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

Forum Messages Posted by ikicihan

(1127 Messages in 113 pages - View all)
<<  ... 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 [39] 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 ...  >>


Thread: Learning vocab

381.       ikicihan
1127 posts
 08 Feb 2013 Fri 04:29 am

 

Quoting vvaamim

But there is one hard part for me: vocabulary. Everytime I look a word up in the dictionary, I´m confronted with a long list of possible meanings for one word. I don´t know if I should take time out to learn the whole list out at once, or just learn the word in the specific context that I found it in. 

What is your guys´ opinion?

 

learn the meaning in that sentence only. if you come accross the same word with a different meaning, than learn the second meaning at that time. learning all the meaning of a word at a time is not a good idea, even native speakers dont know them. good meanings comes from texts.

dictionaries sucks at that usage point. yes they give all possible known meaning but which one is more probable and and which one is used at what percentage. in olden times it was impossible to detect these but now there is an advanced computer technology exists to do that.

i think of producing a statistical dictionary of turkish, showing which words and meanings are more common at what percentage!

...



Edited (2/8/2013) by ikicihan

ljubimica and gokuyum liked this message


Thread: example of non-standart local turkish

382.       ikicihan
1127 posts
 06 Feb 2013 Wed 04:49 am

i just found out that azerbaijani uses the same -k suffix. we locally share something from far history.

English Pronouns    Azerbaijani Pronouns
I speak    Mən danışıram
you speak    Sən danışırsan (or) siz danışırsız
he speaks    O danışır
she speaks    O danışır
we speak    Biz danışırıq
they speak    Onlar danışır

http://mylanguages.org/azerbaijani_pronouns.php



Thread: example of non-standart local turkish

383.       ikicihan
1127 posts
 06 Feb 2013 Wed 02:05 am

Gelmek Fiili


Öğretmen sormuş:
-gelmek fiilinin çekimini yapabilirmisiniz
Erzurumlu çocuk atılmış:
-gelerem ha gelersen ha gelerler ha
Öğretmen:
-bu olmadı kim doğrusunu söyleyecek
Karadenizli çocuk:
-celeyrum celeysun celeyler, demiş

elenagabriela and Abla liked this message


Thread: example of non-standart local turkish

384.       ikicihan
1127 posts
 06 Feb 2013 Wed 01:39 am

 

 

Quoting Abla

Which place?

 

in adana, south central turkey.

 

Quoting Abla

Oh. The -k ending bewildered my imagination already. Thank you, mltm.

 

 

adanalıyık adanalıyız
gidek gidelim
yürüyek yürüyelim

 

geliyok is the shortened version, long version is geliyoruk! really


 

 



Thread: Should Türkiye (Turkey) be ready to join European Union (EU) ?

385.       ikicihan
1127 posts
 05 Feb 2013 Tue 05:15 am

Türkiye yüzünü batı kadar doğuya da çevirmeli


Türkiye sahip olduğu coğrafi konumu nedeniyle ekonomik, kültürel ve siyasi açıdan Doğu ve Batı arasında bir köprü olmuştur. Doğu ve Batıyı bünyesinde barındıran Türkiye son 200 yıldır batıyla hareket ediyor ve modernleşme çabalarıyla da batı standartlarını yakalamaya çalışıyor. 21. yüzyılsa dünya dengelerinin Asya lehine gelişeceği bir dönem olmaya aday. Bu yeni dönem Türkiye’nin yüzünü en az Batı kadar Doğu’ya da çevirmesini zorunlu kılıyor.

...

http://gundem.milliyet.com.tr/turkiye-yuzunu-bati-kadar-doguya-da-cevirmeli/gundem/gundemyazardetay/05.02.2013/1664617/default.htm



Thread: example of non-standart local turkish

386.       ikicihan
1127 posts
 05 Feb 2013 Tue 04:32 am

geliyom
geliyoñ
geliyor
geliyok
geliyonuz
geliyorlar



Thread: Should Türkiye (Turkey) be ready to join European Union (EU) ?

387.       ikicihan
1127 posts
 05 Feb 2013 Tue 04:11 am

 

Quoting gokuyum

 

 

We have already a union here. Jedis union. Everybody who meets our criteria can join us. Our only criteria is having a functional brain

 

but we cannot divide a country into two parts: the ones have brains and have no brains! what should we do then. bir yazarımıza göre milletin yüzde 60´ı aptal, bir önderimize göre milletimiz zekidir. kime inanak, nâpak, nîdek... buyur burdan yak.



Thread: Tech Companies are Developing TV’s that Watch You

388.       ikicihan
1127 posts
 05 Feb 2013 Tue 03:59 am

someone said: "in soviet russia, TVs watch you"

maybe USA and Russia replacing...



Thread: harika vs harikalude

389.       ikicihan
1127 posts
 03 Feb 2013 Sun 09:08 pm

harika: wonderful

harikulade: magnificent

 

arabic origin:

Hârik’ul-âde
Hârik(a) =yırtan (delen,karıştıran,harekete geçiren)
-âde=âdet (alışkanlık,gelenek, rutin)

something like extraordinary in a good way...

 



Thread: Tech Companies are Developing TV’s that Watch You

390.       ikicihan
1127 posts
 03 Feb 2013 Sun 08:26 pm

The new generation of HDTV’s and cable receivers sold to the public contain features that are not very publicized by tech companies: Cameras, mics and sensors that have the ability of recording everything that is happening in the living room. Not unlike the telescreens in George Orwell’s novel 1984, TV’s will soon be able to watch and even thoroughly analyze everyone present in the devices’ vicinity.

The cable company Verizon has recently filed a patent for a system that contain audio and video sensors coupled with facial and profile recognition software. That would allow the company to obtain information such as the number people in the room, their sex, their race, what they are doing and even what they are consuming while watching TV. The goal of such a system is to broadcast “targeted advertising” but crossing the line to outright spying on people is only footstep away. Here’s an article on Verizon’s patent.

Verizon Files Patent for Creepy Device To Watch You While You Watch TV

Picture this: You’re having an argument with your partner while watching television, and suddenly an advertisement comes on for marriage counseling. Or maybe you’re doing some weightlifting while a movie plays in the background, and ads for health food pop up on the screen.

In the past, it would have been mere coincidence. But in the future, things look set to change, thanks to Verizon’s “gesture recognition technology.”

The company has filed a patent, published last week, for a system designed to be used in the home to target advertisements at people. Using a combination of image and audio sensors, it would detect actions in your living room while you were watching TV. These sensors, deploying facial and profile recognition, would pick up “physical attributes” like skin color, facial features, and even hair length, and also detect “voice attributes” to help determine the tone of your voice, your accent, and the language you speak. Inanimate objects aren’t off-limits—the technology could also spot beer cans and wall art.

Combined, this would mean that your TV or set-top box would effectively be watching and listening to you while you snuggle up on the couch with your partner to watch the latest episode of Homeland. If the cuddling went a bit further, the chances are the technology would pick up the noises and start playing ads for “a commercial for a contraceptive” or “a commercial for flowers,” as outlined in the patent.

The patent also says if the device picks up that the user is “stressed” then it “may select an advertisement associated with the detected mood (e.g., a commercial for a stress-relief product such as aromatherapy candles, a vacation resort, etc.).” It adds that “If a couple is arguing/fighting with each other” the system “may select an advertisement associated marriage/relationship counseling.” And if the sensors detect that a user is a kid, the system will trigger “more advertisements targeted to and/or appropriate for young children.”

As Steve Donohue at FieceCable has noted, Verizon’s technology would operate in the same way Google targets Gmail users based on the content of their emails—only transposing that principle into the home by “scanning conversations of viewers that are within a ‘detection zone’ near their TV, including telephone conversations.” Of course, this is only a patent, so you don’t have to start eyeing your TV suspiciously—for now. ArsTechnica points out similar patents have been filed before and have yet to be put into practice. But that doesn’t make this latest incarnation any less creepy—and is perhaps an illustration of how surveillance-style technologies are increasingly encroaching on private life.

http://vigilantcitizen.com/latestnews/tech-companies-are-developping-tvs-that-watch-you/

 



(1127 Messages in 113 pages - View all)
<<  ... 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 [39] 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 ...  >>



Turkish Dictionary
Turkish Chat
Open mini chat
New in Forums
Crossword Vocabulary Puzzles for Turkish L...
qdemir: You can view and solve several of the puzzles online at ...
Giriyor vs Geliyor.
lrnlang: Thank you for the ...
Local Ladies Ready to Play in Your City
nifrtity: ... - Discover Women Seeking No-Strings Attached Encounters in Your Ci...
Geçmekte vs. geçiyor?
Hoppi: ... and ... has almost the same meaning. They are both mean "i...
Intermediate (B1) to upper-intermediate (B...
qdemir: View at ...
Why yer gördüm but yeri geziyorum
HaydiDeer: Thank you very much, makes perfect sense!
Random Pictures of Turkey
Most liked