Muhtemelen yarınki sınav daha kısa sürecek.

Breakdown of Muhtemelen yarınki sınav daha kısa sürecek.

daha
more
kısa
short
sınav
the exam
sürmek
to last
muhtemelen
probably
yarınki
tomorrow’s
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Questions & Answers about Muhtemelen yarınki sınav daha kısa sürecek.

What’s the function of muhtemelen in this sentence?
Muhtemelen is an adverb meaning “probably.” It expresses a likelihood rather than certainty. In Turkish, adverbs of probability like muhtemelen usually appear before the verb or at the very beginning of the sentence to set the speaker’s attitude.
What does the suffix -ki do in yarınki?
The suffix -ki attaches to time or place words (like yarın, “tomorrow”) to create an adjective that means “(the one) of tomorrow.” So yarınki sınav literally is “the tomorrow’s exam,” i.e. “the exam tomorrow.”
Why is daha used before kısa?
Daha is the comparative marker in Turkish. When you want to say something is “shorter,” you put daha in front of the adjective kısa. Without daha, kısa on its own just means “short,” not “more short.”
What is the role of the verb sürmek here, and how does it become sürecek?

In this context, sürmek means “to last” (duration). To form the simple future tense for third-person singular you:

  1. Drop -mek from the infinitive: sür-
  2. Apply vowel harmony to choose -ecek (because üe)
  3. Combine: sür
    • ecek = sürecek (“it will last”).
How do you form the future tense in Turkish more generally?

You add -acak or -ecek to the verb stem, following vowel harmony:
• If the last vowel of the stem is a or ı, use -acak.
• If the last vowel is e, i, o, ö, u, or ü, use -ecek.
Then you add personal endings (here third-person singular is zero ending).

Can the word order in this sentence change?

Yes, Turkish is relatively flexible. You could say:
Yarınki sınav muhtemelen daha kısa sürecek.
Daha kısa sürecek muhtemelen yarınki sınav.
Moving elements can shift emphasis, but the verb typically stays toward the end.

What’s the difference between yarınki sınav and just saying yarın sınav?

Yarın sınav var = “There’s an exam tomorrow.” Here yarın is an adverb of time, and sınav is the subject.
Yarınki sınav = “the exam tomorrow” as a single noun phrase. You need -ki to turn yarın into an adjective modifying sınav.

Could you replace sürmek with olmak and say yarınki sınav daha kısa olacak?

Yes, yarınki sınav daha kısa olacak (“tomorrow’s exam will be shorter/be short”) is grammatically fine.
sürmek focuses on the duration (it will last shorter).
olmak just says it will be short in quality or duration in a more general sense.