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Tomorrow will be 9 months since I’ve started to learn Turkish and I have NEVER seen this tense before. 😮 It’s SO helpful. Very clear and excellent explanation. Thank you!!! ❤
It might be easier to help if you explained _why_ you think they're the same-the names are fairly descriptive, and the suffixes are different, so the confusion must arise somewhere else. If I had to guess, I would say it might be related to the way English uses "goING to" for future-tense constructions, AND "-ing" for continuous aspects-so "I was going" vs. "I was going to X" might seem without distinction. If so, the difference is easier to see in constructions like: • "I was walking." → You're talking about what you were doing in the past; what you were doing was a continuous action, not a completed one.¹ Past tense, continuous aspect. →→ Another way to look at it: the reference point is the moment of speech, and the speech content is about a past action (relative to that reference point) that was ongoing at the time. • "I was about to walk." → You're talking about a past intention to do something, which may or may not be completed (i.e., leaving aspect unspecified).² Past tense (was)-but wait... →→ ...relative to the moment of speech, we're talking about something in the past ("I was")... but then *also* going on to use _that past moment_ as a reference point to talk about something that was in the _future _*_at that time._* Hence: 1) = past, continuous, only reference point is the moment of speech; thus, continuous past. 2) = past (using moment-of-speech reference point) + future (in the past / relative to past-event reference point); thus, future-in-past. ------------ ¹ "Not complete" _as of that sentence._ We disregard what may happen in the next sentence, for these purposes. ² Technically: prospective aspect; there is also debate over whether aspect should be thought of as "how an event extends in time", or as "how clause-internal temporal relations are expressed" (temporal deixis)... but all that's not important, heh.
I've been learning from you for a whike you're really good, but I've noticed that you use the same verbs all the time Katıl, sor, gel, git, kes. Maybe you should've used other verbs so we can learn vocabulary as well as grammer Thank you❤
Merhaba, Türkçe kolay değil fakat çok zor da değil. Her sene binlerce insan Türkçe öğreniyor ve konuşmaya başlıyor. Öğrenmeye devam et, sen de başaracaksın.👍👍👍
@@sapphire6872 I am planning to start some online lessons with a few students soon, both grammar and speaking. Reach me via my email : learnturkishvia@gmail.com or facebook messenger : facebook.com/profile.php?id=100061560465012
⛔UDEMY B1/B2 Tutorial
www.udemy.com/course/turkish-language-course-b1b2-practice/?referralCode=4A159908C130137C5C36
⛔ Do not hesitate to ask on comments ⛔
✏️ If you have any questions regarding this lesson.
✏️ If you want a lesson about any specific subject in Turkish language.
⚠️ Don't forget to follow us on social media ⚠️
📷 instagram.com/learnturkishvia/
👤 facebook.com/profile.php?id=100061560465012
Tomorrow will be 9 months since I’ve started to learn Turkish and I have NEVER seen this tense before. 😮 It’s SO helpful. Very clear and excellent explanation. Thank you!!! ❤
You're welcome, rica ederim. 9 months of dedication, bravo. Tebrikler 👍
Extremely helpful. Thanks for this!
You're welcome. Rica ederim. Başarılar 👍
Super, every time it seems so simple but during speaking I still need a lot of time making the correct syntax in my head at front.
Perfection comes after a lot of practice.
You're good. I love it when teachers are straightforward. Thank you.
You're welcome, rica ederim. Başarılar👍
Biraz zor ama güzel bir ders. Teşekkür ederim.
Rica ederim. Başarılar 👍
future in the past is the same as past continuos or what are the differences?
In some cases they are almost the same, In some other cases they are totally different.
It might be easier to help if you explained _why_ you think they're the same-the names are fairly descriptive, and the suffixes are different, so the confusion must arise somewhere else.
If I had to guess, I would say it might be related to the way English uses "goING to" for future-tense constructions, AND "-ing" for continuous aspects-so "I was going" vs. "I was going to X" might seem without distinction.
If so, the difference is easier to see in constructions like:
• "I was walking."
→ You're talking about what you were doing in the past; what you were doing was a continuous action, not a completed one.¹ Past tense, continuous aspect.
→→ Another way to look at it: the reference point is the moment of speech, and the speech content is about a past action (relative to that reference point) that was ongoing at the time.
• "I was about to walk."
→ You're talking about a past intention to do something, which may or may not be completed (i.e., leaving aspect unspecified).² Past tense (was)-but wait...
→→ ...relative to the moment of speech, we're talking about something in the past ("I was")... but then *also* going on to use _that past moment_ as a reference point to talk about something that was in the _future _*_at that time._*
Hence:
1) = past, continuous, only reference point is the moment of speech; thus, continuous past.
2) = past (using moment-of-speech reference point) + future (in the past / relative to past-event reference point); thus, future-in-past.
------------
¹ "Not complete" _as of that sentence._ We disregard what may happen in the next sentence, for these purposes.
² Technically: prospective aspect; there is also debate over whether aspect should be thought of as "how an event extends in time", or as "how clause-internal temporal relations are expressed" (temporal deixis)... but all that's not important, heh.
I've been learning from you for a whike you're really good, but I've noticed that you use the same verbs all the time
Katıl, sor, gel, git, kes.
Maybe you should've used other verbs so we can learn vocabulary as well as grammer
Thank you❤
Good idea, iyi fikir 👍
Bu ders biraz zor!! :) ama çok güzel!! Teşekkürler hocam!
Rica ederim. Başarılar 👍
teşekkür ederim
Rica ederim
Merhaba hocam. Türkçe zor mu ya da kolay mı?
Merhaba, Türkçe kolay değil fakat çok zor da değil. Her sene binlerce insan Türkçe öğreniyor ve konuşmaya başlıyor. Öğrenmeye devam et, sen de başaracaksın.👍👍👍
@@LearnTurkishvia Online türkçe öğretir misin?
@@sapphire6872 I am planning to start some online lessons with a few students soon, both grammar and speaking. Reach me via my email : learnturkishvia@gmail.com or facebook messenger : facebook.com/profile.php?id=100061560465012