The Personal Endings, ❑Języki, ►Język turecki, turkish grammar


The Personal Endings (PEs) --
How to use'm,
not abuse'm...

In the Minority?

We may be in an inconsequential minority here,
but we've muddled up our
personal endings...
(Not those personal endings!
We mean the ones attached as suffixes
to Turkish
verb stems, nouns, pronouns, adjectives, and adverbs...)
...more than once, so we've decided to discuss
the two varieties that have given us the most trouble, together on a single page -- the better for us to observe and compare them during (recurrent) lapses of memory.

That's right, we too use these pages for reference.
And with our private
Web Page Search Engine,
we can find just
the right information, pretty fast -- and easily.
Now, if we could only convince our
Internet Service Providers to supply an Online Search Engine for you gentle readers...
Well, wouldn' tha' be nice...

Until that happens,
try finding what you need on the
LPT Site Contents and Index page

But we're not as mad as we may first appear -- because in many ways the personal endings for the verb stems, nouns, pronouns, adjectives, and adverbs are very similar.

Have a look for yourself, in the following paragraphs.

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Personal Endings (PEs) --
Definitions

  1. The Personal Verbal Endings/suffixes:
    are those
    PEs that you attach to verb stems, nouns, and adjectives -- to form verb-related constructions.

[For Example: When you attach the Personal Verbal Ending, '-ler', to the Wide-tense (Aorist) verb stem of görmek (which is görür), you get görürler; they see].
For more info, see the
Side-by-side Comparison Chart

.

  1. The Personal Possessive Endings/suffixes:
    are those
    PEs that you generally attach to nouns and pronouns and that are meant to show possession -- and that usually have nothing to do with verb-related constructions.

[For Example: When you attach the Personal Possessive Ending '-leri' to 'anne', you get anneleri; their mother]
For more info, see the
Side-by-side Comparison Chart.
or

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Side by Side Comparison
of the Personal Verbal
and the Personal Possessive Endings/suffixes

Special Note !!!
All endings in the following chart are subject to
the Rule of Vowel Harmony...

Personal Verbal Endings (PVE)

Personal Possessive Endings (PPE)

Type I
[attach to nouns, adjectives, and verb stems (except the definite past tense, -di stem)]

Type II
[only attach after the
definite past tense, -di stem]

After Consonants

After Vowels

-(y)im

  • цgretmenim
    I am a teacher

  • gidiyorum
    They say I go

-m

  • цgretmendim I was a teacher

  • gitmistim
    I had gone

-im

  • kitabIm
    my book

  • цrьmcegim my spider

-m

  • kapIm
    my door

  • sapkam
    my hat

-sin

  • gidiyorsun
    you are going

  • delisin
    you're crazy

-n

  • gidiyordun
    you were going

  • delidin
    you were crazy

-in

  • kalemin
    your pen

  • fIncanIn
    your coffee cup

-n

  • kedin
    your cat

  • araban
    your car

(-dir)
[doesn't have to
be present always ...]

  • avukattIr
    she's a lawyer

  • uзacak-
    he will fly

--
(no personal ending)

  • avukattI
    she was a lawyer-

  • uзtu-
    he flew

-i

  • bisikleti
    his bicycle

  • gцzlьgь
    her eyeglasses

-si

  • masasI
    his table

  • havlusu
    her towel

-(y)iz

  • iyiyiz
    we are well

  • evlenecegiz
    we will marry

  • gьleriz
    we laugh

-k

  • iyidik
    we were well

  • evlendik
    we married

  • gьldьk
    we laughed

-imiz

  • makbuzumuz our
    receipt

  • sekerimiz
    our candy

-miz

  • цlзьmьz
    our measurement

  • iзkimiz
    our drink

-siniz

  • kцtьsьnьz
    you are bad

  • misafirimizsiniz you are
    our guests

  • geliyor musunuz? are you all
    coming?

-niz

  • kцtьdьnьz
    you were bad

  • misafirimizdiniz you were
    our guests

  • geliyor muydunuz? were you all
    coming?

-iniz

  • makasInIz
    your scissors

  • feneriniz
    your flashlight

-niz

  • ayakkabInIz your shoes

  • klavyeniz
    your keyboard

-(dir)(ler)
[these endings can also
appear in reverse order,
but they are not
always present...]

  • tembeldirler
    they are lazy

  • Iyorlar
    they are opening

  • gitmeyecekler mi?
    aren't they going to go?

  • gцrьrler
    they see

  • (Example where no verbal ending required)
    domuzlar kokar
    -
    pigs stink

-ler

  • tembeldiler
    they were lazy

  • aзtIlar
    they opened

  • gitmediler mi?
    didn't they go?

-leri

  • koltuklarI
    their easy chair

  • gьnleri
    their days

-leri

  • anneleri
    their mother(s)

  • babalarI
    their father(s)

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Confusions that may arise

Since the Personal Endings are so similar 0x01 graphic
to each other and because they are identical in looks to other types of endings, it's not surprising that confusion may arise in their use and interpretation.

For example, depending on the sentence it's found in...

  1. зocuklarI can mean his/her/its children -- that's because 'зocuklar' can represent the plural of 'child' and, when you attach the 3rd personal singular, Personal Possessive Ending 'I' it means 'his/her/its'. Thus, his/her/its children...

  2. зocuklarI can mean their child -- that's because 'зocuk' can represent the singular of 'child' and, when you attach the 3rd person plural, Personal Possessive Ending 'larI' it means 'their'. Thus, their child...

  3. зocuklarI can mean their children -- that's because 'зocuklar' can represent the plural of child and, when you attach the 3rd person, Plural Personal Possessive Ending 'larI' it means 'their'. Thus, their children... (Note: You only see one 'lar' in this construction because 'larlar' can't occur in Turkish. So, one 'lar' must be dropped.)

  4. зocuklarI can mean the children -- that's because 'зocuklar' can represent the plural of 'child' and when you attach the 'direct object' Case Ending 'I' (which is identical in appearance to the 3rd person singular, Personal Possessive Ending), it means 'the'. Thus, the children...

In another confusing instance, зocuklarIn can mean...

  1. your children -- that's because 'зocuklar' can represent the plural of 'child' and, when you attach the Personal Possessive Ending 'In' it means 'your' which results in
    your children...

  2. of the children -- that's because 'зocuklar'
    can represent the plural of '
    child' and
    when you attach
    the
    Case Ending 'In' - which is identical in appearance to the Personal Possessive Ending that
    we just used, in the previous paragraph -

    it means '
    of' which results in
    of the children...

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No worry, mate.
We'll talk more about
Case Endings on another page.
(sometime...)

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Does any of this make sense to you, Marvin?
Uh... Can I get back to you on that one, Mabel?

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'Oddball' Uses of the 'Personal Possessive Endings' (PPEs)

It's probably too strong to call these uses 'Oddball'.

Or is it?

Well, we call'em 'oddball' if they are addressed by any of the following list items. What do you think?

  1. When attached to verb stems, the PPEs help form 'Past Personal' or 'Future Personal' Participles in Turkish...

  2. ...but sometimes not. And when not, they may simply be 'faux-participles'. The best way to quickly understand 'faux-participles' is to observe an example of one. Click the following hyper-link to see a 'faux-participle' in action. And click this next hyper-link to see another...

  3. When PPEs get involved with saying "when", we often dive for cover...Do you remember our heavy duty charts on this interesting Turkish language construction? Actually, no, I don't. Remind me, please.

  4. When PPEs are attached to interrogatives they can raise serious questions...For example, when you attach the 1st person singular PPE, '-im' to the interrogative 'ne' you get an oddball pronoun, nem or neyim meaning what of mine? And, it doesn't end there -- as the chart reveals...

say what?

Singular

Plural

nem? or neyim?

what of mine?

nen? or neyimiz?

what of ours?

nen? or neyin?

what of yours?

neniz? or neyiniz?

what of yours (pl.)?

nesi? or neyi?

what of his/hers/its?

neleri?

what of theirs?

  1. And when PPEs are attached to certain adjectives and even adverbs, in oddball ways, we get extremely nervous...For example, when you start adding PPEs to oddball adjectives, like hangi (which) then you start getting oddball pronouns, like...

which of...?

Singular

Plural

---

---

hangimiz?

which of us?

---

---

hanginiz?

which of you (all)?

hangisi?

which one of them?

hangileri?

which (ones) of them?

  1. Or when you anoint good ole ordinary adverbs, like çok; much, very, many with PPEs, they turn into oddball pronouns (or even adjectives) -- right before your very eyes...

most...

Singular

Plural

---

---

çogumuz

most of us

---

---

çogunuz

most of you

çogu
(as pronoun)

most of it, most of them

çoklarI, as in bir çoklarI

a good many of them

çogu
(as adjective),
e.g. çogu zaman

most times, most often

---

---



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