Eatha Kitt-Uska Dara

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Uploaded by on Dec 31, 2009

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Music

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Uploader Comments (194871max)

  • what does 'locum docum duru' mean?

  • @003nkodt Üsküdara gideriken aldda bir yamur:

    Kâtibimin setiresi uzun etei çamur.

    Kâtip uykudan uyanm gözleri mahmur,

    Kâtip benim ben kâtibin elne karr ?

    Kâtibime kulal da gömlek ne güzel yakr !

  • greetings from Turkey. but uska dara sounds like indian. anyway great song

  • @turkoman19  Eartha Mae Kitt (January 17, 1927 – December 25, 2008[2]) was an American actress, singer and cabaret star.

  • Harika...Love it!!!!

  • @LCYTO I think so. This Song is Immortality!

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All Comments (42)

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  • " locum " is turkish delight , a sweet or candy , the girl in the song feeds candy to her boyfriend .

  • :) süpeer 

  • çok hoş walla beğendim:)9

  • Actually, this really wants me to learn Turkish.

    Sounds like a sexy language...like some "Latin" form of Asiatic, lean and precise, a bit like Persian, know what I mean, but how shall I say, it still feels closer to Hindi or Urdu in my ear, albeit not Indo-Arian, nor sino-asiatic, like Japanese or Chinese. And it is definitely NOT near to Arabic at all. A very interesting language. Must do some research.

  • @194871max :)

  • @maviay48 Thanks for the explanation anyway.I just can't get enough wit this song,even though i don't understand it I feel it a lot.:):)

  • @003nkodt hi there. Infact There she says 'lokum doldurdum' Lokum means 'Turkish Delight'. It's like jelly-marshmellow or candy something like that. ' Doldurdum' means I loaded or I put up something on it. In the song she says: In Uskudar ( a town in Istanbul Turkey) I found a handkerchief and then put some Lokum (Turkish Delight) on it. It's a very very old folk song in Turkish music history.

  • @54Turkiye but songs like this isn't some canonical law or verse where people have to abide to an "official" format. That erodes the spirit of the "folk" song. The singer could have been anybody, even someone Turkish, what then? Just look on the bright side: a Turkish folk song has had enough recognition to be sung all the way across the Atlantic.

  • @TheBtr73 maybe that part about the fat man's belly is a metaphor? :P

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