According to the very few studies conducted so far, question sentences with intonations have been used, though not very common, in Old Turkish, Karakhanid Turkish, Kipchak Turkish of historical Turkish dialects with Old Anatolian Turkish, which forms the source of the Contemporary Oghuz dialects.
However, the fact that no question marks were used in Turkish texts written in Arabic letters until the 19th century makes it very difficult to identify question sentences that are composed only with intonation.
Despite this, in various studies conducted in Azerbaijan, it has been stated that the history of the question sentences with intonation can only be traced back to the 16th century, and it was hardly detected in the centuries before then. It is seen that these types of question sentences were used more after the 16th century, starting from Fuzuli, and it became more standardized depending on the development of the press language and theater works, from the 19th century onwards, in Azerbaijani Turkish.
However, due to the aforementioned difficulties, it is possible to identify such sentences not as simple sentences, but as sentences in combined structures in the historical Azerbaijani Turkish texts.
Signs such as conjunctions, prepositions or pronouns, antonyms or positive negative repetitions, comparison sentences, context in this kind of sentence etc. The samples revealed were divided into various groups by categorization, and phonetic and the morphological elements which enable these structures to turn into question sentences with intonation were explained.
In this study, it was found that the question sentences with intonation established with the creativity and meticulousness of Fuzuli have mainly two different structures: Question Sentence Structures Constructed Only with Intonation and Question Sentence Structures with Intonation Supported by the Interrogative Particle. There were 24 examples defined for the first structure, and 11 examples defined for the second.
It is expected that the method used in this study, in which a total of 35 examples were determined, is of a quality that can be used for other poets and writers who worked in the history of Azerbaijani Turkish. DOI : Ankara: Berlin: A Dictionary of Linguistic and Phonetics.
We also use simple past tense to talk about things happened again and again in the past. We use simple past tense for something that was true for a period of time in the past:. In simple past tense, particular words or phrases are used to show when an action or situation happened in the past. Examples; - I watched TV last night.
Examples; - Did you sleep well last night? Examples; - I lived in Turkey for two years. You played You didn't play Did you play? We played We didn't play Did we play? They played They didn't play Did they play? A: What did you do last night? B: I watched a movie. But I didn't like it. A: Did you do your homework?
B: No, I didn't do it. But I was a student 2 years ago. When you've finished you wonder why you made all that fuss, and I really ought to be used to it by now. Do you think an organised group like yours can really have an impact on who wins? Could it really be the fact or the case that we only value allies who disagree with us?
Is this really the answer for Scotland, which boasts some of the greatest salmon streams in the world? I was so angry about colonization and really into the fact that Canada has a lot of stolen land. Yes, you really ought to hate Richards for all that good fortune, but the trouble is, you can't.
I think we should all turn to the person on our left and acknowledge the fact that we really are blessed. I really ought to hope that the murderous pair repented before they died. I ask all of those sorts of questions because I am really concerned about this issue. In other words, it's a question of what really gets you impassioned, instinctively. Imagine George Orwell, only with slightly different political opinions and in a really bad mood.
It may be that there is a really straightforward answer and that it appears here somewhere. I know you're tired but really!
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