Sınav bittiğinde çay içeceğim.

Breakdown of Sınav bittiğinde çay içeceğim.

içmek
to drink
çay
the tea
bitmek
to end
sınav
the exam
-tiğinde
when
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Questions & Answers about Sınav bittiğinde çay içeceğim.

What are the components of bittiğinde and what does each one do?

bittiğinde =

  • bit (root meaning finish)
  • -ti- (past‑tense marker)
  • -ğinde (temporal conjunction meaning when … has)
    Together they yield when it has finished.
Can I use bitince instead of bittiğinde? Is there a difference?

Yes. bitince also means when it finishes. It’s a shorter variant:

  • bitince = bit-
    • -ince (temporal when)
  • bittiğinde is slightly more explicit about completion and can sound more formal.
Why is Sınav in the nominative case and not Sınavı?
In Turkish bitmek is intransitive (something finishes by itself), so the thing that finishes is treated as the subject (nominative). You only add when a verb takes a direct object.
How is the future tense içeceğim formed?

içeceğim =

  • iç- (root drink)
  • -ecek (future‑tense suffix)
  • -im (first‑person‑singular suffix; a buffer y turns iç + ecek into içecek
    • -im)
      This combination gives I will drink.
Why is there no subject pronoun like ben in the sentence?
Turkish verbs carry person information in their endings (-im for I). When the subject is clear from the verb suffix, the pronoun is usually dropped unless you want to emphasize it.
Why is there no article before çay? Can I say bir çay içeceğim?
Turkish doesn’t have an indefinite article (no direct equivalent of a/an). A bare noun can mean tea or a tea. If you want to specify one tea, you can say bir çay içeceğim.
Why is the main verb içeceğim at the end of the sentence?
Turkish follows subject‑object‑verb (SOV) word order. Even time clauses (like Sınav bittiğinde) appear before the main verb.
How do you pronounce the letter ğ in bittiğinde?
ğ (soft g) is silent and simply lengthens the preceding vowel. So bittiğinde is pronounced roughly bit‑ee‑n‑deh.