Telafuzunuz çok kötü. D'ye b dediniz. Through'da ğ sesi çıkmaz ve truğ diye okunmaz. Görüntüye daha çok özen gösterirseniz daha iyi olur zira komik video sanıp girdim. Onun dışında sonuçta bir emek var teşekkürler.
many languages have phonetic alphabets, Serbian language is influenced by Turkish a bit but I think its even more phonetic, because all consonants here end with e while in serbian it ends with unarticulated sound "ugh"
in other words there is no vocal a e i o u in end of consonants in serb language
tesekkurler" comes from arabic meaning i am grateful to you sağol is turkish meaning be alive(live long) buth are used. sağol is more collaqual&friendly
dalka gecenlere burdan agzımı bozmak ıstemıyorum.. Bu arada vıdeo ıcın cok ıyı dusunussunuz helal olsun tek kelımeyle super dılımızı ne kadar olurlsa olsun ıllakı merak edıp arayan vardın onlar ıcın hazırladıgınız ıcın tesekkur edıyorum sıze
Lol, I got a Turkish background. My name is Can, so you can imagine what it was like growing up in an English-speaking country.
Though i pronounce my name, and tell others it's pronouced as "JARN". When i hear other Turk's pronounce it, it's more of a snapping "JUN". I'm probably killing the Turkish language... but oh well.
kime tutae seni be abiciyim... ama sana bir sorum olacak sana türkce ögrenmek icin e-posta gönderen oldu mu, cevabi evet ise genelde hangi ülkeden di???? cevabina sevinirim...saygilar
Well, we can give mandarine chinese,swahili,azeri turkish, viatnemese and thai language freely in addittion to the free hug. Just think well before bargaining and do not bargain when you take LSD
One last clarification. When I refer to the word 'ben' in Turkish being pronounced 'more or less like the word "ban" in Engish,' I am not saying that it is exactly the same as 'ban' in English. I am merely using that as a point of reference for English speakers. The sound actually rests between the sounds in 'penny' and 'land'.
Unfortunately, the claim that 'the letters retain their individual pronunciation at all times'is false. For example, the letter 'e' has one sound in the word 'Ben' (meaning 'I' in English) which sounds more or less like the word 'ban' in English and another in 'tencere' ('pot' in English) where the first syllable sounds much closer to 'ten' in English.
actually that is an accent. the most proper way to say Ben (and anywhere else you see an E) would be with the same pronunciation (e as in Eric). In Azeri however we use an ə for the "A" as in apple.
farzin007, sorry to disappoint you, but I am a phonologist who works with hundreds of educated Turks from all over Turkey and I assure you it is not an accent at all. Please do not take it as an insult.
chiavaio, don't worry about insulting or disappointing me. If I turns out that I am mistaken, I will have learned something new. But can you point to any legitimate sources that say the "Bən" pronunciation is more academic then the "Ben" pronunciation.
farzin007, a reasonable request. However, I didn't really say one sound was more academic. I merely said that it was the one that educated native speakers tend to produce. I couldn't find anything accessible to you on the internet that is making a claim quite as detailed as the one I was making, but the following three academic sources support my claim that sounds similar to those in 'land' and 'pen' are both heard heard as /e/ by speakers of Turkish.
I agree educated native speakers do tend to produce it. When I speak Turkish, I inevitably produce it. In written Azerbaijani we make a distinction between the two (e vs ə). However I always considered the E as in pen pronunciation as more proper for Turkish. I could be wrong.
Every language on the face of the Earth has what are called phonemes (the psychological concept of sounds) and their allophones (the different physical realizations of the phonemes). English for instance, has only one letter 'l' but two realizations of this sound.
In the word 'lip' there is what is called a 'light l' and in the word 'hull' there is what is called a 'dark l'. English speakers are usually completely unaware of this difference, as are Turkish speakers of the difference I pointed out initially.
Telafuzunuz çok kötü. D'ye b dediniz. Through'da ğ sesi çıkmaz ve truğ diye okunmaz. Görüntüye daha çok özen gösterirseniz daha iyi olur zira komik video sanıp girdim. Onun dışında sonuçta bir emek var teşekkürler.
adram3lech 1 month ago
@adram3lech daha iysini yaparsanız istifade ederiz inşallah şimdiden teşekkürler
hitturkey24 1 month ago
This has been flagged as spam show
hi girls, my name is irfan from turkey, girls please add me, i will help to you about turkish... But please just girls ;)
handsome.irfan55@hotmail.com
crazy_irfan_55@yahoo.com
i wait you add me ;)
irfankalkar 3 months ago
thats not the point ...
junky888 10 months ago
amca konusmadan, telaffuzdan ve tipten baya kaybediyor. :D
alicancagil 1 year ago
dayi ne dion ya
boylekimse bir sey anlamaz .....
The21Muro 2 years ago
amca tipten kaybedion :D:D
furque666 2 years ago 3
@furque666 haha güldürmeyin lan adamı
esraretin 8 months ago
many languages have phonetic alphabets, Serbian language is influenced by Turkish a bit but I think its even more phonetic, because all consonants here end with e while in serbian it ends with unarticulated sound "ugh"
in other words there is no vocal a e i o u in end of consonants in serb language
maybe in Russian too..
MARKO0oO 2 years ago
dsıxhcjsdamcx
sikkirigi 3 years ago
tipe bak amcam senin türkçe konuştuğuna inanmıyorum :D
rehanfec88 3 years ago
where's the free hugs ? : )
zingapura 3 years ago 3
and bisey dehil means your welcome hahah
junky888 3 years ago
@junky888 its written as " biR şey deĞil " ...
colintansel 1 year ago
Thank you!
WendellUrth 3 years ago
d yi b okuyo amk
nikkifore 3 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
you fkn turksish DOG !.. hahahhaha jokessssss.. but i dont get what ur talking about....
wrsslol 3 years ago
wrsslol have some respect for this man,he is older and wiser than you,he even could be your father !
It dosen't matter nationalities, we are all humans,and if you show no respect, you will have no respect
MrKriminaL88 3 years ago 3
heeeyt baba beee :)
kucukCAYkasiklari 3 years ago
kürt
ghistenharman 3 years ago
and tesekkür ederim means I thank you :D
gfbgfb37 3 years ago
both are used as thank you
hitturkey24 3 years ago
what is the difference between "sagol" and "tesekkurler" and "Tesekkür ederim" ??
thank you.
mimonita 3 years ago
tesekkurler" comes from arabic meaning i am grateful to you sağol is turkish meaning be alive(live long) buth are used. sağol is more collaqual&friendly
hitturkey24 3 years ago
emege saygi
gfbgfb37 3 years ago
sağol
hitturkey24 3 years ago
abi senin meslegin nedir?
ServetCetin81 3 years ago
tercüman/rehber/yazar
hitturkey24 3 years ago
siktir la´n
TurqualityRST58 3 years ago
I am learning turkish and this is all very helpful.
786HKHM 3 years ago
kardesim alien sey neoldu? hahaha
CaseClosed23 3 years ago
tesekkur ederim sen
i have lernt so much
allah amant ol
h205a00l 3 years ago
SAĞOL
hitturkey24 3 years ago
Thanks a lot! It's very helpful for me to learn Turkish. Keep the good job!
cheekypixie007 3 years ago
pleasure
hitturkey24 3 years ago
güzel olmuş
emeğinize sağlık
bi arkadaşım Türkçe öğrenmek istiyodu
bunu ona gösteririm
BeatOfTheHeat 3 years ago
sağol,gözüne sağlık
hitturkey24 3 years ago
thanks for clip
i interest about turkish but so hard to find lesson in here
sidaphun 4 years ago
cok guzel olmus, tebrik ederim gercektende akillica. umarim cok daha gelisir ve istediginiz amaca ulastirir sizi.
hayirli gunler ve tekrar tesekkurler.
mertert 4 years ago
teşekkürler. beğenmeniz beni çok sevinirdi.iyi günler
hitturkey24 4 years ago
Eline emeğine sağlık abi. YouTube' u faydalı işler için de kullanan var demek ki
garfield98 4 years ago
Sağol senin de.İnşallah bir süre sonra bu tip olanaklar insanlarınyararına kullanılmaya dönecek. sağlık ve esenlikler
hitturkey24 4 years ago
whatup bro
clramg 4 years ago
adam- means man in turkish.
xQueuex 4 years ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
Turkey,chicken lol
turgay and all XD
Gameplayery 4 years ago
i love you
Gameplayery 4 years ago
dalka gecenlere burdan agzımı bozmak ıstemıyorum.. Bu arada vıdeo ıcın cok ıyı dusunussunuz helal olsun tek kelımeyle super dılımızı ne kadar olurlsa olsun ıllakı merak edıp arayan vardın onlar ıcın hazırladıgınız ıcın tesekkur edıyorum sıze
messier211 4 years ago
Lol, I got a Turkish background. My name is Can, so you can imagine what it was like growing up in an English-speaking country.
Though i pronounce my name, and tell others it's pronouced as "JARN". When i hear other Turk's pronounce it, it's more of a snapping "JUN". I'm probably killing the Turkish language... but oh well.
UnionKidz 4 years ago
u r welcome= birşey değil. from ur video one can really see that u love turkey. we want to c u u in Turkey always
hitturkey24 4 years ago
hi thanks for the lessons in turkish! i love ur language :) / From Sweden
nessah01 4 years ago
Abi helal olsun youtube'da çok olumlu işler yapıyorsun...
Azapx 4 years ago
SAĞOL FAYDALANDIĞINA SEVİNDİM
hitturkey24 4 years ago
"ğ" yi çok beğendim..
very nice broo.. :D
mxblitz 4 years ago
bravo abi 5 point thats the grage lesson learn turkish guys its hart to pronans but its realy soft langugish
gunes1907 4 years ago
emeğinize saygı duyuyorum..
konkonkoza 4 years ago
teşekkürler
hitturkey24 4 years ago
hahahahahaha hahahahahaha hahahahahaha hahahahaahah hahaahahahaah hahaahahahaaha
wayy bee amca sen neymissin bole, senin sayende okumayi tekrar ogrendim.
orhun20 4 years ago
kime tutae seni be abiciyim... ama sana bir sorum olacak sana türkce ögrenmek icin e-posta gönderen oldu mu, cevabi evet ise genelde hangi ülkeden di???? cevabina sevinirim...saygilar
s10zeybek 4 years ago
210 million speak turkish?? oh really?? wow, arent you including the ones speaking turkic languages like kazakh, uyghur, etc ??
pedromqz 4 years ago
i am
hitturkey24 4 years ago
Hey, where are the hugs?... you cheater ...
give me a hug now... and don't be so serious...
nkmarks 4 years ago
that is after learning Turkish and coming to Turkey-like ten thousands of Greek tourists- after drinking a Turkish cofee
hitturkey24 4 years ago
I just want a free hug...
TryLSDnow 4 years ago
Well, we can give mandarine chinese,swahili,azeri turkish, viatnemese and thai language freely in addittion to the free hug. Just think well before bargaining and do not bargain when you take LSD
hitturkey24 4 years ago
Heyt be hacıya bak türkçe dersi veriyor hahaha
yürrü be kim tutar seni =))
swatzz 4 years ago
One last clarification. When I refer to the word 'ben' in Turkish being pronounced 'more or less like the word "ban" in Engish,' I am not saying that it is exactly the same as 'ban' in English. I am merely using that as a point of reference for English speakers. The sound actually rests between the sounds in 'penny' and 'land'.
chiavaio 4 years ago
Unfortunately, the claim that 'the letters retain their individual pronunciation at all times'is false. For example, the letter 'e' has one sound in the word 'Ben' (meaning 'I' in English) which sounds more or less like the word 'ban' in English and another in 'tencere' ('pot' in English) where the first syllable sounds much closer to 'ten' in English.
This is just one example among many.
chiavaio 4 years ago
actually that is an accent. the most proper way to say Ben (and anywhere else you see an E) would be with the same pronunciation (e as in Eric). In Azeri however we use an ə for the "A" as in apple.
farzin007 4 years ago
farzin007, sorry to disappoint you, but I am a phonologist who works with hundreds of educated Turks from all over Turkey and I assure you it is not an accent at all. Please do not take it as an insult.
chiavaio 4 years ago
chiavaio, don't worry about insulting or disappointing me. If I turns out that I am mistaken, I will have learned something new. But can you point to any legitimate sources that say the "Bən" pronunciation is more academic then the "Ben" pronunciation.
best regards
farzin007 4 years ago
farzin007, a reasonable request. However, I didn't really say one sound was more academic. I merely said that it was the one that educated native speakers tend to produce. I couldn't find anything accessible to you on the internet that is making a claim quite as detailed as the one I was making, but the following three academic sources support my claim that sounds similar to those in 'land' and 'pen' are both heard heard as /e/ by speakers of Turkish.
chiavaio 4 years ago
I agree educated native speakers do tend to produce it. When I speak Turkish, I inevitably produce it. In written Azerbaijani we make a distinction between the two (e vs ə). However I always considered the E as in pen pronunciation as more proper for Turkish. I could be wrong.
farzin007 4 years ago
There are a host of other ways letters in Turkish can represent multiple sounds. If you are interested I can list further examples.
chiavaio 4 years ago
Every language on the face of the Earth has what are called phonemes (the psychological concept of sounds) and their allophones (the different physical realizations of the phonemes). English for instance, has only one letter 'l' but two realizations of this sound.
chiavaio 4 years ago
In the word 'lip' there is what is called a 'light l' and in the word 'hull' there is what is called a 'dark l'. English speakers are usually completely unaware of this difference, as are Turkish speakers of the difference I pointed out initially.
chiavaio 4 years ago
cok guzel
SecretPrince 4 years ago
SAĞOL
hitturkey24 4 years ago
iyi iyi turkceyi öğret
aferem :D
cezateam 5 years ago
very educational thx ama inşallah izleyen çıkar
alperoz49 5 years ago