Breakdown of Emlakçı bana kartvizit verdi.
Questions & Answers about Emlakçı bana kartvizit verdi.
What exactly does emlakçı mean? Is it gendered?
Do I need a subject pronoun like “he/she” in Turkish here?
Why are there no articles like the or a in the sentence?
Turkish has no articles. Definite vs. indefinite is handled by context and case-marking:
- Definite direct objects take the accusative (e.g., kartviziti = the business card).
- Indefinite direct objects are usually bare (e.g., kartvizit = a business card).
- Indefinite subjects are typically marked with bir.
Do I need bir before kartvizit to mean “a business card”?
If I mean “A realtor…,” should I say Bir emlakçı?
What does bana mean and how is it formed?
Bana is the dative form of ben (I), meaning “to me.” The dative marks a recipient/direction. Useful contrasts:
- Dative (to): bana, sana, ona, bize, size, onlara
- Accusative (me): beni
- Locative (on/at me): bende
- Ablative (from me): benden
- Genitive (my): benim
Why is it bana, not something like bene?
Why doesn’t kartvizit have an ending? Shouldn’t it be kartviziti?
Because it’s an indefinite direct object. In Turkish, indefinite objects are unmarked: kartvizit = a business card. If you mean a specific/known card, use the accusative: kartviziti. Compare:
- Emlakçı bana kartvizit verdi. = …gave me a business card.
- Emlakçı bana kartviziti verdi. = …gave me the business card.
What tense is verdi, and what is the verb?
Verdi is the simple past (-DI) of vermek (to give), 3rd person singular: “(he/she) gave.” Examples:
- I gave: verdim
- You gave: verdin
- He/She gave: verdi
- We gave: verdik
- You (pl/formal) gave: verdiniz
- They gave: verdiler
What’s the difference between verdi, vermiş, veriyor, and verir?
- verdi: simple/certain past (I know it happened).
- vermiş: reported/inferred past (“apparently/it seems (s/he) gave”).
- veriyor: present continuous (“is giving/keeps giving”).
- verir: aorist/habitual (“gives” in general truths/habits).
Is the word order SOV? Can I move things around for emphasis?
Default is subject – indirect object – direct object – verb, and the element right before the verb is typically in focus.
- Neutral: Emlakçı bana kartvizit verdi.
- Focus on the recipient (“to me”): Emlakçı kartviziti bana verdi.
- Focus on the object (“the card” vs. something else): Emlakçı bana kartviziti verdi. Fronting for topic is also possible (e.g., Bana emlakçı kartvizit verdi), but the main focus still sits before the verb.
How do I make it a yes–no question?
Add the question particle, which harmonizes as mi/mı/mü/mu, after the verb phrase:
- Emlakçı bana kartvizit verdi mi? = Did the realtor give me a business card?
How do I say it in the negative?
Use the negative marker -me/-ma before the past ending:
- Emlakçı bana kartvizit vermedi. = The realtor didn’t give me a business card.
How do I say “He gave me his business card”?
Add 3rd‑person possessive + accusative to the object:
- Emlakçı bana kartvizitini verdi. (literally “gave me his/her business card,” definite and possessed)
Any pronunciation tips for these words?
- ç = ch in “church” (e.g., emlakçı = em-lak-chı).
- ı (dotless i) = a close, back unrounded vowel (like a quick, unstressed “uh”).
- Stress is usually toward the last syllable: em-lak-ÇI, kart-vi-ZİT, ver-Dİ.
Is kartvizit one word or two?
Can I omit bana?
How do I talk about multiple cards?
Use a quantity word for an indefinite plural:
- Birkaç kartvizit verdi. = He gave (me) a few business cards. Definite plural takes the accusative plural form:
- Kartvizitleri verdi. = He gave (me) the business cards. (definite)
What’s a natural way to say “I got a business card from the realtor”?
Switch perspective to the recipient with almak and the ablative:
- Ben emlakçıdan kartvizit aldım. = I got a business card from the realtor.
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