagli10 ай бұрын

    I personally think that figurative world of the Turkish is so unique and wide. I love Turkish music, literature and poetry. It is so meaningful ❤🤍

  • @theyfukenwmesubliminally
    @theyfukenwmesubliminally Жыл бұрын

    Türkçemiz gerçekten çok özel bir dil, çok estetik de bir dil ayrıca. Türk edebiyatının, şiirin müthiş sanatsalllığının zenginliğinin gerçekten kıymetini bilmek lazım ve soldurmamak lazım, sanatimizi ve sanat tarihimizi kültürde canlı tutmalıyız. Normal konuşma dilimizin bile tonalitesi karmaşık geliyor bazen yabancılara

  • @aloistrancy3515

    @aloistrancy3515

    Жыл бұрын

    Lisede öğretilen edebiyat dersleri beni çok sıkıyordu liseden mezun olduktan sonra kendi başıma kütüphaneden 4 ciltlik Türk edebiyatı tarihini okumaya başladım önce tarihini okuyacam sonrada her dönemin eserlerini inceleyecem. Ben birde sayısal temelliyim ama belli olmaz ikinci bir üniversite bile okumayı düşünüyorum edebiyatla alakalı. Sonuç olarak kendi dilimin ne kadar güzel olduğunu lise zamanlarmda anlayamamş olabilirm ama daha geç değil 20 lerdeyim. Kendi dilini tanımayan milletler bağımsız değildir. Dediğiniz doğru.

  • @sehirkasaba8524

    @sehirkasaba8524

    Жыл бұрын

    Matematiksel bir dil, ayrica.

  • @spiderh

    @spiderh

    Жыл бұрын

    Pratik bir dildir. Hatta benim gördüklerim arasında dünyadaki en pratik dildir. Biz de pratik bir milletiz, ondandır.

  • @esmadura1264

    @esmadura1264

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sehirkasaba8524 hep bunu desteklerim

  • @yusufaydinay9854

    @yusufaydinay9854

    Жыл бұрын

    Ayrıca bir çok duyguyu ve hissiyatı çok güzel olarak tarif edebilen bir dil. Mesela bir İngilizin cümle kurarak anlattığı düşünce ve duyguyu, Türkçe ile tek bir kelimede tarif edebiliyorsunuz. İnanın biz Türklerin çoğu bile Türkçeye o kadar hâkim değiliz. Edebi alanda çok güzel Türkçe konuşan biriyle karşılaşmak, servet niteliğindedir. Öyle bir insanla karşılaştığınız zaman oturup sabaha kadar sohbet edersiniz ama yine de asla sıkılmazsınız. Yeter ki konuşsun diye ağzının içine bakarsınız :)

  • @onur6145
    @onur6145 Жыл бұрын

    Also you can communicate in Caucasus and the Central Asian countries with just speaking Turkish. They will understand almost every words you spend.

  • @baharmohelena
    @baharmohelena9 ай бұрын

    Thank you for the video :)) such good and fluent way to describe Turkish!!!

  • @steeltrader8319
    @steeltrader83199 ай бұрын

    this language is amazing ...

  • @hasanimam3102
    @hasanimam3102 Жыл бұрын

    I learned Turkish within 9 months. We started out with 150 ish people from 41 different countries who knew zero Turkish and now all of us are doing university (bachelor's, masters and PhD) in Turkish except for only one guy who couldn't learn. After three months, interacting with the locals become so easy and natural. After six months, you start getting the feeling that you finally know the language. After that point onwards, it's just about improving your language skills. Learning a language along with people from all over the world in a language institution is the most fun academic thing I've ever done In my life. You don't just take language lessons, you sing songs, watch movies, read poems, write poems(!), They teach you to even write love letters, take you to tours, you attend cultural programs. Things like your going to Bazar with your classmate and doing a successful conversation with the shopkeeper, or playing football with local Turkish kids and interacting with them in their language, first time getting a Turkish joke with Turkish humor are unforgettable memories. I remember learning a new Grammer rule in the class and trying out that with a local guy that day. If it worked, I'd speak that way the whole day XD. Turkish is really an easy language to learn given the right conditions. Specially when you're in Turkey.

  • @cagataytezcan1998

    @cagataytezcan1998

    Жыл бұрын

    Güzel. Aslında söylenenlere bakma dostum. TÜRKÇE yapı itibari ile kolay bil dildir. Ancak Türkçenin bir çeşidi yok. Çok çeşidi var. Bugün Türkçe sözlüğünü açıp okuduğumda, ne kadar fazla sözcüğü kullanmadığımızı görüp ürperiyorum. Haha

  • @ercancul8840

    @ercancul8840

    Жыл бұрын

    Siz çok iyi konuştuğunuzu sanıyor olabilirsiniz ama emin olun siz anlatabildiğiniz için değil biz anlayabildiğimiz için iletişim kurabiliyoruz. Bu bir çok lisan için geçerli sanırım. Bir lisanı sonradan öğrenmek gerçekten zor ve sıkıntılı bir süreç olabiliyor.

  • @saidtekin3812

    @saidtekin3812

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@ercancul8840Burda adamı gömüyormuşsun hissi aldım ama neyse.

  • @huseyinsozkesen7770

    @huseyinsozkesen7770

    Жыл бұрын

    tebrikler

  • @aliaking23

    @aliaking23

    Жыл бұрын

    @@saidtekin3812 9 ayda ne dili öğreniyor ya xd

  • @VILLAGERPIG
    @VILLAGERPIG Жыл бұрын

    Turkey is not arab country.Dont use arabic musics.

  • @Baemonssw

    @Baemonssw

    6 ай бұрын

    Yes

  • @Fnafshiphater

    @Fnafshiphater

    6 ай бұрын

    Yes fr ☠

  • @elfida633

    @elfida633

    3 ай бұрын

    GERCEKTEN SİNİRDEN PATLADİM

  • @Petosmiyyy

    @Petosmiyyy

    3 ай бұрын

    AUUUUU ASK BAYRAKLARI ASSSS 🐺🇹🇷

  • @Petosmiyyy

    @Petosmiyyy

    3 ай бұрын

    @@elfida633BENDE

  • @mustafabardak1030
    @mustafabardak10306 ай бұрын

    emeğinize sağlık hocam teşekkürler.

  • @Fahreddin_Pasa
    @Fahreddin_Pasa6 ай бұрын

    Türkçe’mizi daha iyi öğrenmek için Orhun yazıtlarını araştırmanızı öneririm. Kelimelerimizin nasıl,nereden veya ne şekilde geldiğini öğrenmek benim için harika bir duyguydu 🐺 🇹🇷

  • @sevdebusra

    @sevdebusra

    4 ай бұрын

    kesinlikle

  • @iloveyunho.

    @iloveyunho.

    3 ай бұрын

    bildiğin kaynak var mı?

  • @Fahreddin_Pasa

    @Fahreddin_Pasa

    3 ай бұрын

    @@iloveyunho. türkbitig kanalını tavsiye ederim. Gökbey Uluç da doğrudan öğretiyor 👍 tabi kaynak çok senin ilgi duyup araştırman gerekiyor

  • @bantorio6525
    @bantorio6525 Жыл бұрын

    ... I had the tremendous privilege of visiting Turkey (Istanbul, Ephesus ... ) last month and I just fell in love with it; the language, the food, the landscape, the architecture, the people ... and I decided to study Turkish ... I hope that when I go to Turkey next time I'll be able to say a few things ... ... Greetings from Miami ...

  • @furkanyasayan5446

    @furkanyasayan5446

    Жыл бұрын

    hey if you are looking for someone to practice Turkish, you can send me a message on instagram.

  • @furkanyasayan5446

    @furkanyasayan5446

    Жыл бұрын

    _thefurkii

  • @inanmaz

    @inanmaz

    Жыл бұрын

    Merhaba Banto! As a Turk, I am honored by your words and I really glad that you want to learn Turkish. I hope you have fun in Türkiye.

  • @bantorio6525

    @bantorio6525

    Жыл бұрын

    @@inanmaz 💙💙💙 ... !!!

  • @ilbilgehatun278

    @ilbilgehatun278

    Жыл бұрын

    ☺️❤️

  • @robbiejay
    @robbiejay Жыл бұрын

    I know everyone would say the same thing for their mother language, but as a person who knows 3 languages, I see the beauty in Turkish, which is its flexibility in meanings. I am not a linguist so I dont know the terms. In German every word is precisely refered to a thing. For example there are different verbs for apply to a job or apply for a visa and there are thousands of examples like that, however in Turkish you can use the same verb for lots of things and herein lies the sense of humor based on words. That's why I love Turkish

  • @Nothing.T

    @Nothing.T

    Жыл бұрын

    İnteresting

  • @Mustafa-om9gm

    @Mustafa-om9gm

    Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely I agree. Turkish is a very deep language with little details. For example, when we say on the plate in English, we understand that the plate is flat when we say in the plate that the plate is not flat. There is no such a distinction in Turkish, there is only the concept of "plate" and "stand on"

  • @oguzylmaz_

    @oguzylmaz_

    Жыл бұрын

    true, most Turkish words gain meaning according to the sentence, a word can have a different meaning in each sentence

  • @robbiejay

    @robbiejay

    Жыл бұрын

    I want to give a few examples: yemek "to eat", birsey yemek (to eat something), dayak yemek (to get beat up), para yemek (to have money to burn or spend money freely), yumruk yemek (to get a punch), götü yemek (to dare), kafayı yemek (to go crazy)... This is fun.

  • @ULYS5ES

    @ULYS5ES

    Жыл бұрын

    @@robbiejay As a linguist and lecturer in the SLA field in two languages aside being a native Turkish, I'd like to point out that there is nothing odd or unusual in the examples you just mentioned above. We call'em "phrasal verbs" just to be more specific. And there are plenary similar chunks or phrases within every language. It is definetely not unique to Turkish by any means. The reason of your take on this specific issue might be due to your focusing or studying a language, of which is being the Turkish in your specific case here, a little bit too much than you actually need. Since the phrases people use in their native seem quite normal to them, they usually tend not to examine the root of these phrases or words. But if you examine them with a little focus and effort I'm positive you are going to find countless examples.

  • @hamdamrasulov8861
    @hamdamrasulov8861 Жыл бұрын

    I speak Uzbek natively which is closely related to Turkish. It takes only several months for us to be fluent in Turkish. Even with so much exposure, most people don't even hit the books to learn it.

  • @enesozdemir4085

    @enesozdemir4085

    Жыл бұрын

    Bir söz duymuştum. Özbekistan, Türkiye ve Azerbaycan vatandaşı birisi diğer iki ülkeden birinde bir hafta geçirirse direkt o dili anlamaya ve konuşmaya başlıyormuş.

  • @optimus522

    @optimus522

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@Ne Bakıyon katılmıyorum. İstanbul Türkçesi ile anadolu ağızlarını karıştırmayın. Ben Erzurumluyum ve istanbulludan çok daha fazla anlıyorum diğer Türk lehçelerini. Anadolu ağızlarındaki kelimeler diğer Türk Lehçelerindede birebir var. Dedelerimizin kullandığı sözcükler hep aynı.

  • @optimus522

    @optimus522

    11 ай бұрын

    @Ne Bakıyon Türkiye Türkçesi bilen biri özbekçe yi çok rahat öğrenemez demişsiniz ya. Sözcükler çok farklı yazmışsınız. Aksine İstanbul ağzı dışındaki anadolu ağızlarındaki sözcükler orta Asya'daki sözcüklerle aynı. İstanbul Türkçesinde o kelimeler yok. Eski nesil, kırsalda, anadoluda yaşayanlar orta asyadakilerle aynı sözcükleri kullanıyor. Yani anadolu ağzı bilen birisi İstanbul Türkçesi bilenden daha rahat öğrenir.

  • @optimus522

    @optimus522

    11 ай бұрын

    @Ne Bakıyon anadolu ağzı bir tane değil bir sürü var. Anadolu ağızları. Örneğin Kayseri ağzı, Erzurum ağzı, Adana ağzı, Edirne ağzı, karaman ağzı vs. İstanbul ağzı biraz daha kozmopolit. Daha fazla yabancı kökenli sözcük barındırıyor. Anadolu ağızları çok az yabancı sözcük barındırır. Anadolu ağızlarındaki sözcükler eski Türkçe, öz Türkçedir bu yüzden diğer Türk lehçeleriyle aynı sözcükler var.

  • @buztuz6206

    @buztuz6206

    10 ай бұрын

    Dilimizde tüy bitti . Özbekçe ile Türkçe ayrı iki dil değil. Türkmence ile de öyle. Özleti aynı . Di rus etkisinde biz arap , batı etkisinde kalmışız. Ama aynı ırktan aynı dili konuşan insanlarız. Türkmenler özbekler vs biz siz diye ayırınca bi acaip oluyor

  • @erimozata5120
    @erimozata51207 ай бұрын

    I'll be more than happy to help anyone in his/her Turkish learning journey. Just feel like making new friends. See y'all!

  • @user-je3wz3xq6f
    @user-je3wz3xq6f7 ай бұрын

    Turkish is very comfortable language when you try to explain something, we just dont know much word to use

  • @zikoraifenneli
    @zikoraifenneli Жыл бұрын

    Turkish is delightful.It may sound a bit hard but constant practice and studying and also, guidance from native speakers will point you to the right direction.Besides,if you already speak any Turkic language like Uzbek, Kazakh or Azerbaijani Turkish, the road is already easier.

  • @magnumnoc62
    @magnumnoc62 Жыл бұрын

    Is it hard? Depends on your mother language. If you're a native English speaker, it'll be very different for you and this difference could bring learning difficulties with it. But for example, if your mother language is Japanese, learning Turkish will be easier for you since you can relate the logic of the sentences with your mother language. These similarities are not only limited by logic but expressions too. For example, English has a "huh" expression in it. Turkish has "ha" and "a" expressions like many Asian languages. Turkish is the simplest of the Turkic languages (but native speakers in Turkey could use different sounds like "ŋ" while talking, keep that in mind). A native or native-level Turkish speaker can communicate with other Turkic speakers to some certain degree such as Kazakh, Uzbek, Kyrgyz, Turkmen, Azerbaijani, and Uyghur. Important: If you're willing to learn Turkish, you should know that you will be encountered by 3 hours long Turkish TV dramas with extremely degenerate characters and tragic events.

  • @blossom4479

    @blossom4479

    Жыл бұрын

    Trust me, old turkish series are better.

  • @CLINTEASTWOODD

    @CLINTEASTWOODD

    Жыл бұрын

    @@blossom4479 Sen türk müsün?

  • @blossom4479

    @blossom4479

    Жыл бұрын

    @@CLINTEASTWOODD evet

  • @CLINTEASTWOODD

    @CLINTEASTWOODD

    Жыл бұрын

    @@blossom4479 ok

  • @blossom4479

    @blossom4479

    Жыл бұрын

    @@CLINTEASTWOODD tamam djdkskksks

  • @canosozler
    @canosozler10 ай бұрын

    Çok iyi bir video yapmışsın veya yapmışsınız. Sana teşekkür ederim, size teşekkürlerimi sunuyorum.

  • @zatwost
    @zatwost6 ай бұрын

    Turkish is pretty hard to learn, but impressively, it shortens words A LOT. For example, "I went to the store with my car" turns into "Arabamla mağazaya gittim", going from 8 words to THREE.

  • @PA-ss5cq
    @PA-ss5cq Жыл бұрын

    Easy bit is that once you have learned the alphabet, you can pronounce ANY word. The hard bit is then learning its meaning, since there aren't similarities between Turkish and English words, no clues like you have with French or German. The fun bit is that if you're Scottish, you have a big advantage in pronouncing Turkish, because the hard "r" sound is really important, as is the harsh "ch" sound. Knew there had to be SOME advantage to a Scots accent!

  • @rimenahi

    @rimenahi

    Жыл бұрын

    T sound is also very harsh compared to English. My American friends would call my "t"s explosive when conversing in English.

  • @yorgunsamuray

    @yorgunsamuray

    Жыл бұрын

    Turkish has many loanwords from French. In fact, it's the biggest loanword source among European languages (the biggest benefactor among Indo-European languages is Persian though). The hard thing about our French loanwords is the spelling. "Autobus" becoming "otobüs" etc. And sometimes we add a vowel before the start where there are two consonants. "Station" becomes "istasyon". In the old times "stadium" was called "istadyum", but it's "stadyum" nowadays.

  • @PA-ss5cq

    @PA-ss5cq

    Жыл бұрын

    @@yorgunsamuray True. I puzzled over "ekler" on a pack on a supermarket cake shelf, till I realised it was as near as Turkish can get to "eclair". I can also vouch for your added vowel, being an Iskocyali from Iskocya (Scotland)

  • @yorgunsamuray

    @yorgunsamuray

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PA-ss5cq Yeah, definitely. But I think we took Scotland's name from Italian. The French word for Scotland is Ecosse. Which Turkish also took, but we use it to describe plaid. Yes, in Turkish plaid is ekose, from the word Scotland in French.

  • @PA-ss5cq

    @PA-ss5cq

    Жыл бұрын

    @@yorgunsamuray That IS interesting, I had never come across the word for plaid. Thanks!

  • @aysecelik1659
    @aysecelik1659 Жыл бұрын

    Turkish, Korean, Mongolian and Manchu-Tunguz (and Japanese could be included but not clear yet) originate from a specific language called Main Altaic. And studies showed us that there are hundreds of words and suffixes in common especially between Korean and Turkish. If you ever learn one of these language, just try the other one it won't be that hard but your language range may will a bit narrow hahaha

  • @8kmkid568

    @8kmkid568

    Жыл бұрын

    Finnish, Estonian, and Hungarian can be included in this group to a lesser extent as well.

  • @Raidon8537

    @Raidon8537

    Жыл бұрын

    @@8kmkid568 these languages are Uralic. They are not included.

  • @8kmkid568

    @8kmkid568

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Raidon8537 Altaic languages and Uralic languages are very connected.

  • @orkunyucel3095

    @orkunyucel3095

    Жыл бұрын

    The Turkish language has evolved to speak practically according to the fast living conditions of nomadic shepherd warriors in ancient times. They were tried to be spoken with as few words as possible. 1. The most used words have been removed from the language. For example The words "the" and "a/an", which are perhaps the most used in English, are not used in Turkish. 2. The words in English are in the form of suffixes in Turkish. So a single word can actually be a long sentence. 3. Suffixes and words can have more than one meaning even though they are spelled the same. Despite everything, Turkish is easily learned by living with Turks. In addition, since a sentence can have more than one meaning, it is a deep language in the literary sense. Moreover, the Turkish Alphabet is a kind of Latin alphabet. It is pronounced almost as it is written. It is easy to learn.

  • @eraysezgin1332

    @eraysezgin1332

    11 ай бұрын

    This is wrong. Turkic languages and the other language families you listed are not related. It's a common misconception in turkey, it's not scientific.

  • @sserkank
    @sserkank9 ай бұрын

    bu videoyu hazırladığın için teşekkürler. (sizi tanımıyorum ama şimdi tanımaya çalışıcam ^^ )

  • @Tyrann03
    @Tyrann034 ай бұрын

    I am from Turkey and while I watching that, I thought the language is not easy at all. If you learn the language, that means you really did something. I really appreciate your success.

  • @EM-tc6tp
    @EM-tc6tp Жыл бұрын

    In your list ou forgot to mention the biggest brotherhood country to Turkey, Bosnia. Bosnia with its culture and language (over 8000 Turkish words) it’s a close to Turkey as it gets.

  • @kayahankocaman6321

    @kayahankocaman6321

    8 ай бұрын

    Bosnian People is our real brothers and sisters

  • @imspartacusss
    @imspartacusss11 ай бұрын

    There's no sexual discrimination in Turkish. We always say "o" . Everybody is equal as should be. 😊

  • @pureprodukte1
    @pureprodukte17 ай бұрын

    In turkish there are some extra words for example for the word 'heart' we use yürek , kalp and gönül. Kalp is mostly for physical usage. Gönül has so much deeper meaning related with emotions

  • @Nisonadhdfjud
    @Nisonadhdfjud6 ай бұрын

    No,it is not hard as a Turkish. In our country we learn English and it is not hard. Greetings from Turkey 🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷❤️

  • @ilghiz
    @ilghiz Жыл бұрын

    Turkish is very mathematical. It has little to no exceptions.

  • @BalaPodcast.07

    @BalaPodcast.07

    Жыл бұрын

    It is normal that Turkish is one of the oldest languages ​​in the world, but this is not the actual Turkish that is taught now. This is Turkish; 𐱅𐰇𐰼𐰰 𐰓𐱅𐰀𐱁𐰰 𐰰𐱁𐰅 𐰸𐰅 Turkish has changed a lot compared to today

  • @ilghiz

    @ilghiz

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BalaPodcast.07 , how do you measure the age of a language to claim that one language is older than another? How do you define a language? Which language is older: Turkish or Azerbaijani, or Kazakh? Russian, Polish or Bulgarian? Turkmen or English, or Arabic? Bir dilin başka dilden yaşlı olması nasıl anlaşılır? Dil nedir? Hangisi daha eski: Türkçe mi, Azerice mi, Kazakça mı? Rusça, Lehçe, Bulgarca mı? Türkçe, İngilizce, Arapça mı?

  • @BalaPodcast.07

    @BalaPodcast.07

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ilghiz First of all, Turkish languages ​​such as Turkish, Azerbaijani Kazakh come from the same ancestor, Göktürk (𐰍𐰇𐰚𐱃𐰰𐰚) Languages ​​like Russian are older than Turkish to understand this, you have to look at when the first ancestors of Nations were born. It is thought that the first ancestor of the Turks was Yafes, son of Prophet Noah. When the Turks accept Islam, the Turkish Divan period begins (the most difficult Turkish is in this period)1923 With the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, Turkish is adapted to the western language and becomes the easiest.

  • @wergerrt.8944

    @wergerrt.8944

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BalaPodcast.07 omg! 😂 is yafes (japheth) the ancestor of turks! maybe the god also is a turk. 😂 en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japheth

  • @ulkuasasoglu2896

    @ulkuasasoglu2896

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BalaPodcast.07 sil.

  • @polyglotsjourney
    @polyglotsjourney Жыл бұрын

    Great video Olly! I am trying to acquire Turkish and just as you said it is one of the most amazing languages in the world. 😊

  • @dollydollah
    @dollydollah11 ай бұрын

    I LIKE THIS CONTENT! I'm currently studying linguistics in english and turkish as well😭

  • @yavuzozturk9655
    @yavuzozturk96557 ай бұрын

    Turkce cok guzel bir dil ❤❤

  • @zsoltkosa1610
    @zsoltkosa1610 Жыл бұрын

    99,99% of this video also applies to Hungarian, so basically you could copy/paste the whole video to make the Hungarian version, you'll almost only have to change the examples.

  • @robbiejay

    @robbiejay

    Жыл бұрын

    I loved Hungarian as a Turk. It felt amazing to learn without having a difficulty building a sentence. Jebenbe alma van like cebimde elma var. Just amazing. I wish I could learn more.

  • @blackwizard34

    @blackwizard34

    Жыл бұрын

    because we have the same heritage and origin. our languages are similar and our backgrounds that's why we meet in Turkic Council ;)

  • @Zurenarrh

    @Zurenarrh

    Жыл бұрын

    No just no. Hungarians are Uralic, turks are altaic. QUITE CLOSE I KNOW. but guess what there are different ethnic groups in siberia. Hungarian is close to Mansi language than Turkic languages. Turks are more eastern, we are from siberia and you are from urals

  • @MrEmretti

    @MrEmretti

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Zurenarrh I wish I could have met your geo. teacher...

  • @Zurenarrh

    @Zurenarrh

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MrEmretti aga öyle bişeyler işte macarca türkçe ile sandığınız kadar yakın değil. Farklı

  • @Realmariah510
    @Realmariah510 Жыл бұрын

    I’m learning Turkish, and it’s surprising easy for me. Learning Spanish and Hindi really helped

  • @emregoktas2019

    @emregoktas2019

    10 ай бұрын

    İspanyolca ve Hintçe bizim dilimize hiç benzemiyor😂

  • @-R3NG0KU-_-KUN-
    @-R3NG0KU-_-KUN-10 ай бұрын

    Guys tysm for your lovely comments to us🇹🇷🇹🇷🇹🇷I hope y'all have a great day😊

  • @evranirnek
    @evranirnek8 ай бұрын

    the fact that i had learned turkish while i was a toddler makes it really really easy

  • @karacaddy
    @karacaddy11 ай бұрын

    Turkish language is like a computer language, like the order of 1s and 0s; Here, the most important structure is the word syllables. A vowel is always accompanied by one or two consonants. If you understand this logic, you have started to learn Turkish :)

  • @archienoyce2453
    @archienoyce2453 Жыл бұрын

    ive just started turkish so this is a very lucky coincidence! you explained this so clearly thank you so much for making this!

  • @joaninha3484

    @joaninha3484

    Жыл бұрын

    Have you also seen Elysse Speaks? She learns it too. Which resources are you using? There are tonnes of dizis on Netflix

  • @archienoyce2453

    @archienoyce2453

    Жыл бұрын

    @@joaninha3484 i havent seen them no but ill definitely look into them thank you for sharing this! like i said ive only just started so im still looking into whether its the right language for me if that makes sense?

  • @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    Жыл бұрын

    @@joaninha3484 you can learn Turkish from my first videolist in a month at basic level. you will be able to speak everything that was taught in the lesson after each 30 minutes lesson. listen 1 lesson per day.

  • @mikhaiiil

    @mikhaiiil

    Жыл бұрын

    İyi Şanslar! After that maybe you could try Azerbaijani Turkish 🇦🇿

  • @archienoyce2453

    @archienoyce2453

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mikhaiiil thank you lol, i am going to need the luck! but yeah i may look into that i appreciate the suggestion 💛

  • @ertemesiner
    @ertemesiner8 ай бұрын

    Great video. Just one note: the soft 'g' in Turkish isn't silent. Though it can be treated as such by non-native speakers for ease of pronunciation, it actually has a very distinct sound.

  • @war_fish
    @war_fish10 ай бұрын

    as a Turkish person, it made me really happy to see people trying to leanr my language lol

  • @egekucukala5188
    @egekucukala5188 Жыл бұрын

    As a Turk I want to inform you about something. Background music at the 1:18 doesn’t belong to Turkish culture. I don’t know where it belongs but I’m sure that it isn’t belong to us, it’s more like Arabic and we’re not Arab.

  • @iwanjones7334
    @iwanjones7334 Жыл бұрын

    Nice concise summary of what's important to know in Turkish. Thank you, Olly.

  • @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    @PimsleurTurkishLessons

    Жыл бұрын

    Linguists' opinions on Turkish Grammar Prof. David Cuthell : “I know many foreign languages. Among these languages, Turkish is such a different language that it is as if a hundred high mathematics professors came together to create Turkish. A dozen words are produced from one root. Turkish is such a language that it is a language of emotion, thought, logic and philosophy in itself.” Max Müller :Even reading a Turkish grammar is a real pleasure, even if he hasn’t had the slightest desire to speak and write Turkish. Those who hear the skillful style in the mods, the compliance with the rules that dominate all the shots, the transparency seen throughout the productions, the marvelous power of the human intelligence that shines in the language will not fail to be amazed. This is such a grammar that we can watch the inner formations of thought in it, just as we can watch the formation of honeycombs in a crystal… The grammatical rules of the Turkish language are so orderly and flawless that a committee of linguists, an academy, approves this language. It is possible to think that it is a language made with consciousness. Prof. Dr. Johan Vandewalle;,now I have learned about 50 languages ​​. After learning languages ​​with very different systems, the language that I still admire the most, the language that I find most logical and mathematical is Turkish.” johan Vandewalle “…I think that a native Turkish speaker thinks in short sentences, and when speaking, he builds complex structures by connecting these short sentences in various ways. This "tendency to connect sentences" can be weak in some speakers, and strong in others, almost to the extent of a disease. The linguistic structures that emerged in this last situation reflect the superior possibilities of the human mind in the best way. Although I have studied many languages ​​belonging to different language groups, I can say that I have never come across a structure that fascinates me as much as complex sentence structures in Turkish. If you let me be a little sentimental, I sometimes say to myself, “I wish Chomsky had learned Turkish when he was younger too…”. I'm sure then modern linguistics would have been shaped according to Turkish, not English” Receiving the Babylonian World Award, Belgium's Ghent University Center for Eastern Languages and Cultures, Dr. Johann Van De Walle explains why he is interested in Turkish today: “Turkish can be learned in a very short time. The rules in chess are logical, simple and few in number. Even a seven-year-old can learn to play chess. Despite this convenience, the person playing chess does not get bored throughout his life. The game possibilities are endless. It is a very magical feature that the same situation exists in the Turkish grammar system. Turkish grammar is a language that has a regular and unexceptional character almost as much as mathematics. Paul Roux: "Turkish is a mathematical language full of thought and intellect." Moliere: "Turkish is language to be admired; you can express a great deal by a few words." French Turcologist Jean Deny : "The Turkish language suggests that it was formed as a result of the consultation and discussion of an elite committee of scholars. Turkish verbs have such a peculiarity that they cannot be found in any of the Arian languages. This feature is the power to form new words with affixes”. Jean Deny Herbert W. Duda:“Turkish, which expresses all thoughts and feelings in the most perfect way, has such a rich vocabulary that everyone admires this language and accepts it as the most perfect scientific language.'”. Herbert Jansky: “Turkish language is an extremely rich and easy-to-understand, easy-to-learn scientific language in terms of vocabulary, phonetics, orthography, syntax and vocabulary.” page 257 (261 in pdf) in book (The Science of Language by Max Müller in 1861) It is a real pleasure to read a Turkish grammar, even though one may have no wish to acquire it practically. The ingenious manner in which the numerous grammatical forms are brought out, the regularity which pervades the system of declension and conjugation, the transparency and intelligibility of the whole structure, must strike all who have a sense of that wonderful power of the human mind which has displayed itself in language. Given so small a number of graphic and demonstrative roots as would hardly suffice to express the commonest wants of human beings, to produce an instrument that shall render the faintest shades of feeling and thought;-given a vague infinitive or a stern imperative, to derive from it such moods as an optative or subjunctive, and tenses as an aorist or paulo-post future;-given incoherent utterances, to arrange them into a system where all is uniform and regular, all combined and harmonious;-such is the work of the human mind which we see realized in “language.” But in most languages nothing of this early process remains visible. They stand before us like solid rocks, and the microscope of the philologist alone can reveal the remains of organic life with which they are built up. In the grammar of the Turkic languages, on the contrary, we have before us a language of perfectly transparent structure, and a grammar the inner workings of which we can study, as if watching the building of cells in a crystal bee-hive. An eminent orientalist remarked “we might imagine Turkish to be the result of the deliberations of some eminent society of learned men;” but no such society could have devised what the mind of man produced, left to itself in the steppes , and guided only by its innate laws, or by an instinctive power as wonderful as any within the realm of nature. page 260 (264 in pdf). there is one feature so peculiar to the Turkish verb, that no analogy can be found in any of the Aryan languages-the power of producing new verbal bases by the mere addition of certain letters, which give to every verb a negative, or causative, or reflexive, or reciprocal meaning Sev-mek, for instance, as a simple root, means to love. By adding in, we obtain a reflexive verb, sev-in-mek, which means to love oneself, or rather, to rejoice, to be happy. This may now be conjugated through all moods and tenses, sevin being in every respect equal to a new root. To each of these three forms a causative sense may be imparted by the addition of the syllable dir. Thus, I. sev-mek, to love, becomes IV. sev-dir-mek, to cause to love. II. sev-in-mek, to rejoice, becomes V. sev-in-dir-mek, to cause to rejoice.

  • @ilhanerdem6810
    @ilhanerdem68107 ай бұрын

    OMG I am turkish and sooo happy you did this vid let me speak turkish merhaba ben Nil ve sana aboneyim seni çok seviyorum bu videoyu yaptığın için teşekürler

  • @reinbew794
    @reinbew7949 ай бұрын

    I feel proud of my country when I see people try and learn Turkish. (Feeling proud of our country is really rare)