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Breakdown of Manzara resmi duvarda güzel görünüyor.
güzel
beautiful
görünmek
to look
duvar
the wall
-da
on
manzara resmi
the landscape painting
Questions & Answers about Manzara resmi duvarda güzel görünüyor.
What is the subject of Manzara resmi duvarda güzel görünüyor?
The subject is manzara resmi (“the landscape painting”). In Turkish, the subject typically appears at the beginning of the sentence.
Why doesn’t Turkish use words for “a” or “the” here?
Turkish has no indefinite or definite articles. Nouns stand alone without a or the, so manzara resmi can mean “a landscape painting” or “the landscape painting” based on context.
What case is duvarda, and why is it used?
Duvarda is the locative case (suffix -da after the vowel a). It means “on the wall” and marks the location where something appears.
Why does resmi end in -i? Is that the accusative case?
No. resim is the dictionary form of “picture,” which ends in -im. Here resmi has no extra suffix; it’s just the noun resim modified by manzara. There’s no accusative suffix because görünmek is intransitive and doesn’t take a direct object.
What does the verb görünüyor mean, and why is it used?
Görünüyor is the third‐person singular present continuous form of görünmek, meaning “to appear” or “to look (seem).” So güzel görünüyor literally means “it appears beautiful,” i.e. “it looks nice.”
How is görünüyor formed from görünmek?
- Drop -mek from görünmek, giving the stem görün-.
- Add the present‐continuous suffix -(i)yor, choosing -üyor by vowel harmony.
- No extra personal ending is needed for 3rd person singular.
How do we decide between -iyor, -ıyor, -uyor, and -üyor for the present continuous?
Use 4‐way vowel harmony based on the stem’s last vowel:
• If it’s a/ı, use -ıyor
• If e/i, use -iyor
• If o/u, use -uyor
• If ö/ü, use -üyor
In görün-, the last vowel is ü, so we use -üyor.
Why is güzel placed before görünüyor? Does it modify resim?
Here güzel functions adverbially, modifying the verb görün- (“to appear”). güzel görünmek is a common verb phrase meaning “to look nice.” Adverbs or adjectives like güzel usually come directly before the intransitive verb they modify.
Why is the locative phrase duvarda before the verb instead of after?
Turkish word order is generally Subject–(Object)–Adverbial–Verb. Locative adverbials like duvarda normally appear before the verb, not after it.
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