Adjectives describe nouns and are always stable and never conjugated. No masculine, feminine or neuter forms exist in Turkish. Adjectives never get plural suffixes. Adjectives always come before the noun
Ahmed Drudini studied medicine at Medipol University after Saudi Arabia. Student services office provided free registration and tuition fee discounts. Turkish language was learned in eight months, completing fifth level. Currently pursuing medical training at Medipol University Hospital
Contains 114 units covering basic grammar points from A1 to B1 level. Each unit is two pages long with explanations on left and exercises on right. Includes 3000 practice questions and over 2000 sentences. Features full answer key for exercises
Type 0: Facts and scientific truths (e.g., "If we heat water, it boils"). Type 1: Probable situations likely to happen in future (e.g., "If Mr Morris speaks softly, we will fall asleep"). Type 2: Unlikely future situations or advice (e.g., "If he had won, they would travel around the world"). Type 3: Unlikely past situations (e.g., "If I had studied harder, I would have passed the exam")
Current Turkish exams are commonly prepared in language centers. Yunus Emre Institute's exam is most common but not international benchmark. Listening teaching can be distracting in noisy environments
Learning Turkish takes time and effort, not just months. Motivation is most important factor affecting learning speed. Turkish is considered harder than English for native speakers. Similar native languages like Azerbaijani help learn Turkish faster. Previous language learning experience influences learning speed