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Questions & Answers about Toplantı olumlu geçti.
What is the subject of the sentence “Toplantı olumlu geçti”?
The subject is toplantı, which means meeting.
What does the verb geçti mean, and how is it formed?
Geçti is the past tense form of the verb geçmek, which means to go or to pass. In this sentence, it indicates that the meeting went well. The suffix -ti signals the past tense.
How does the adjective olumlu function in this sentence, and what does it mean?
Olumlu means positive or favorable. It describes how the meeting went. In Turkish, adjectives like olumlu are typically used without a separate adverbial form, conveying the quality of the event directly.
Why is there no linking verb equivalent to “was” in the English sentence?
Turkish often omits linking verbs in simple descriptive sentences. The quality of the subject (the meeting) is directly conveyed by the adjective and the past tense verb, making additional linking words unnecessary.
How does the structure of this Turkish sentence compare with an English sentence conveying the same meaning?
Turkish typically follows a subject–adjective–verb order. In contrast, English might use a structure like “The meeting went positively” or “The meeting was positive,” often requiring a linking verb. Turkish conveys the complete meaning more compactly.
How does verb conjugation work with the subject in “Toplantı olumlu geçti”?
In Turkish, verbs naturally agree with their subjects. The verb geçti is in the third person singular past tense, which correctly aligns with the singular noun toplantı. Subject pronouns are generally dropped when the subject is clear from the context.