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Forum Messages Posted by juliacernat

(424 Messages in 43 pages - View all)
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Thread: What are you listening now?

191.       juliacernat
424 posts
 20 Feb 2007 Tue 02:57 pm

Santana featuring Rob Thomas- Smooth



Thread: Sentence order - no verb

192.       juliacernat
424 posts
 20 Feb 2007 Tue 02:49 pm

there cannot be a sentence without a verb and there is a verb (olmak) in your sentence

I think it should be like this:

Bu Istabul`da son akşamımızdır.
or
Son akşamımız Istanbul`da bu(dur).



Thread: What are you listening now?

193.       juliacernat
424 posts
 20 Feb 2007 Tue 12:00 pm

Urge Overkill- Girl, you`ll be a woman soon



Thread: Appreciating Turkey while packed in a dolmus

194.       juliacernat
424 posts
 20 Feb 2007 Tue 11:55 am



"I don’t like hot, crowded places, and I don’t like to let other people drive. And yet, here I was, weaving in and out of traffic on a hot, crowded dolmuş, on the Asian side of Istanbul, with a nearsighted madman at the wheel... and I was smiling. Something was wrong with me.


First, they call this little bus a “dolmuşâ€ because just like the Turkish and Greek dish, “dolmuşâ€ (that grape leaf thing they fill with rice), they keep packing it until it is stuffed. And this little blue bus was stuffed today.
As you walk or drive through the city of Istanbul you can’t help but notice the thousands of dolmuşes competing for passengers and lanes on the crowded roads. If you miss one at a bus stop you only have to wait a few seconds until three or four more race to the curb to pick you up… or pack you in.
Designed for 14 passengers, this dolmuş had over 25 people in it. The windows were closed and nobody seemed to realize that we were all close to asphyxiation but me. I tried to open the window next to me but it was held fast by a bolt. It had to be 95 degrees Fahrenheit in this hot little box and nobody cared.
In fact, they were bundled up in jackets, scarves and sweaters. I was wearing my new safari shirt, (and looking very “adventurish”) and I was still dripping wet.
From somewhere in the back I heard the small voice of Stanley, our 10-year-old boy, I heard him talking to someone but couldn’t see him. He had been caught in the wave of boarding passengers and ended up behind me. Eventually I caught sight of him sitting on the backrow with three big Turks. One of them was an elderly man dressed in a suit; he was sitting next to Stanley with his big arm around my son’s shoulders.
All the bells and flags of parental protectiveness went off and up in my head. And yet Stanley’s demeanor and face told a different story. For a boy that is shy and suspicious and always on the lookout for robbers and dragons, he was at ease, even comfortable, talking to this big hairy Turk.
We had been in Istanbul less than 24 hours, the start of a three-year search to learn all we could about those who live along the Silk Road of Asia. Just 48 hours ago we were comfortably ensconced in our Los Angeles rental and today we were half a world away. None of us really knew whether we had what it would take to live our lives out so far from home. And now my little boy is sitting at the back of a crowded bus with a total stranger. A stranger that was hugging him and laughing with him.
As our dolmuş made its stops and the crowd thinned, I finally got a clear view of the interaction on the back row. Stanley was now smiling and laughing with his seatmate. The Turk was giving him his full attention and talking a mixture of Turkish and broken English. His arm was still resting on Stanley’s shoulders and as they laughed their foreheads would bump together. The Turk looked at me and winked.
As our stop approached we got up and I thanked the Turk for his kindness. As our dolmuş sped away in a cloud of blue smoke, Stanley’s first words were, “I already have a friend in Istanbul, I love this place!”
This was certainly a city one could become passionate about. It would be hard for anyone even remotely interested in world history not to love Istanbul. Byzantium, Constantinople, the “City of the World’s Desire” as it had so aptly been named was one of the oldest cities in the world.
Here, is where East meets West, where Islam meets Christendom, and where the continent of Europe meets the continent of Asia. It is a place of drastic contrast and entrenched tradition.
It is in Istanbul that the Aya Sofia stands across the square from the Blue Mosque. It was where Ottoman rulers commanded a vast empire that only lost its power within this last century.
It was the place we had chosen to live and gain a perspective of the world outside the lines of politics and boundaries. It was here that we wanted to meet the people we had only read about. It was in this fabulous city that we took our first ride on a little blue bus called a dolmuş.
A few hours later we were in another dolmuş on the way home. It, too, was hot, crowded and shuttered against any dangerous breeze that might waft through. I thought about our first intimate glimpse of the Turkish people in this city of over 15 million, a stranger, helping a little boy far from home to feel welcome in his new country. I smiled. I loved this place too".


by STAN STEWARD, Today`s Zaman, 20.02.2007



Thread: Divorce in Turkiye

195.       juliacernat
424 posts
 20 Feb 2007 Tue 11:53 am



Legal grounds for divorce under Turkish law



"“I have been married for almost three years, my husband is Turkish and we live in Turkey. We have had no problems arising out of cultural difference, and I love to be in Turkey.
However, I just feel like I don’t love my husband as I did before. I feel like his image as a husband to me is fading away. I have lately started to consider getting a divorce. It seems like I do not have significant grounds for a divorce. Would this -- not feeling in love anymore -- be grounds for divorce? Please only disclose my nickname if you have to. Your response will be appreciated.”
My dear reader, I certainly don’t have to disclose any names or nicknames. I just like to demonstrate that my corner is read and I am receiving enquiries. I only disclose names upon written approval of the reader who made the enquiry.
If I may proceed with your question; Nobody gets married to get divorced one day and every marriage is supposed to last forever. However, it is a fact that many people get divorce.
What does Turkish law say about grounds for divorce?


Under Turkish law, the grounds for divorce are basically as follows:

* adultery/disloyalty
* crimes against the life of a spouse
* ill-usage
* cruelty/affront/insult
* crime and infamous conduct
* abandonment/ desertion,
* mental illness
* domestic disturbances
The most common grounds for divorce applied in Turkish courts is domestic disturbance. Turkish Civil Code Article 166/1 states that “if the marriage is irreparably shaken, either of the spouses may file for divorce.” The parties can file for a divorce before the Family Court if they feel that their marriage has been ruined and their relationship is unbearable and intolerable. In practice, the Family Court should be convinced that the marriage has become unbearable.
Turkish courts have ruled on several matters regarding these grounds for divorce.
For instance, if one of the spouses continuously refuses to have sexual intercourse this may be considered as grounds for divorce. Other grounds that have been accepted in precedent cases include revealing family secrets, insulting the other spouse, humiliating activities against the other spouse, bedwetting and having bad breath.
One should note that none of these grounds solely can convince the judge to decide in favor of the claimant if the marriage hasn’t become intolerable.
In your case, if your feelings in relation to your husband make the marriage intolerable, you can go to court for a divorce.
In any case, according to Turkish Civil Code 166/IV, if the divorce case is dismissed and if the marriage hasn’t been reformed after three years, the court shall accept the new divorce case after this three year period has passed".

Berk Cektir, Today`s Zaman, 20.02.2007



Thread: Proof that girls are evil

196.       juliacernat
424 posts
 19 Feb 2007 Mon 12:50 pm

On reading the initial so called "syllogism", a quote from Albert Einstein came to my mind:

"There are only two infinite things: the universe and the human foolishness, but I am not pretty sure regarding the first. Regarding the second, one can easily notice how we destroy ourselves only to prove who can do more".....



Thread: What are you listening now?

197.       juliacernat
424 posts
 19 Feb 2007 Mon 11:39 am

Deep Blue Something- Breakfast at Tiffany`s



Thread: ALL-TIME 15 NOVELS

198.       juliacernat
424 posts
 19 Feb 2007 Mon 11:33 am

merhaba!
as the universal library has unlimited resources and therefore selecting the "best"/"most read"/"most popular" 15 books seems unrealistic, I propose to have an open list of recommendations

mine are the following:
Amin Maalouf- Leo Africanus and Balthasar`s Odyssey
Sadegh Hedayat- The Blind Owl (BUF-e KUR)
Rudolf Otto- The Holly
Mircea Eliade- Sacred and Profane
Umberto Eco- The Name of the Rose
Mikhail Bulgakov- The Master and MArgarita
Hermann Hesse- Steppenwolf and The Glass Bead Game (Magister Ludi)
Jose Saramago- The Gospel According to Jesus Christ and All the Names
Ismail Kadare- The General of the Dead Army
N.H. Kleinbaum- Dead Poets Society
Milan Kundera- Ludicrous Loves
Pascal Bruckner- The Art of Loving
Marguerite Duras- L`Amant
Carlos Ruiz Zafon- The Shadow of the Wind
Peter Beagle- The Last Unicorn and Fine and Private Place



Thread: Imperative rule

199.       juliacernat
424 posts
 19 Feb 2007 Mon 12:09 am

Quoting caliptrix:

Quoting natiypuspi:


I like sleeping = Uyumayı beğeniyorum



I think beğenmek is not suitable for here. It must be "Uyumayı seviyorum".



as this mention has been made, it would be useful to distinguish between the use of "sevmek", "beğenmek" and "hoşlanmak"; thus, besides the diffenent cases asked by these verbs (-i for "sevmek" and "beğenmek" and -dan for "hoşlanmak"), which is the proper context use for each of them?

thank you,
julia



Thread: kardes

200.       juliacernat
424 posts
 18 Feb 2007 Sun 01:24 pm

Quoting Elisa:

Quoting ambertje:

I know kardes means brother. But can it also means brothers, in a way of friends?

Thank you.



Yes, it's an informal way of addressing a friend.
Friends also use "abi" which means older brother to address eachother.



"abla" (elder sister) or "teyze" (aunt) are also used.



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