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Questions & Answers about Arabanın önü kirli.
What does arabanın mean, and what role does the -nın suffix play?
Arabanın comes from araba (meaning "car") with the genitive suffix -nın, which indicates possession. Thus, it translates to "of the car" or "the car’s."
How does önü function in this sentence?
Önü means "its front." Here, ön (meaning "front") takes the third-person possessive suffix -ü, showing that the front belongs to the car mentioned earlier.
Why is there no verb equivalent to “is” in Arabanın önü kirli?
Turkish commonly omits the linking verb to be in the present tense. Although English requires "is" in "The car’s front is dirty," in Turkish the state is directly expressed with the adjective kirli without an explicit copula.
How does the word order in Arabanın önü kirli differ from typical English sentence structure?
The Turkish sentence follows a structure where the possessor comes first (with the noun araba and its genitive suffix -nın), followed by the possessed noun (with its possessive suffix -ü), and then the adjective (kirli). In English, we would restructure this to "The car’s front is dirty," inserting a linking verb and using a different possessive form.
How do Turkish possessive constructions work, as seen in this sentence?
Turkish shows possession using a two-step process: the possessor noun takes a genitive suffix (here, -nın with araba), and the possessed noun takes a possessive suffix (here, -ü with ön). This method clearly indicates that the front belongs to the car without needing additional words.