*This comment for the whole people who want to learn turish language not just commenting for the youtuber* To learn turkey fast you need to change your phone to turkey language system and all your games uncluding whatsapp and youtube and contacting apps so it will be much easier to learn I'm just trying to learn I'm not saying that because I know turkey I just downloading duolingo and I just started yesterday I'm a moroccan and I learn English fast because in Corona I was playing in roblox with American people and contacting with American people and I never studied English last year and for French too I'm an original Muslim arab from the adarissa family of prophet Mohammad So do this tips and you will learn fast! Edit: never start using duolingo to learn any language because it give you words first so start watch videos like those, because you need alphabets pronouns first then words❤❤❤❤ Good luck and have nice life *to the youtuber: thanks for the videos ! You have an amazing pronunciations and good tip thank you sooo much (Sen en iyisisin, teşekkürler!)
Thank you Julide, I have an interest in learning the Turkish language and the way you teach and speak each vowel and consonant is such a clear and easy to follow way of learning the language. Thank you so much.
I would love to see a video dedicated to pronouncing the "R" letter. It seems to be done differently when it's at the beginning vs middle vs end of a word. As an English speaker, it's a very difficult.
In general you have to roll your R's a little like Americans or west country speakers of England or like how you have to say "R's" from the back of the throat like in the German language. It is mostly difficult for British English speakers who say the "r" sound with a closed mouth. if you don't Rrrrooolll roll the "r" in Turkish most Turks will not understand you.
I started watching a Turkish telenovela this weekend, it's dubbed but there is often text in Turkish, I don't speak Turkish but I would at least like to have the correct pronunciation in my head of certain words when reading them , now I realize that I have read everything wrong, it is by reading them correctly that we have a chance of learning, even if some translations are fanciful. It's "Brave and Beautiful".
First viewer 🤚... Love this session...❤ One of of my Long awaited dreams.....very excited now in hoping to learn Turkish soon❤❤.. Thank u so much dear 😘😘😘
Just starting with Turkish and I'm noticing how sometimes "e" sounds that in English (e.g. get, set, Beth), and sometimes more like an "a" (like ban, man, grab). In two examples she gives "el" and "ben", the two vowels sound pretty different to me. Of course it's nothing compared to the variation found in English though.
That is correct. It all depends on the word. But no Turkish Teachers fully explain it. And trying to find out in which words these changes happen is very difficult for non Turkish speakers to discover.
Never understood this about Russian and Turkish speakers. If the "V" sound exists in the language, why do English words (in this case 'vowel' ) always get rendered as "wowel'? But veery helpful introduction... thanks.
I'm from tunisia i want to learning turkish but my problem in the learning process it's to find the FeedBack like duolingo, can you help me please All love from Tunisia 🇹🇳
1:59 I swear I thought I was doing good, but on the second time pronouncing it she gave me a look that said "no that was horrendous, it's said like this", and I pronounced it even worse. But I think I'm pretty good at this. 🙃 I almost wanna learn Turkish now.
Am South African and since our etv no longer give us Turkish Series then I have to teach myself Turkish language so that I don't rely on a tv channel but myself.As am writing this comment I have a week trying to learn few Turkish words , eg , that Gunaydin is Good morning , araba is a car , Yok is no , tabe is of course, babum I guess it means my father and if I don't say the correct meaning of babum please tell me , hi is Merhaba.
A Turkish person who doesn’t know how to read in English would read your name as ‘Loujie’ as someone said above (I wrote it in a different way just to prevent a possible confusion/misunderstanding) But if you want to write your name according to the Turkish writing rules then it would be ‘Lusi’.
Merhaba arkadaşlar 🙂 I have a question. I am now learning present aorist tense and i was wondering if words with 2 syllables that end with a vowel will follow r rule or the ır/ir/ur/ür rule?
That's how my beautiful name's spelling people write around the world (Suhail, Sohail, Soheil) UAE, Pakistan, Iran respectively so you tell me how to write "SOHAIL" in Turkish or Turkiye
Watching a Turkish drama and am terrified that they might stop the English subtitles so I want to learn Turkish in case I don’t get those eng subtitles
The letter ğ doesn’t have a sound actually. You just pronounce the letter before ğ longer. For example, the word ‘yağmur’ is read as ‘yaamur’. I hope it helps.
Hopefully this helps. Looking at words that can these sounds in English are: J contains the ipa symbol [ʒ] genre, pleasure, equation, seizure C contains the ipa symbol [dʒ] jeans, jump
as a Turk i should say that we don't say r like z/s at end of words on purpose, most of us don't even realize it and some deny it, but we do 😅 @@fazgamerx
But always the same . The only problem could be ‘a’sound. This is because arabic and farsic words inTürkçe. Pure Turkish words do not the same problem.
Turks actually have four alphabets, two of which are specific: the Uyghur one, similar to Mongol traditional script, written in vertical. The old Turkic one, which is a runic alphabet written from right to left 𐱅𐰇𐰼𐰰. Than you have the Latin script adapted for Turkish and the Arabic one for the Ottoman language
No, v in Turkish is pronounced as v in English. I’m saying this as a native Turkish speaker. Did you say that because of her pronunciation of the word ‘vowel’ or what?