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Questions & Answers about Valiz ağır.
How is Valiz ağır literally structured and what's its meaning in English?
It literally reads “Suitcase heavy”, which in English we render as The suitcase is heavy.
Why is there no to be verb like is in the sentence?
Turkish normally omits the present-tense copula (to be) in nominal sentences. So instead of saying Valiz ağırdır, you simply say Valiz ağır in everyday speech.
Why does the adjective ağır come after the noun valiz? I thought Turkish adjectives always precede nouns.
When used attributively (directly modifying a noun), adjectives indeed precede: ağır valiz (heavy suitcase). But when an adjective functions as a predicate (describing the subject in a sentence), it follows the noun: Valiz ağır (The suitcase is heavy).
Why isn't there an article like the or a before valiz, and why does valiz have no suffix?
Turkish has no articles. Nouns in the nominative case (the subject of a sentence) appear without any suffix. Definiteness or indefiniteness is inferred from context or made explicit with determiners like bir (a) or o (that).
How would I say a suitcase is heavy (indefinite) versus the suitcase is heavy (definite)?
• Indefinite: Bir valiz ağır. (A suitcase is heavy.)
• Definite: O valiz ağır. (That/the suitcase is heavy.)
Omitting bir or o leaves it contextually ambiguous.
Do adjectives like ağır change for number, gender or case in Turkish?
No. Adjectives in Turkish are invariable: they never take number, gender or case endings. Whether the noun is singular or plural, masculine or feminine, the adjective remains ağır.
What effect does adding -mış to ağır have, as in Valiz ağırmış?
The suffix -mış marks inferential or hearsay past. Valiz ağırmış means apparently the suitcase is heavy or I hear the suitcase is heavy, implying secondhand information. Valiz ağır states it as a fact.
When should I use Valiz ağırdır instead of Valiz ağır?
Adding -dır is a formal written or emphatic copula. Use Valiz ağırdır in written language, formal speech, definitions or when you want to stress certainty. In casual conversation, Valiz ağır is preferred.
How do I form questions and negations with this structure?
• Question: add the particle mı/mi/mu/mü after the adjective (vowel harmony): Valiz ağır mı? (Is the suitcase heavy?)
• Negation: insert değil after the adjective: Valiz ağır değil. (The suitcase isn't heavy.)