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Forum Messages Posted by Umut_Umut

(485 Messages in 49 pages - View all)
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Thread: Ramadan Foods and Drinks

21.       Umut_Umut
485 posts
 25 Jul 2013 Thu 04:51 pm

In Mersin Kerebiç is very famous in Ramazan. 

 

kerebiç

 

 

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Thread: Come on (haydi)

22.       Umut_Umut
485 posts
 24 Jul 2013 Wed 08:33 am

hayda bre

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Thread: 1st person possessive and to be is the same

23.       Umut_Umut
485 posts
 23 Jul 2013 Tue 04:14 pm

 

Quoting denizli

I noticed that 1st person possessive and ´to be´ is the same, when the word ends in a vowel.How do you know the difference? I can´t think of many examples but, ´my lady´ and ´I´m a lady´.

 

That´s right. But  when the word doesn´t end with a vowel. 

We know the difference from the meaing of the sentence. And 1st person posssesive suffix mostly use with "benim".  

 



Thread: Come on (haydi)

24.       Umut_Umut
485 posts
 23 Jul 2013 Tue 04:01 pm

I know from my colleague that Croations use that word as Hajde ( hayde ) 



Edited (7/23/2013) by Umut_Umut
Edited (7/23/2013) by Umut_Umut [doesn´t appear ]

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Thread: kontrol ederbilir misiniz lutfen?

25.       Umut_Umut
485 posts
 23 Jul 2013 Tue 03:59 pm

 

Quoting Johnk

Merhaba

 

Can someone check these sentences to see if I have written them correctly.

 

Morecambe Manchester´ın 40 km kuzeyindedir = Morecambe is 40 kms north of manchester

Su ne - what is that? or is it o ne? both are true, for sure if you touch you don´t say o ne. But when you point something with your finger, you can use both of them.

 

Merhaba Jonk,

 

 



Thread: SUPPORT FOR SHARIAH

26.       Umut_Umut
485 posts
 23 Jul 2013 Tue 03:56 pm

Dear pew institute  

Is Turkey  in Central Asia ( Türkistan) ??  pewww



Edited (7/23/2013) by Umut_Umut



Thread: \

27.       Umut_Umut
485 posts
 11 Feb 2013 Mon 09:44 am

Neyin kafasındasınız ya {#emotions_dlg.unsure} Alpha savunmayla ilgili bir şey yolluyor, iş dönüp dolaşıp Atatürk´e geliyor. Dam üstünde saksağan vur beline kazmayı. Pietercik sen de bırak bu işleri de, dil öğrenmeye yoğunlaş.

vona, nevbahar, ikicihan, Laleler and gokuyum liked this message


Thread: Some words that we use incorrectly

28.       Umut_Umut
485 posts
 18 Jan 2013 Fri 02:32 pm

 

Quoting Abla

birşey or bir şey  -  or are they two different things?

 

No they are not two different things. It should be written as "bir şey"

 

Actually the rule for it is really easy. The word "şey" is always written apart from the previous word.

 

bir şey

her şey

 

tunci liked this message


Thread: A crazy question ...

29.       Umut_Umut
485 posts
 18 Jan 2013 Fri 10:59 am

A very interesting article, that can give us a different point of view about this issue. It seems trip´s brain is trying to adapt to the natural order that she use when representing events nonverbally. Wink

 

Does the language we speak influence the way we think? Scientists have fiercely debated this question for more than a century. A July 1 study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences bolsters the case against language’s influence by showing that people with different native tongues organize events in the same order—even if that order is different from the one dictated by their native grammar.

Psychologist Susan Goldin-Meadow of the University of Chicago asked Chinese, English, Spanish and Turkish speakers to describe activities by using only their hands. Turkish is the only language in the quartet that follows subject, object, verb, or SOV, order (as in woman knob twists ) . The other languages adhere to the pattern subject, verb, object ( woman twists knob ) . When gesturing, however, all participants used the SOV order, regardless of their native language. The same was true in a noncommu­ni­cative task in which volunteers had to put pictures in order.

The results point to the existence of a “natural order” that humans use when representing events nonverbally, the researchers say. Where such a natural order might come from is unknown, but Goldin-Meadow suggests that it may influence developing languages so that they initially use the SOV order—such is the case with a sign language currently emerging in Israel. Languages are sub­ject to other pressures, however, such as the need to be semantically clear and rhetorically interesting. As a language becomes more complex, she explains, these pressures might push it away from the natural SOV order. Today the two dominant orders that were represented in this study are equally frequent and account for roughly 90 percent of the world’s languages.

One of the possible consequences of a language that goes against our pattern of representation may be that the brain has to do additional work when speaking it, Goldin-Meadow says. “It could be that there is a small cognitive cost to speaking English.”


Source : http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=brains-natural-order



Edited (1/18/2013) by Umut_Umut

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Thread: Are there any native Arabic speaking members who are willing to help us?

30.       Umut_Umut
485 posts
 15 Jan 2013 Tue 09:25 am

maybe a troll?



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