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imdat...!!!!!!
(22 Messages in 3 pages - View all)
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10.       caliptrix
3055 posts
 18 May 2006 Thu 12:56 am

then, he was a spider... o bir örümcekti...

11.       carol.trky
165 posts
 18 May 2006 Thu 01:04 am

12.       caliptrix
3055 posts
 18 May 2006 Thu 01:09 am

Quoting carol.trky:

thanks YaaaaSHinnnn I will succeed in turkish because of u



and i will change my name because of you...

13.       carol.trky
165 posts
 18 May 2006 Thu 01:13 am

14.       caliptrix
3055 posts
 18 May 2006 Thu 01:15 am

burdaydık or buradaydık...

buradaydınız
buradaydılar

ben buradaydım
sen buradaydın
o buradaydı

peki şimdi nerdesin? and now, where are you?

15.       carol.trky
165 posts
 18 May 2006 Thu 01:19 am

16.       oceanmavi
997 posts
 18 May 2006 Thu 01:57 am

Quoting caliptrix:






-ydım.. is just for after nouns:



i never knew that! i always wondered why the -y- was sometimes there and sometimes not

17.       caliptrix
3055 posts
 18 May 2006 Thu 06:53 am

Quoting oceanmavi:

Quoting caliptrix:


-ydım.. is just for after nouns:



i never knew that! i always wondered why the -y- was sometimes there and sometimes not


i mean just with "to be" plus "noun", and the last letter is a vowel: a,e,ı,i,o,ö,u,ü

bela: o tam bir bela + idi = belaydı
hamile: o zamanlar Ahmet'e hamile idi =hamileydi
yankı: duyduğumuz sadece bir yankı idi = yankıydı
keçi: çiftliğimizde gördüğümüz keçi idi=keçiydi
şato: yol üstündeki şato idi=şatoydu
and goes...


you can see something like in old turkish songs and also that named türkü's, let's have a look to my türkü lyric:

vaktıyla bir yâr sevdim
saçları sarı idi



in fact, last words refers to: "sarıydı": was yellow

18.       lacivert
3 posts
 18 May 2006 Thu 07:15 pm

So with consonants?

It was a horse: O bir at idi?

19.       sophie
2712 posts
 18 May 2006 Thu 07:26 pm

Quoting lacivert:

So with consonants?

It was a horse: O bir at idi?



Could it be o bir attı?

20.       erdinc
2151 posts
 18 May 2006 Thu 08:31 pm

It's easy.

past tense suffixes are as follows:

-dı
-di
-du
-dü

-tı
-ti
-tu
-tü

1. After a vowel always use the "-d" version.
2. After an unvoiced consonant use the "-d" version.
3. Only after a voiced consonant use the "-t" version.
Voiced consonants are : p,ç,t,k,h,s,ş,f (hint "Fıstıkçı Şahap")

Ok, let's summarize 1,2 and 3:

If the last letter before the past tense suffix is "abcdegğıijlmnoöruüvyz" use "-d" version and if it is "pçtkhsşf" use "-t" version.

Remember it is only the last letter that counts for consonant harmony.
gitmek : to go
"git + ti + m" : I went
"git + me + di + m" : I didn't go

On affirmative last letter was voiced consonant, on negative last lette changed.

Now you know when to use t or d versions. But there are four of each. Which one do we use, say for d version?

-dı -di -du -dü

This time after consonant harmony it is "vowel harmony" that takes the stage.

In general :
a is followed by a or ı
e is followed by e or i
ı is followed by a or ı
i is followed by e or i
o is followed by a or u
ö is followed by e or ü
u is followed by a or u
ü is followed by e or ü

If we apply these to past tense:

if the last vowel is a use -dı
if the last vowel is ı use -dı

if the last vowel is e use -di
if the last vowel is i use -di

if the last vowel is o use -du
if the last vowel is u use -du

if the last vowel is ö use -dü
if the last vowel is ü use -dü

Example:
"gitmek"
verb stem is "git"
now you check two things:

1. is the last letter a voiced consonant?
2. what is the last vowel?

Yes, the last letter a voiced consonant and therefore I should use the t version.

The last vowel i and I should use "ti"

So we get "gitti".

example:
okumak > oku

1. is the last letter a voiced consonant? no
2. what is the last vowel? u
>>okudu

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