Tarama başladı.

Breakdown of Tarama başladı.

başlamak
to start
tarama
the scanning
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Questions & Answers about Tarama başladı.

Why is there no subject pronoun in Tarama başladı?
In Turkish, the subject is often omitted when it’s clear or generic. Here tarama (“scanning”/“the scan”) is the logical subject in the nominative case, so you don’t need to add o (“it”) or any other pronoun. Literally it reads “Scanning started.”
Is tarama a verb or a noun here?
It’s a noun formed from the verb taramak (“to scan”). In Turkish, you often turn verbs into nouns by adding -ma/-me, so taramaktarama, meaning “a scan” or “the act of scanning.”
Why isn’t tarama in the dative case (taramaya)?
You could say taramaya başlamak (“to start scanning”), but that’s a different construction: the action word in dative + başlamak. In Tarama başladı, tarama itself is the subject, not the object of başlamak, so it stays in the nominative.
What is the difference between Tarama başladı and Taramaya başlandı?

Both mean “Scanning has started,” but:

  • Tarama başladı treats tarama as the subject (“The scan started”).
  • Taramaya başlandı uses the impersonal passive form of başlamak (with -lAn-), meaning literally “It was begun to scan,” i.e. “One has started scanning.”
How is başladı formed?
Başladı is the 3rd-person singular simple past of başlamak (“to start”). You take the stem başla- and add the past tense suffix -dı, which harmonizes to -dı because the last vowel in başla is a (a back vowel).
How would you negate this sentence?

Insert the negative suffix -ma into the verb before the past suffix:
başlamak → başlamamak → başlamadı
So you get Tarama başlamadı (“Scanning did not start”).

How do you say “Scanning is starting” (present continuous)?

Use the present continuous suffix -yor on başla-:
başlamak → başla + yor → başlıyor
So: Tarama başlıyor (“Scanning is starting”).

Can you add an explicit subject like “We started scanning”?

Yes. If you want to say “We started scanning,” you’d use the dative pattern:
Taramaya başladık.
Here taramaya is “to scanning,” başladık is “we started.”