Dative Accusative or Nominative in Turkish Language?

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Exploring Dative, Accusative, and Nominative Cases in Turkish Language
Join us on an enlightening journey through the intricacies of Dative, Accusative, and Nominative cases in the Turkish language! 🌟 Whether you're delving into indirect objects, direct objects, or understanding the nuances of these cases, this video is your comprehensive guide.

In this lesson, we'll cover the following key topics:
Dative Case in Turkish Language: Gain a deep understanding of how this case marks the indirect object, expressing recipients or beneficiaries in sentences.
Accusative Case in Turkish Language: Explore how this case marks the direct object, indicating the target of an action, and learn its specific use in sentence structures.
Nominative Case in Turkish Language: Uncover the foundational role of this case as the indefinite direct object marker in sentences, allowing you to identify and understand basic sentence structures.
We'll illustrate these cases through a range of example sentences, shedding light on their application and providing clarity to learners seeking mastery.
Enhance your understanding of noun conditions and Turkish grammar with this detailed exploration of Turkish noun cases.
Engage with us in the comments section! Share your thoughts, questions, or topics you'd like us to cover in future lessons. Your participation fuels our commitment to making Turkish language learning accessible and enjoyable for all!

#learnturkish , #turkishlanguage , #turkishdativecase , #turkishjourney

00:00 Merhabalar, ben Sercan
00:05 Introduction and general explanations
01:54 Examples

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Merhaba, Sercan! I’m a teacher as well, from Brazil. I started learning Turkish last week. Your videos have been really useful. Cok teşekkürler!
I’ve noticed a pattern when “istemek” is the main verb... From what I understood, the verbs used with “istemek” will look like infinitive verbs (with mak or mek) such as in “öğrenmek istiyorum”, “uyumak istiyorum” or “bilmek istiyorum”. I was so happy thinking it would always be that easy…hehe Until I ran into sentences like “I try to speak” (konuşmaya çalışıyorum), “I’m starting to learn” (öğrenmeye başlıyorum) or “I forgot to do” (yapmayı unuttum). I can recognize the Dative Case in “konuşmaya” and “öğrenmeye” and the Accusative Case in “yapmayı”, but I don’t know why they don’t all just take the infinitive (mak or mek) in the first place as they would with “istemek” and which Case to choose from if I had to. Could you teach us how to build sentences like these, when a verb is the object of another verb?

ceciliasilva
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Can you do a video about Tamlama? I understand there are 3 different tamlama's all with their own rules and I don't know when to use which tamlama and the only one I think I understand is where the second word "belongs" to the first and you add a suffix to the second word. Like okul gunlugu, school agenda. Okul stays the same but with gunlu you add a suffix "gu" . Another example, Kahve tenceresi, the cup from the coffe cup belongs to the coffee. How do the other tamlama's work? like "who's coffee is this", answer "benim kahvem" . And then there is a third tamalama...?
Thank you in advance and I think this is the hardest part in learning Turkish, using tamlama and directing or pointing suffixes

denisedoos
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