Ben arkadaşıma sinemaya eşlik ediyorum.

Word
Ben arkadaşıma sinemaya eşlik ediyorum.
Meaning
I am accompanying my friend to the cinema.
Part of speech
sentence
Pronunciation
Lesson

Breakdown of Ben arkadaşıma sinemaya eşlik ediyorum.

ben
I
benim
my
arkadaş
the friend
sinema
the cinema
eşlik etmek
to accompany
Elon.io is an online learning platform
We have an entire course teaching Turkish grammar and vocabulary.

Start learning Turkish now

Questions & Answers about Ben arkadaşıma sinemaya eşlik ediyorum.

Why is the subject pronoun Ben included in the sentence, even though Turkish often omits subject pronouns?
In Turkish, subject pronouns can be dropped because the verb’s conjugation clearly indicates the subject. However, including Ben (“I”) adds emphasis or clarity, especially when the speaker wants to stress who is performing the action.
How are the words arkadaşıma and sinemaya constructed, and what roles do their endings play?
Both words use the dative case. Arkadaşıma comes from arkadaş (“friend”) with a possessive ending for “my” and then the dative suffix -a, indicating “to my friend.” Similarly, sinemaya is formed from sinema (“cinema”) with the dative ending -ya, showing direction or destination—“to the cinema.”
Why are both the person being accompanied and the destination in the dative case?
The verb phrase eşlik etmek (“to accompany”) requires its complement—the person who is being accompanied—to appear in the dative case. Additionally, in Turkish, places toward which someone is moving (or where an activity occurs) are also marked with the dative case. This is why both arkadaşıma (to my friend) and sinemaya (to the cinema) carry the dative endings.
What is the structure behind the compound verb eşlik ediyorum?
Eşlik ediyorum is a compound verb made up of the noun eşlik (“accompaniment”) and the verb etmek (“to do”). In this sentence, etmek is conjugated in the present continuous form as ediyorum (“I am doing”), creating the phrase that means “I am accompanying.” This construction is common in Turkish, where many verbal expressions pair a noun with etmek to convey actions.
How is the present continuous tense formed in this sentence, and what clues indicate its use?
The present continuous tense in Turkish is formed by adding -iyor to the verb stem, then appending the personal ending. In the sentence, etmek becomes ediyorum by using the -yorum ending for the first-person singular. This ending indicates that the action (“to accompany”) is currently taking place.

You've reached your AI usage limit

Sign up to increase your limit.