Minibüs şehre gidiyor.

Breakdown of Minibüs şehre gidiyor.

gitmek
to go
şehir
the city
-e
to
minibüs
the minibus
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Questions & Answers about Minibüs şehre gidiyor.

What case is şehre and what function does it serve?
The suffix -e marks the dative case in Turkish. It means “to” or “toward” a place, so şehre literally means “to the city.”
Why doesn’t Turkish use an article like the or a before minibüs?
Turkish has no direct equivalent of English definite or indefinite articles. A noun by itself can be definite or indefinite depending on context. If you really want “a minibus,” you can add bir (a/one): Bir minibüs şehre gidiyor (“A minibus is going to the city”).
Why is the verb gidiyor placed at the end of the sentence?
Turkish is a subject-object-verb (SOV) language: the verb normally comes last. Here Minibüs (subject) + şehre (object in dative) + gidiyor (verb).
Why is it spelled gidiyor with a d instead of gitiyor?
Turkish has a consonant‐softening rule (ünsüz yumuşaması). When the verb root git- (with final t) takes a vowel-initial suffix like -iyor, the t becomes a d for easier pronunciation: git- + ‑iyor → gidiyor.
Why isn’t there a subject pronoun like o (“he/she/it”) before the verb?
Turkish verbs are fully conjugated for person. In the present continuous 3rd person singular, gidiyor already means “he/she/it is going,” so the pronoun o is optional and usually dropped.
What’s the difference between şehre (dative) and şehirde (locative)?
  • şehre (-e): dative → “to the city” (movement toward).
  • şehirde (-de): locative → “in the city” or “at the city” (location/stationary).
Why is minibüs singular? Would minibüsler change the meaning?
minibüs refers to one vehicle. If you want to talk about multiple minibuses, you’d use the plural suffix -ler: Minibüsler şehre gidiyor (“Minibuses are going to the city”).
What tense/aspect is gidiyor, and can it mean both “is going” and “goes” regularly?

gidiyor is the present continuous (progressive) tense.

  • Usually “is going” right now or in the near future.
  • For habitual or scheduled actions (e.g. timetables), it can also be translated as “goes.” Context tells you whether it’s happening now or routinely.