Welcome
Login:   Pass:     Register - Forgot Password - Resend Activation

Turkish Class Forums / Turkey

Turkey

Add reply to this discussion
Moderators: libralady, sonunda
Ramadan Question
(39 Messages in 4 pages - View all)
1 2 3 4
1.       Lm18
43 posts
 26 Jul 2012 Thu 12:41 am

i have a male friend in turkey who is on ramadan. he is quite a strict muslim and always follows the religion. he was drinking tea during daytime a few days ago, in ramadan, which i thought muslims were not allowed to do whilst fasting. i did ask him but he said there was quite a long explanation but didnt tell me so i really want to know why this is! he works at a hotel and is on night shift (i dont think this has anything to do with it though!) any suggestions would be great i would love to know, thanks

2.       Abla
3648 posts
 26 Jul 2012 Thu 12:51 am

The ruling is quite simple and I don´t understand what there is to explain. Either he was sick, he was on a journey (in which cases he will have to fast the missing days later) or he had just given up. Even if he had done it inadvertendly which sometimes happens to fasters he could have just continued the day as if nothing happened.

nano hmi, barba_mama and hedef liked this message
3.       Lm18
43 posts
 26 Jul 2012 Thu 08:21 pm

he wasnt sick, on a journey or given up- thats why i couldnt understand it. i was just curious that was all. thabks for your reply anway

4.       stumpy
638 posts
 27 Jul 2012 Fri 12:11 am

It is like for the cathiolics, they should be fasting for the 40 days of Lent which was rigorouresly prescribed by the church but now they only required us to fast on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday.  I work with 4 Muslims and they each have their way of observing Ramadan, it depends on how devoted they are, the same as with Catholics, the more devoted ones respect the fasting others don´t.

5.       vona
150 posts
 27 Jul 2012 Fri 01:52 am

"there is quite a long explnation" often means there is no explanation I think the explanation was not about being allowed to drink tea whilst fasting but about the reason why he was noıt fasting that day.

barba_mama and hedef liked this message
6.       Lm18
43 posts
 27 Jul 2012 Fri 09:37 am

oo ok i suppose that makes sense really. i just thought that there was going to be be a more in depth kind of reason, but there must not be! thank you for all your replies though

7.       AlphaF
5677 posts
 27 Jul 2012 Fri 06:21 pm

 

Quoting Lm18

oo ok i suppose that makes sense really. i just thought that there was going to be be a more in depth kind of reason, but there must not be! thank you for all your replies though

 

There are subtler conditions under which one may suddenly find himself disqualified for fasting.



Edited (8/28/2012) by AlphaF

8.       Lm18
43 posts
 27 Jul 2012 Fri 06:44 pm

Conditions such as...

9.       barba_mama
1629 posts
 27 Jul 2012 Fri 09:21 pm

10.       ilia-rad
2 posts
 01 Aug 2012 Wed 02:08 pm

  .



Edited (8/1/2012) by ilia-rad
Edited (8/7/2012) by ilia-rad [clear]

Lm18 liked this message
11.       AlphaF
5677 posts
 01 Aug 2012 Wed 02:25 pm

like eating and drinking on purpose, to make yourself vomit, sexual intercourse , masturbating (it´s a sin in general in islam ) and some other things that I can explain more if you want.

 

Neither sexual intercourse nor masturbating directly breaks one´s fasting. Both however break something else, which then disqualifies one as a faster. The effect is indirect.

12.       barba_mama
1629 posts
 01 Aug 2012 Wed 05:25 pm

# They are under-age (9 years old for girls and 15 for boys)

Seems a bit unfair... in any case under-age is not counted at age 9 for girls, but before having a first period. But still unfair Most of my muslim female friends started fasting around the age of 16, which seems a better age than having a girl start at the age of 9 or 10. The body is still in a high level of development, at that age so not giving the proper nurishment seems wrong to me.

13.       ghiziss
16 posts
 01 Aug 2012 Wed 06:19 pm

from what i know, the most of turkish people don´t fast in ramdan, even they are muslims, but they don´t really practice religion as other muslims country, im morrocon and , morocco is muslim country, and it´s forbidden for a morrocon citizen to eat in the street for example in ramadan, if they want eat , they can do, coz it still between God and them, but they should respect others who are fasting, But in turkey, they can eat and drink and and maybe having sex also, they can do what they want , you don´t feel that you are in ramadan month becoz they are secular country

so now, in their cultur, ramadan is just a month where you can fast if you want, if not,no problem 

14.       AlphaF
5677 posts
 01 Aug 2012 Wed 06:23 pm

 

Quoting barba_mama

# They are under-age (9 years old for girls and 15 for boys)

Seems a bit unfair... in any case under-age is not counted at age 9 for girls, but before having a first period. But still unfair Most of my muslim female friends started fasting around the age of 16, which seems a better age than having a girl start at the age of 9 or 10. The body is still in a high level of development, at that age so not giving the proper nurishment seems wrong to me.

 

That is correct, if you are taught that science of biology (or whatever) rules the growth of young human beings.

If you have been led to believe however, that growth - like everything else - is a divine miracle by god, over which external factors can have no effect whatsoever.......... then things look a little different.

 

15.       AlphaF
5677 posts
 01 Aug 2012 Wed 06:32 pm

 

Quoting ghiziss

from what i know, the most of turkish people don´t fast in ramdan, even they are muslims, but they don´t really practice religion as other muslims country, im morrocon and , morocco is muslim country, and it´s forbidden for a morrocon citizen to eat in the street for example in ramadan, if they want eat , they can do, coz it still between God and them, but they should respect others who are fasting, But in turkey, they can eat and drink and and maybe having sex also, they can do what they want , you don´t feel that you are in ramadan month becoz they are secular country

so now, in their cultur, ramadan is just a month where you can fast if you want, if not,no problem 

 

Measuring a person´s closeness to God  by the way he dresses, acts or prays is related to the concept of TAKWA. Only god can pass judgement on a person´s Takwa.

Be careful...Trying to assume roles reserved for God alone, is a cardinal sin in Islam.

Keep fasting graciously and silently....never mind what others do !

16.       ghiziss
16 posts
 01 Aug 2012 Wed 06:48 pm

 

Quoting AlphaF

 

 

Measuring a person´s closeness to God  by the way he dresses, acts or prays is related to the concept of TAKWA. Only god can pass judgement on a person´s Takwa.

Be careful...Trying to assume roles reserved for God alone, is a cardinal sin in Islam.

Keep fasting graciously and silently....never mind what others do !

 

i think you understood wrong, coz i never try to judge someone, and as i said before, it´s between the person and his God, but also, it´s up to cultur of the country, and in turkey if you eat in ramadan is something normal, but in others countries, it´s different 

i´m not talking about me or how do i fast, it´s far from this ...everyone is free, no one can know between people and their God coz as you said, and no one can judge people but their creator

May Allah show us all the right way

17.       gokuyum
5050 posts
 02 Aug 2012 Thu 04:51 am

 

Quoting ghiziss

from what i know, the most of turkish people don´t fast in ramdan, even they are muslims, but they don´t really practice religion as other muslims country, im morrocon and , morocco is muslim country, and it´s forbidden for a morrocon citizen to eat in the street for example in ramadan, if they want eat , they can do, coz it still between God and them, but they should respect others who are fasting, But in turkey, they can eat and drink and and maybe having sex also, they can do what they want , you don´t feel that you are in ramadan month becoz they are secular country

so now, in their cultur, ramadan is just a month where you can fast if you want, if not,no problem 

You cant eat or do whatever you want everywhere in Turkey in Ramadan. If you eat or drink something in the street, people will not approve your behavior. People can warn you and even some fanatics can attack you. So many people like me dont take this risk. I dont fast. But I never eat or drink something in the street.

 

18.       heiditc
15 posts
 02 Aug 2012 Thu 07:58 am

19.       heiditc
15 posts
 02 Aug 2012 Thu 07:59 am

Ramadhaan you cannot eat or drink after fajr and untill Maghrib prayer, also you can not have sexual realtions during this time also. Its nothing to do with CULTURE, Ramadhaan is ramadhaan there is no question and no excuse for not fasting, unless you are not a muslim, you are really sick, pregnant or brest feeding, on having period. these are the only things that stop you from fasting. But there is no point in fasting if you are not going to pray the 5 daily prays.

20.       heiditc
15 posts
 02 Aug 2012 Thu 08:01 am

Also a person has to fast as soon as they hit puberty... so saying 9 for girls and 15 for boys is wrong.. generally children should be fasting and praying by the age of 11!

 

21.       ghiziss
16 posts
 02 Aug 2012 Thu 01:19 pm

you have to know all that i have nothing agaisnt turkey, on the contrary,turkey is my second country becoz my husband is turkish man, and im going to live in turkey inshallah , that´s why im learning turkish here

and he told me the same thing about Ramadhan there, yes All muslim people know that in Ramadan we have to fast, but there , restaurants, coffes, bars and everything is open and people are eating without any problem , 

you say that ramadan is far from culture, but i don´t think so, becoz, look, when i grow up in country where i can eat or fast, where i see most of people are not fasting, i take in my mind that this is a choice , i can eat just becoz ramdan is hard for me, i can´t stay hungry all the day, and no one will ask me, "why did you eat?"... but in other country, you grow up with this idea of " you have to fast coz it´s ramdan" if you don´t have reaaly a good reason to eat, you should never do, even if you are hungry or thirsty , becoz this is the objectif

and again i say, i don´t judge anyone, coz everyone is responsable about himself , i respect others and their choices as they must respect me and my choices also, but we are just discussing here about difference between ramdan in turkey and in other countries , not less or more

nice day to all

22.       heiditc
15 posts
 02 Aug 2012 Thu 01:25 pm

Well in the UK most muslims fast... so really dont think there is any excuse! ... Allahu Alam!

 

23.       barba_mama
1629 posts
 02 Aug 2012 Thu 02:51 pm

24.       tunci
7149 posts
 02 Aug 2012 Thu 02:59 pm

 

Quoting barba_mama

 

Why dont you use a different browser barba ? "Mozilla" , as we dont see   your post. At least me myself cant see it although my eyes are as strong as eagle´s..

 

25.       barba_mama
1629 posts
 02 Aug 2012 Thu 03:01 pm

 

Quoting tunci

 

 

Why dont you use a different browser barba ? "Mozilla" , as we dont see your post. At least me myself cant see it although my eyes are as strong as eagle´s..

 

Ugh, because I don´t want to be forced into using a browers just to be able to post on 1 website. I like my browser I said something about fasting being personal, and our opinions have nothing to do with it. Wether we think people could or should fast has nothing to do with Ramadan. And if you only fast because other people say you should, or you simply fast because you can, it is empty. Ramadan is a month of contemplation and meditation, about overthinking life and your relationship with god. Fasting can be a tool to do this, but fasting shouldn´t be something you just do because everybody says so.

 

ghiziss liked this message
26.       tunci
7149 posts
 02 Aug 2012 Thu 03:23 pm

 

Quoting barba_mama

 

Ugh, because I don´t want to be forced into using a browers just to be able to post on 1 website. I like my browser I said something about fasting being personal, and our opinions have nothing to do with it. Wether we think people could or should fast has nothing to do with Ramadan. And if you only fast because other people say you should, or you simply fast because you can, it is empty. Ramadan is a month of contemplation and meditation, about overthinking life and your relationship with god. Fasting can be a tool to do this, but fasting shouldn´t be something you just do because everybody says so.

 


How can you call it just "on that one website" that one website [turkishclass.com] should play a big role in your life . neyse..just kidding..

I agree that "fasting is a totaly personal " however sometimes we get encouraged by other people by them saying us their views as long as they do NOT judge "the way our fasting" or "our not fasting"

It is God who is and will judge us all..

We[should] fast for God , NOT for other people. Otherwise as you said "It is empty"




 

 


 

 

27.       ghiziss
16 posts
 02 Aug 2012 Thu 03:53 pm

 

Quoting barba_mama

 

Ugh, because I don´t want to be forced into using a browers just to be able to post on 1 website. I like my browser I said something about fasting being personal, and our opinions have nothing to do with it. Wether we think people could or should fast has nothing to do with Ramadan. And if you only fast because other people say you should, or you simply fast because you can, it is empty. Ramadan is a month of contemplation and meditation, about overthinking life and your relationship with god. Fasting can be a tool to do this, but fasting shouldn´t be something you just do because everybody says so.

 

 

you are right, absolutly right !!!

Ramadan is the month where we must be near of Allah, we fast for this objectif, we fast, we pray, we try to clean ouselves from everything bad we were doing, we clean our eyes so we don´t watch something bad, we clean our mouths, so we don´t say something bad, we clean our hearts, we think of others and we feel as poor people can feel when they are hungry or thirsty and they don´t find to eat, we should visit our families , and our nears ... as you said Ramadan is a month of contemplation and meditation 

but when i was talking about ramdan in turkey, i didn´t talk about this, i mean, i didn´t enter in details....in general there are some people who are fasting coz they know what does Ramadan mean,  but alot of people dont know, coz their parents didn´t teach them, didn´t show them, what is ramadan and for what we have to fast, and society also in general doesn´t show that it´s really important month for us as muslims.... in other countries, from childerhood, we learn that ramadan is not like other countries, we should fast, and we should be near of Allah more than any other time " even we should always be near of God not just in ramadan " 

it doesn´t mean also, that in other muslim countries , all people are fasting as they should, there are who are not fasting at all also, but they hide themselves , but they are free again, i dont have to judge anyone, it´s not my business 

but again i say , in turkey Ramdan is very different and alittle hard at least for me !!!

Lm18 liked this message
28.       Abla
3648 posts
 02 Aug 2012 Thu 04:51 pm

Quote:heiditc

But there is no point in fasting if you are not going to pray the 5 daily prays.

 

 

Keeping the prayers is more difficult than fasting. I would say it is the most difficult thing in Islam. And yet, it is the first thing the servant is asked about in the hereafter. If a person´s prayer is in order his other deeds are accepted also. If the prayer is lacking his whole performance is not complete.

 

The easiest thing in Islam, if I was asked  -  it is loving the Prophet SAAS.



Edited (8/2/2012) by Abla
Edited (8/2/2012) by Abla

ghiziss liked this message
29.       ilia-rad
2 posts
 02 Aug 2012 Thu 10:50 pm




Edited (8/2/2012) by ilia-rad
Edited (8/2/2012) by ilia-rad
Edited (8/2/2012) by ilia-rad
Edited (8/7/2012) by ilia-rad [clear]

Lm18 liked this message
30.       heiditc
15 posts
 03 Aug 2012 Fri 03:04 am

Yeaah 11 is about right because 11 is the age where a child must start praying... in which that means the fast should start at 11 also..

in different countrys its told at different ages i will get some evidence ...

Okay soo just red and it says pref 10 years old...

sorri if we are not allowed to post links but this is from islam q&a

 

http://www.islam-qa.com/en/ref/65558

31.       alameda
3499 posts
 03 Aug 2012 Fri 03:32 am

your empty messages are a wonder. I´ve looked at them in Firefox and Chrome and they were empty. What browser is it you are so attached to? I think both Mozilla and Chrome are pretty standard these days, so whatever you are using is odd.

I find it amusing that you, as a self identified Jew, are offering advice on what Ramadan is about. Only Alllah really knows what it´s about. We only guess. 

Quoting barba_mama

 

Ugh, because I don´t want to be forced into using a browers just to be able to post on 1 website. I like my browser I said something about fasting being personal, and our opinions have nothing to do with it. Wether we think people could or should fast has nothing to do with Ramadan. And if you only fast because other people say you should, or you simply fast because you can, it is empty. Ramadan is a month of contemplation and meditation, about overthinking life and your relationship with god. Fasting can be a tool to do this, but fasting shouldn´t be something you just do because everybody says so.

 

 

 



Edited (8/3/2012) by alameda [add mark]

32.       admin
758 posts
 03 Aug 2012 Fri 06:07 am

I should be able to fix the empty message problem if I can reproduce it. So far I tried all the browsers I have and it is not happening. What version of Internet Explorer is this happening on? Is it IE6, 7, 8, or 9? 

33.       Abla
3648 posts
 03 Aug 2012 Fri 09:08 am

I use Firefox because I like it. Often people say they can´t see the message even if I do and some other people do.

 

If I try to send something heavy like a picture the post gets white even in my eyes. The picture sometimes eats the text, too! I have learned from this and use GC for heavy loads.

 

How many of my posts are really empty...that one I don´t know.

34.       barba_mama
1629 posts
 03 Aug 2012 Fri 01:11 pm

 

Quoting alameda

your empty messages are a wonder. I´ve looked at them in Firefox and Chrome and they were empty. What browser is it you are so attached to? I think both Mozilla and Chrome are pretty standard these days, so whatever you are using is odd.

I find it amusing that you, as a self identified Jew, are offering advice on what Ramadan is about. Only Alllah really knows what it´s about. We only guess.

 

 

 

I´m not a Jew, part of my family is. By the Jewish law I would be considered a Jew, because it is passed on through the female line. Just like in Islam the faith is passed on through the male line. So if I have a baby in my current relationship it would be considered both Jewish and Muslim by religious rules I don´t see myself as Jewish, more a... well, everything and nothing But it still hurts me when people talk about Jews, because yes, it is a part of me. But theology is a hobby, and I have studied Islam (and still studying, it takes a while!). I don´t think it would be smart of me to give an opinion about something, if I don´t even take the effort to educate myself first. So I have read the quran and some hadiths, and I bother everybody with too many questions It is a difficult topic though, since the imams that I stalk tend to give different answers from time to time on the same question.

But if you read my post, you would see that I´m not giving adivce on what Ramadan is about, but actually saying that our opinions don´t matter! Read, than comment

35.       AlphaF
5677 posts
 03 Aug 2012 Fri 02:01 pm

Barba,

That you are a Jew (or half a  Jew) should not lead you to blindly stand up for all aspects of Sionizm.

The "Olympic symbol"  discussion  is not about Jews and Judaism in general, but it strongly relates to Sionism.



Edited (8/3/2012) by AlphaF

36.       alameda
3499 posts
 04 Aug 2012 Sat 07:54 am

Hmmm....in some of your previous posts I thought you self identified as  Jew. Personally, I don´t think one´s religion is a matter of bloodline, but rather a matter addressed in one´s heart. 

Of course, there are many ways of interpreting religious teaching. 

This Jewish law thing I don´t understand at all. One can be a Jew and be an athiest, so I´ve been told...that is if your mother´s mother´s mother´s mother´s on and on back somewhere was Jewish, you are Jewish, forget about your father´s line? No requirement to have any beliefs? What would Moses say? I am old enough to have been the evolution of this definition. It really is rather new Haskalah interpretation of who is a Jew. IOW it´s a political definition. 

As for Islam, it´s really very simple, or so it seems. It is based on belief, &r to testify/witness, Shahada to that belief, not heritage. 

لا إله إلا الله محمد رسول الله

"There is no god but God, Muhammad is the messenger of God" 

That really is a rather poor translation of a very profound concept. that it takes years to comprehend, but it´s a start.

In the Quran it says, وَلِلَّهِ الْمَشْرِقُ وَالْمَغْرِبُ فَأَيْنَمَا تُوَلُّوا فَثَمَّ وَجْهُ اللَّهِ إِنَّ اللَّهَ وَاسِعٌ عَلِيمٌ

"Unto Allah belong the East and the West, and whithersoever ye turn, there is Allah´s Countenance. Lo! Allah is All-Embracing, All-Knowing." I rather like the site that link takes you to because you can see many translations, not just one. 

Maybe this post will be deleted for being too religious, but you mentioned it and I wanted to follow up on it as best I could. I know the parentage definition is followed a lot in some parts of the ME, Lebanon for example and other parts. I´d like to see that definition removed and let people  question and evolve, learn and what they actually believe. 

I didn´t even get into the Christian concept of Trinitarian or Unitarian.....or the Nicene Creed...it´s easy to see how people get confused 

Quoting barba_mama

I´m not a Jew, part of my family is. By the Jewish law I would be considered a Jew, because it is passed on through the female line. Just like in Islam the faith is passed on through the male line. So if I have a baby in my current relationship it would be considered both Jewish and Muslim by religious rules I don´t see myself as Jewish, more a... well, everything and nothing But it still hurts me when people talk about Jews, because yes, it is a part of me. But theology is a hobby, and I have studied Islam (and still studying, it takes a while!). I don´t think it would be smart of me to give an opinion about something, if I don´t even take the effort to educate myself first. So I have read the quran and some hadiths, and I bother everybody with too any questions It is a difficult topic though, since the imams that I stalk tend to give different answers from time to time on the same question.



Edited (8/4/2012) by alameda [add]
Edited (8/4/2012) by alameda [grammar]

37.       barba_mama
1629 posts
 07 Aug 2012 Tue 11:28 pm

 

Quoting AlphaF

Barba,

That you are a Jew (or half a Jew) should not lead you to blindly stand up for all aspects of Sionizm.

The "Olympic symbol" discussion is not about Jews and Judaism in general, but it strongly relates to Sionism.

 

The fact that I think the "2012 spells zion" thing is rubbish has nothing to do with my Jewish roots. It has something to do with me thinking it´s just rubbish. I do not favor Jews in any way, I just stand up when people think that all Jews are the same or behind a complot... or all Muslims are the same..or all Siks are the same, and so on, and so on. This zion thing, posting it as if it is reality sparks racism. I am against racism, not particularly pro-Jews.

Actually, religion is no issue in my family, so I call myself a person with Jewish roots. Not a Jew or half a Jew. My grandmother technically stopped being a Jew because she stopped believing in God after what happened in the second world war. She was a communist actually So am I also half a communist? Perhaps...

To alemeda. The Jewish bloodline thing is not something I believe. It´s just a religious rule. Like "don´t eat pork." Some people see "Jew" as a race, to point towards a distinct seperate culture and history. The Jewish atheist isn´t really correct, but it´s something people call themselves to point out their cultural heritage and there is no country you can name to point it out. In that case it is similar to "Roma" or something. But more politically correct would be to say Hebrew (some Americans do, European are not so politically correct). So in that case you can´t be a Jewish atheist. It would be a Hebrew atheist.

38.       ikicihan
1127 posts
 08 Aug 2012 Wed 03:49 am

 

Quoting heiditc

But there is no point in fasting if you are not going to pray the 5 daily prays.

 

Five daily prayer (salah, namaz) is not connected to fasting (sawm).

Even ramadan tarawih prayer is not connected to daytime fasting.

 

Ablution (wudhu) is connected to daily prayer (salah). Without ablution, prayer is not possible and accepted.

 

If we cannot do everything in religion ordered, we should not quit all. Ne yaparsak kârdır.

 

39.       alameda
3499 posts
 08 Aug 2012 Wed 03:56 am

The fact of the matter is if one reads 2012 from right to left, it does spell ZION. That´s just how the numbers are this common year.  I think it´s the dot in the logo that seals it. I wonder what the reason was for putting that in there? FWIW I had not seen that particular logo anywhere but here, so it´s not too common. 

The "who is a Jew" question is a confusing and sticky one. 

"As René-Samuel Sirat, chief rabbi of Paris, declared, “One cannot be both a Christian and a Jew.”.....

However then one reads, 

"When Pope John-Paul II named him archbishop of Paris, an astonished Lustiger told a reporter: “I have always considered myself Jewish, even if the rabbis do not agree with me. I was born Jewish, and Jewish I’ll remain.” Indeed, during his funeral service at the Cathedral of Notre-Dame, one of his relatives recited the Kaddish, while the leaders of France’s Jewish community — including the chief rabbi — prayed by the side of his coffin."

From here: France´s Jewish Archbishop

 

 

Quoting barba_mama

 

 

The fact that I think the "2012 spells zion" thing is rubbish has nothing to do with my Jewish roots. It has something to do with me thinking it´s just rubbish. I do not favor Jews in any way, I just stand up when people think that all Jews are the same or behind a complot... or all Muslims are the same..or all Siks are the same, and so on, and so on. This zion thing, posting it as if it is reality sparks racism. I am against racism, not particularly pro-Jews.

Actually, religion is no issue in my family, so I call myself a person with Jewish roots. Not a Jew or half a Jew. My grandmother technically stopped being a Jew because she stopped believing in God after what happened in the second world war. She was a communist actually So am I also half a communist? Perhaps...

To alemeda. The Jewish bloodline thing is not something I believe. It´s just a religious rule. Like "don´t eat pork." Some people see "Jew" as a race, to point towards a distinct seperate culture and history. The Jewish atheist isn´t really correct, but it´s something people call themselves to point out their cultural heritage and there is no country you can name to point it out. In that case it is similar to "Roma" or something. But more politically correct would be to say Hebrew (some Americans do, European are not so politically correct). So in that case you can´t be a Jewish atheist. It would be a Hebrew atheist.

 

 



Edited (8/8/2012) by alameda [add]

(39 Messages in 4 pages - View all)
1 2 3 4
Add reply to this discussion




Turkish Dictionary
Turkish Chat
Open mini chat
New in Forums
Why yer gördüm but yeri geziyorum
HaydiDeer: Thank you very much, makes perfect sense!
Etmeyi vs etmek
HaydiDeer: Thank you very much!
Görülmez vs görünmiyor
HaydiDeer: Thank you very much, very well explained!
Içeri and içeriye
HaydiDeer: Thank you very much for the detailed ...
Present continous tense
HaydiDeer: Got it, thank you!
Hic vs herhangi, degil vs yok
HaydiDeer: Thank you very much!
Rize Artvin Airport Transfer - Rize Tours
rizetours: Dear Guest; In order to make your Black Sea trip more enjoyable, our c...
What does \"kabul ettiğini\" mean?
HaydiDeer: Thank you very much for the detailed ...
Kimse vs biri (anyone)
HaydiDeer: Thank you!
Random Pictures of Turkey
Most liked
Major Vowel Harmony

Turkish lesson by admin
Level: beginner
Introduction

Turkish lesson by admin
Level: beginner