THANK YOUUU. It seems like for nearly every language I learn, whether it’s French, Spanish, German, or Dutch, the problem consonant for me is ALWAYS THE R. But unlike those languages, Turkish speakers are unhelpful with or unaware of how non-native speakers should say the r correctly.
@johnsmoke1785Ай бұрын
Thank you for this (imho) near perfect explanation. I just have one critique and that is that in the case of "Ğ followed by a vowel", its not completely silent. Just very short and almost unhearable. At least for me there is a clear distinction between Er-do-an and Er-do-Ğan the far back of the tongue is still shaping the Ğ sound at the start of the last syllable in my humble opinion. Its hard to notice but its still there and distinguishable imho. PS: I'm a native speaker living abroad.
@PhilantropeАй бұрын
I did not understand how to pronounce kar or bir
@ceydakovan73592 ай бұрын
I‘m really trying but I just can‘t do it…
@LL-zp7ut2 ай бұрын
This is wonderful. Harikasiniz!
@LL-zp7ut2 ай бұрын
I needed this phonology based explanation! Teşekkür ederim.
@antananarywa3 ай бұрын
Very interesting! I was trying to find info whether it is similar to Czech ř.
@Tcgmaster8084 ай бұрын
very valuable video thank you sir ! short, and well explained
@PopDasKorn7 ай бұрын
I was wondering if I heard correctly that the r in Turkish is like or similar to the r in Chinese
@strallent10 ай бұрын
Hi! So how do pronounce my friend’s name “TUĞBA?” She put that Ğ character on the spelling. - Thanks! (Btw, thank you for the video!)
@bensully9411 ай бұрын
Also when you pronounce Ben it sounds like ban
@ahmedahmedli8182 ай бұрын
Because there are 2 types of e in Turkish in daily speech.I am an Azerbaijani, and my language is very very similar to Turkish, but we use different letters for these types of e: e and ə Ə is the sound in the word cat.
@MrGianeta11 ай бұрын
Thank you. Genuinely interesting content.
@MrGianeta11 ай бұрын
OMG, this is exactly what I was looking for. I relaxed immediately when he mentioned "alveolar tap"-like terminology and then fricative and the like. Finally, something clear and technically . I would appreciate if there were schemes with the position of tongue etc. Can anybody point me to a video with a good description of Turkish phology for consonants and vowels, preferable with schematic pictures. I would like to get the answers to things like are turkish t and d dental, is there aspiration (non at all? very soft at the begining of the words for instance). what about n? dental? which sounds are palatalized (or more palatalized then say in English) and which are not. the vowels - how do that compare. For instance, when turkish speakers say "ceket" - the e I hear is very narrow and clearly pronounce in the front of the mouth, while a typical e in "ben" is very deep and sounds closer to " a" to my ears, etc. Is there smth I can watch?
@cleopatraonlyfans7 ай бұрын
Fuck yeahhhhhh this is also exactly what i was looking for Subscribed
@katkimtv Жыл бұрын
Wow this is great! Pleaaaase make more videos!
@katkimtv Жыл бұрын
Hello, these videos are really great. I hope you produce more content. More examples would also help. Thank you.
@DaveHuxtableLanguages Жыл бұрын
Brilliant explanation! What happens before another consonant? In the work Türkiye, for example.
@bozlakmapping7987 Жыл бұрын
İts not like ş but more like whistle or wind sound
@nochu9753 Жыл бұрын
What about the sound in words like erkek for example? It sounds or it seems to sound a little different from all these 3
@alexandrashvydun8726 Жыл бұрын
this is a great video, i can tell you know a lot about linguistics
@alexandrashvydun8726 Жыл бұрын
i didnt even know alveolar tapped fricatives exist!
@antananarywa3 ай бұрын
It is a similar case to polish <r>.
@PimsleurTurkishLessons Жыл бұрын
Video bitince bitir neden başa sarıp tekrar anlatıyor?
@caribmale Жыл бұрын
This was very helpful. It was a challenge at first, but I wanted to sound authentic so I found that by letting out a bit of air after a voiceless R. It worked. I’m very happy now, but I’d almost been driven crazy deciphering why Gülru sounded so different between my pronunciation and that of a native speaker. 😂
@dregga7638 Жыл бұрын
That's the best explaination i've seen so far. I noticed a potential forth 'R' wich is when it's followed bey an consonant as in 'Merhaba' or 'Türkçe'. Or would you say it's the same as the second one you mentioned?
@yedeque7858 Жыл бұрын
2:13 burda yanlış diacritic kullandın sanırım raised oluyor öyle
@turkishwithanil Жыл бұрын
Raised zaten.
@yedeque7858 Жыл бұрын
@@turkishwithanil tap raised olamaz ki, senin anlattığın da zaten raised değil
@turkishwithanil Жыл бұрын
@@yedeque7858 Literatürde bu alofonlar hep [ɾ̝] / [ɾ̝̊] olarak gösterilmiş, onu takip ettim. Keza Çekçedeki (Türkçedekinin trill versiyonu olan) Ř sesi için de /r̝/ kullanılıyor.
@yedeque7858 Жыл бұрын
@@turkishwithanil nerde? [ɾ̞] [ɾ̞̊] olarak gösterilir zaten raised senin dediğinin tam zıttı
@turkishwithanil Жыл бұрын
@@yedeque7858 Gördüğüm kadarıyla [ɾ̝] / [ɾ̝̊] ve [ɾ̞] / [ɾ̞̊] çiftlerinin ikisi de kullanılmış. (www.google.com/search?q=%22%C9%BE%CC%9D%22+OR+%22%C9%BE%CC%9D%CC%8A%22+OR+%22%C9%BE%CC%9E%22+OR+%22%C9%BE%CC%9E%CC%8A%22+turkish) Biri yanlış olsa gerek. Tap'in fricated olması için raised olması daha mantıklı geliyor bana, Çekçedeki kullanım da böyle çünkü. Ama phonetician değilim, bir dipnot düşeyim.
@ryanodonnell2726 Жыл бұрын
I learned a lot from this, thanks! Other things I'd love to hear about: unexpected vowel harmonies (e.g., saat/saati), why my pocket is cebim but my trash is çöpüm, words that aren't not pronounced as spelled (sohbet, dakika), regional Turkish accents...
@Cosmic_Love Жыл бұрын
Your videos should be more mainstream
@shelookstome8727 Жыл бұрын
Teşekkürler!!
@catboy7216 ай бұрын
This word is the perfect example of the topic. Almost every source on the internet says that thank you should be “teh-shed-kür-LAHSH” (laş). Is it?
@ashsgirl2 ай бұрын
@@catboy721Yes!
@abluecassette Жыл бұрын
Great video, well explained! I used to always wonder why I heard a 'whistle' in words ending with r, especially evident in songs sung by Göksel.
@zenkidscreation Жыл бұрын
Ğ
@zenkidscreation Жыл бұрын
Ğinğer, I wrote
@recepyaman32812 жыл бұрын
👍
@ColonelKai2 жыл бұрын
Surprisingly well made for a video with this few viewers.
@recepyaman32812 жыл бұрын
👍👍
@brstfr71262 жыл бұрын
Great explanation. I subscribed and am looking forward to watching more.
Пікірлер
This guy sounds like his name would be Pilbert
THANK YOUUU. It seems like for nearly every language I learn, whether it’s French, Spanish, German, or Dutch, the problem consonant for me is ALWAYS THE R. But unlike those languages, Turkish speakers are unhelpful with or unaware of how non-native speakers should say the r correctly.
Thank you for this (imho) near perfect explanation. I just have one critique and that is that in the case of "Ğ followed by a vowel", its not completely silent. Just very short and almost unhearable. At least for me there is a clear distinction between Er-do-an and Er-do-Ğan the far back of the tongue is still shaping the Ğ sound at the start of the last syllable in my humble opinion. Its hard to notice but its still there and distinguishable imho. PS: I'm a native speaker living abroad.
I did not understand how to pronounce kar or bir
I‘m really trying but I just can‘t do it…
This is wonderful. Harikasiniz!
I needed this phonology based explanation! Teşekkür ederim.
Very interesting! I was trying to find info whether it is similar to Czech ř.
very valuable video thank you sir ! short, and well explained
I was wondering if I heard correctly that the r in Turkish is like or similar to the r in Chinese
Hi! So how do pronounce my friend’s name “TUĞBA?” She put that Ğ character on the spelling. - Thanks! (Btw, thank you for the video!)
Also when you pronounce Ben it sounds like ban
Because there are 2 types of e in Turkish in daily speech.I am an Azerbaijani, and my language is very very similar to Turkish, but we use different letters for these types of e: e and ə Ə is the sound in the word cat.
Thank you. Genuinely interesting content.
OMG, this is exactly what I was looking for. I relaxed immediately when he mentioned "alveolar tap"-like terminology and then fricative and the like. Finally, something clear and technically . I would appreciate if there were schemes with the position of tongue etc. Can anybody point me to a video with a good description of Turkish phology for consonants and vowels, preferable with schematic pictures. I would like to get the answers to things like are turkish t and d dental, is there aspiration (non at all? very soft at the begining of the words for instance). what about n? dental? which sounds are palatalized (or more palatalized then say in English) and which are not. the vowels - how do that compare. For instance, when turkish speakers say "ceket" - the e I hear is very narrow and clearly pronounce in the front of the mouth, while a typical e in "ben" is very deep and sounds closer to " a" to my ears, etc. Is there smth I can watch?
Fuck yeahhhhhh this is also exactly what i was looking for Subscribed
Wow this is great! Pleaaaase make more videos!
Hello, these videos are really great. I hope you produce more content. More examples would also help. Thank you.
Brilliant explanation! What happens before another consonant? In the work Türkiye, for example.
İts not like ş but more like whistle or wind sound
What about the sound in words like erkek for example? It sounds or it seems to sound a little different from all these 3
this is a great video, i can tell you know a lot about linguistics
i didnt even know alveolar tapped fricatives exist!
It is a similar case to polish <r>.
Video bitince bitir neden başa sarıp tekrar anlatıyor?
This was very helpful. It was a challenge at first, but I wanted to sound authentic so I found that by letting out a bit of air after a voiceless R. It worked. I’m very happy now, but I’d almost been driven crazy deciphering why Gülru sounded so different between my pronunciation and that of a native speaker. 😂
That's the best explaination i've seen so far. I noticed a potential forth 'R' wich is when it's followed bey an consonant as in 'Merhaba' or 'Türkçe'. Or would you say it's the same as the second one you mentioned?
2:13 burda yanlış diacritic kullandın sanırım raised oluyor öyle
Raised zaten.
@@turkishwithanil tap raised olamaz ki, senin anlattığın da zaten raised değil
@@yedeque7858 Literatürde bu alofonlar hep [ɾ̝] / [ɾ̝̊] olarak gösterilmiş, onu takip ettim. Keza Çekçedeki (Türkçedekinin trill versiyonu olan) Ř sesi için de /r̝/ kullanılıyor.
@@turkishwithanil nerde? [ɾ̞] [ɾ̞̊] olarak gösterilir zaten raised senin dediğinin tam zıttı
@@yedeque7858 Gördüğüm kadarıyla [ɾ̝] / [ɾ̝̊] ve [ɾ̞] / [ɾ̞̊] çiftlerinin ikisi de kullanılmış. (www.google.com/search?q=%22%C9%BE%CC%9D%22+OR+%22%C9%BE%CC%9D%CC%8A%22+OR+%22%C9%BE%CC%9E%22+OR+%22%C9%BE%CC%9E%CC%8A%22+turkish) Biri yanlış olsa gerek. Tap'in fricated olması için raised olması daha mantıklı geliyor bana, Çekçedeki kullanım da böyle çünkü. Ama phonetician değilim, bir dipnot düşeyim.
I learned a lot from this, thanks! Other things I'd love to hear about: unexpected vowel harmonies (e.g., saat/saati), why my pocket is cebim but my trash is çöpüm, words that aren't not pronounced as spelled (sohbet, dakika), regional Turkish accents...
Your videos should be more mainstream
Teşekkürler!!
This word is the perfect example of the topic. Almost every source on the internet says that thank you should be “teh-shed-kür-LAHSH” (laş). Is it?
@@catboy721Yes!
Great video, well explained! I used to always wonder why I heard a 'whistle' in words ending with r, especially evident in songs sung by Göksel.
Ğ
Ğinğer, I wrote
👍
Surprisingly well made for a video with this few viewers.
👍👍
Great explanation. I subscribed and am looking forward to watching more.
Perfectly explained, teşekkürler!