Degrees of Adjectives.docx
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Degrees of Adjectives
Comparatives and superlatives are constructed in a very straightforward way in Turkish. Besides
these, there is a special way of making adjectives stronger in Turkish and this is not very trivial. I
this lesson, we will cover all these topics.
1. Comparatives
1.1. More, Less
Comparative of an adjective is obtained by adding the word "daha" before the adjective. We cansay that daha is the word formore and all adjective comparatives are constructed like 'more
clever' (not like faster).
faster --> daha hzl
slower --> daha yava
more intelligent --> daha zeki
more hardworking --> daha alkan
more beautiful --> daha gzel
If you want to say less beautiful or less hardworking, then replace the word 'daha'with 'daha az'.
less fast --> daha az hzl
less intelligent --> daha az zeki
less hardworking --> daha az alkan
less beautiful --> daha az gzel
Now, let's see how the comparative form of an adjective is used in sentences.
I am beautiful. --> (Ben) gzelim.
I am more beautiful. --> (Ben) daha gzelim.
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You are more beautiful. --> (Sen) daha gzelsin.
She is more beautiful. --> (O) daha gzel.
This is a fast car. --> Bu hzl bir araba.
This is a faster car. --> Bu daha hzl bir araba.
This car is faster. --> Bu araba daha hzl.
1.2. More than
If you want to compare two nouns with respect to an adjective, the structure used in English is asfollows:
noun1 is moreadjectivethannoun2
Ex1: Ahmet is more hardworking than Mehmet.
Ex2: I am more intelligent than you.
The structure to express the same meaning in Turkish is as follows:
noun1noun2-den daha adjective
Ex1: Ahmet Mehmet'ten daha alkan. (Note that the ' sign is used to separate private namesfrom their suffixes)
Ex2:Ben senden daha zekiyim.
Now, let's see a few example sentences with this expression.
- Beril is beautiful. --> Beril gzel.
- Gke is more beautiful. --> Gke daha gzel.
- Gke is more beautiful than Beril. --> Gke Beril'den daha gzel.
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- He is more hardworking than me. --> Obenden daha alkan.
- My car is faster than your car. --> Benim arabam senin arabandan daha hzl.
- US is larger than Turkey. --> Amerika Trkiye'den daha byk.
1.3. As ... as
If you want to say that two nouns are equal with respect to an adjective, the strctre used inEnglish is:
noun1 is asadjectiveasnoun2
Ex1: Beril is as beautiful as Gke.
Ex2: I am as beautiful as you.
The structure to express the same meaning in Turkish is as follows:
.ouonouoradakeviacjda
no
ouondouoradakeviacjda
Both of these expressions have the same meaning, you will understand the very slightdifference
as you see them used. One point to note here is that ifnoun2 is a simple pronoun (like ben, sen,
bu, u) then it is used in possessive form (like benim, senin, bunun, unun).
Ex1: Beril de Gke kadar gzel.
Ex2: Ben de senin kadar gzelim.
Now, let's see a few example sentences with this expression.
- Beril is beautiful. --> Beril gzel.
- Gke is also beautiful. --> Gke de gzel. (de means 'also', 'as well')
- Gke is as beautifl as Beril. --> Gke de Beril kadar gzel.
- He is as hardworking as me. --> O da benim kadar alkan.
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- My car is as fast as your car. --> Benim arabam da senin araban kadar hzl.
- US is almost as large as China. --> Amerika neredeyse in kadar byk. (neredeyse meansalmost)
2. Superlatives
Superlatives are also straightforward in Turkish, like it is in English. Instead of 'the most', you
use 'en', and all superlatives are constructed using this word.
the fastest --> en hzl
slower --> en yava
the most intelligent --> en zeki
the most hardworking --> en alkan
the most beautiful --> en gzel
Now, let's see how the superlative form of an adjective is used in sentences.
I am beautiful. --> (Ben) gzelim.
I am more beautiful. --> (Ben) daha gzelim.
When you want to use the superlative form in a sentence, there are two different cases:
I am the most beautiful. --> (Ben) en gzelim. (This has the meaning of describing yourself, likean answer to the question "What are your traits?")
I am the most beautiful. --> En gzel benim. (This has the meaning of the answer to the question"Who is the most beautiful?")
I am the most beautiful girl. --> En gzel kz benim.
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I am the most beautiful girl in this class. --> Bu snftaki en gzel kz benim.
You are the most beautiful girl in this class. --> Bu snftaki en gzel kz sensin.
She is the most beautiful girl in this class. --> Bu snftaki en gzel kz o.
3. Making an adjective stronger
3.1. Very
In English, when you want to make an adjective stronger, you use the word 'very'. Saying very
fastis a stronger statement than just sayingfast. The same method is applied also in Turkish, and
the word forvery is 'ok'. Hence:
very fast --> ok hzl
very slow --> ok yava
very intelligent --> ok zeki
very hardworking --> ok alkan
very beautiful --> ok gzel
You are very beautiful. --> (Sen) ok gzelsin.
She is a very beautiful girl. --> (O) ok gzel bir kz.
This girl is very beautiful. --> Bu kz ok gzel.
3.2. Too
Another way of making an adjective stronger, but this time giving the meaning extreme, is to use
the word too. Saying something is too fastgives the meaning that it is extremely fast and should
be slower. The word fortoo in Turkish is 'fazla'.
too fast --> fazla hzl
too slow --> fazla yava
too intelligent --> fazla zeki
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too hardworking --> fazla alkan
too beautiful --> fazla gzel
We are too fast. --> (Biz) fazla hzlyz.
This car is too fast. --> Bu araba fazla hzl.
3.3. Other ways
A third way commonly used in Turkish (which is not seen in English) to make an adjectivestronger is adding a modified form of the first syllable before the adjective. Important points to
note here are:
There is not a rule for how this first syllable should be modified, which makes this rulehard to learn.
This gives the same meaning as using the word 'very' and makes the adjective stronger. All adjectives can't be made stronger using this method, and there is not a rule to
understand for which adjectives this method can be used. A group of adjectives you can
always use this method is colors, to express that the color is strong. However, there is no
rule to exactly say which adjectives can be made stronger like this.
Because there is not a well-defined rule, it will be very difficult to go over adjectives andsee what the stronger form of each adjective is. I think you should not try to learn this for
each adjective at this step. The best strategy here would be to note that there is a rule like
this and when you see it used, you will understand what it means. In your sentences, yousimply can use 'ok + adjective' instead and you will be clearly understood.
Let's see some examples to this rule:
hzl --> fast
hphzl --> very fast
sar --> yellow
sapsar --> very yellow, strong yellow
mavi --> blue
masmavi --> very blue, strong blue
beyaz --> white
bembeyaz --> very white, strong white
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abuk --> quick
arabuk --> very quick
kaln --> thick
kapkaln --> very thick
Another way to make an adjective stressed and stronger is to repeat it twice. Again, this is not
done with all adjectives and the best way to learn for which adjectives this rule is applicable is to
note when you hear an adjective used like this. Don't be afraid by these rules, you will learn how
to use them if you start reading Turkish texts or if you speak to native speakers. You can stillexpress yourself without using these methods for making adjectives stronger. Simply use the
word 'ok' before the adjective. I am giving these rules now so that you know the meaning when
you see such a usage somewhere.
byk byk evler --> big houses, the property bigis stressed
sar sar elmalar--> yellow apples, the propertyyellow is stressed
There is also another way to stress an adjective and make it stronger. That is, adding a modifiedform of the adjective after the original form. This is again an irregular rule and you don't need to
know this completely, just understand it when you see this usage. Sometimes, an adjective
followed by the modified form of that adjective may have a slightly different meaning.
yal --> old (for people)
yal bal --> old, mature
eski --> old (for objects)
eski psk --> very old and useless