kapanmak
kapanmak في 30 ثانية
- Kapanmak means to close, shut down, or be covered. It's the passive or reflexive form of 'kapamak'.
- It is used for physical objects (doors), technology (phones), weather (clouds), and business (bankruptcies).
- It has a specific cultural meaning referring to a woman starting to wear a headscarf.
- It also means to seclude oneself (eve kapanmak) or to heal (yara kapanmak).
The Turkish verb kapanmak is a multifaceted word that English speakers often find intriguing because it combines passive, reflexive, and intransitive functions into a single form. At its core, it is the passive form of kapamak (to close), but in daily Turkish, it has evolved to represent a wide array of states where something becomes shut, finished, or covered. Whether you are talking about a physical door clicking shut, a local business going out of business, or the sky becoming overcast with heavy clouds, kapanmak is the essential verb you need to master. It describes the transition from an open state to a closed one, often focusing on the result or the process itself rather than the person who performed the action.
- Physical Closing
- This is the most literal use. It refers to doors, windows, lids, or eyes shutting. If a draft of wind blows and the door shuts on its own, you use kapanmak because the focus is on the door's state change.
- Business and Technology
- In the modern world, this verb is ubiquitous for shutting down computers, closing apps, or even a company going bankrupt and permanently closing its doors. It implies the cessation of operation.
Rüzgardan dolayı mutfak kapısı aniden kapandı ve hepimiz çok korktuk.
Beyond the physical, kapanmak carries significant metaphorical weight. It is used when a wound heals (the skin 'closes' over), when a debt is paid off (the account 'closes'), or when a specific topic of conversation is finished and should not be brought up again. In a more personal and psychological sense, it describes the act of secluding oneself. When a student locks themselves in their room to study for finals, they are said to be eve kapanmak (shutting themselves in the house). This nuance of self-isolation for a purpose—whether for work, grief, or focus—is a very common idiomatic use in Turkish culture.
- Weather and Nature
- When the sky turns grey and clouds cover the sun, Turks say 'Hava kapandı'. It paints a picture of the sky being 'closed off' from the light.
Bütün hafta sonu kütüphaneye kapanıp tezimi bitirmem gerekiyor.
Lastly, a culturally specific use involves religious practice. In Turkey, when a woman decides to start wearing a headscarf (hijab), the verb used is kapanmak. This refers to 'covering' or 'closing' oneself in accordance with religious modesty. This usage is very common in social discourse and news, reflecting the word's deep integration into the societal fabric of Turkey. Understanding these layers—from a simple door to a life-changing religious decision—is key to reaching B1 proficiency and beyond.
Using kapanmak correctly requires understanding its role as an intransitive or passive verb. Unlike its active counterpart kapamak, which requires an object (e.g., 'I closed the door'), kapanmak usually focuses on the subject that is undergoing the closure. You will rarely use a direct object with this verb. Instead, the thing that is closing becomes the subject of the sentence. This is a fundamental shift for English speakers who might be used to using the word 'close' for both active and passive contexts.
- The Passive Construction
- When you want to say 'The shop is closed' or 'The window was closed,' you use the past tense: Dükkan kapandı. Here, the focus is on the fact that the shop is no longer open, not who closed it.
Bilgisayarım güncelleme yaparken aniden kapandı.
One of the most common grammatical patterns involves the dative case (-e/-a) when someone shuts themselves *into* a place. The phrase odaya kapanmak (to shut oneself in the room) is a perfect example. The person is both the actor and the one affected by the action. This reflexive usage is very productive in Turkish. You can shut yourself into a house (eve kapanmak), a laboratory (laboratuvara kapanmak), or even your own inner world (kendi içine kapanmak).
In more advanced contexts, you will see kapanmak used in the negative to describe something that remains unresolved. For example, Bu konu henüz kapanmadı means 'This topic has not been closed yet,' implying that the debate or the issue is still ongoing. This is common in business meetings or legal discussions. Similarly, when a road is blocked due to snow or an accident, you will hear Yollar kapandı. The road doesn't 'close' itself, but the state of the road is now 'closed'.
Eski defterler kapandı, artık geleceğe bakmalıyız.
- The 'Healing' Context
- When talking about health, 'Yara kapandı' means the wound has healed or closed up. It describes the natural biological process of recovery where the gap in the skin disappears.
Finally, consider the use of the word in the context of technology. If an application 'crashes' or 'shuts down' unexpectedly, kapanmak is the verb of choice. 'Uygulama kapandı' (The app closed). If you want to tell someone to shut down their computer, you might say Bilgisayarı kapat (active), but if you are describing the computer's state, you say Bilgisayar kapanıyor (The computer is shutting down). Mastering these subtle shifts between who is doing the action and what is happening to the object is a hallmark of a fluent Turkish speaker.
To truly understand kapanmak, you need to step out of the textbook and into the streets of Istanbul or the digital world of Turkish social media. This word is everywhere, from the mundane to the deeply emotional. If you are walking through a Turkish bazaar late at night, you will hear shopkeepers saying Dükkanı kapatıyoruz (We are closing the shop), but as a bystander, you would observe that Çarşı kapandı (The bazaar has closed). The word signals the end of a cycle, whether daily, seasonal, or permanent.
- In the News
- You will frequently hear this word in economic reports. 'Şirket kapandı' (The company closed/went bankrupt). It is also common in political news regarding the closure of political parties or the shutting down of certain social media platforms by authorities.
Haberlerde okuduğuma göre, mahalledeki o tarihi sinema maalesef kapandı.
In a Turkish household, you'll hear it regarding the weather. If a family is planning a picnic and the sun disappears, someone will inevitably look up and sigh, Hava kapandı, yağmur yağacak (The weather has closed/turned cloudy, it's going to rain). This metaphorical 'closing' of the sky is a very standard way to describe overcast conditions. Similarly, at the end of a long day, you might hear someone say Gözlerim kapanıyor (My eyes are closing), indicating they are extremely sleepy and can no longer keep them open.
Social media and technology provide another rich environment for kapanmak. If a YouTuber decides to stop making videos, they might say Kanalımı kapatıyorum (I am closing my channel), and fans will comment Kanal kapandı mı? (Is the channel closed?). If a website is down, users will say Site kapandı. This versatility across mediums—from the physical sky to the digital cloud—makes it one of the top 500 most useful verbs in the language.
- Religious and Social Usage
- In social circles, if someone asks 'O kapandı mı?', and the context is a woman's appearance, they are asking if she has started wearing a headscarf. It is a neutral, descriptive term in this context.
Sınav haftası geldiğinde Ali kütüphaneye kapanır ve kimseyle konuşmaz.
Lastly, in the kitchen, if a container lid isn't fitting right, you might say Bu kapak kapanmıyor (This lid won't close). Or if you are at a restaurant and they are no longer serving, they will say Mutfak kapandı (The kitchen is closed). From the highest levels of government to the simplest daily interactions, kapanmak is the word that signals completion, coverage, or seclusion.
The most frequent mistake English speakers make with kapanmak is confusing it with its root verb, kapamak (or its more common form kapatmak). In English, the word 'close' functions as both an active verb ('I close the door') and an intransitive verb ('The door closes'). In Turkish, these are strictly separated. You cannot say Kapıyı kapandı to mean 'I closed the door.' This is grammatically incorrect because kapanmak cannot take a direct object in the accusative case. You must say Kapıyı kapattım (active) or Kapı kapandı (passive/intransitive).
- Confusion with 'Bitmek'
- Learners often use bitmek (to finish) when they should use kapanmak. For example, while a movie 'finishes' (film bitti), a business 'closes' (dükkan kapandı). Using bitti for a store implies that the store itself has disappeared or finished its existence, whereas kapandı specifically refers to the act of shutting down operations.
Wrong: Ben dükkanı kapandım.
Correct: Ben dükkanı kapattım. / Dükkan kapandı.
Another common pitfall is the use of kapanmak in weather contexts. English speakers might say 'The weather is cloudy' using an adjective. In Turkish, while you can say Hava bulutlu, it is much more idiomatic to use the verb Hava kapandı to describe the *process* of the sky becoming overcast. If you use the wrong tense, like Hava kapanıyor, it means 'The weather is currently in the process of closing,' which is great for a live observation but might be confusing if the sky is already dark.
In the context of secluding oneself, learners often forget the dative case. They might say Evde kapandım (I closed in the house), which sounds like you were accidentally locked inside. To say 'I shut myself in to study,' you must use the motion-towards dative: Eve kapandım. This implies the action of going into the house and shutting the world out. Small prepositional errors like this can significantly change the meaning of your sentence from 'I'm a diligent student' to 'I'm stuck in the house and can't get out.'
- Misusing the Religious Context
- Be careful when using kapanmak to describe people. If you say 'O kapandı' about a person, Turkish listeners will almost always assume you are talking about a woman starting to wear a headscarf. If you just mean someone has become introverted, use 'Kendi içine kapandı' to be clear.
Yara iyileşiyor, yavaş yavaş kapanıyor.
Finally, avoid using kapanmak for things that 'turn off' like lights. For lights, Turks use sönmek (to go out) or kapatılmak (to be turned off). Saying Lamba kapandı is understandable but sounds a bit like the lamp physically folded in on itself rather than the electricity stopping. Stick to kapanmak for devices with screens (computers, phones) and sönmek for bulbs and fires.
While kapanmak is the most versatile word for closing, Turkish offers several alternatives depending on the specific nuance you want to convey. Understanding the difference between 'closing,' 'covering,' and 'finishing' will help you sound more like a native speaker. Let's look at how kapanmak compares to its closest neighbors in the Turkish vocabulary.
- Kapanmak vs. Örtülmek
- Kapanmak implies a functional closing (like a door or a business), whereas örtülmek means to be covered by something (like a table being covered with a cloth or the ground being covered with snow). If you say the sky is 'örtüldü', it means it's hidden; if it's 'kapandı', it means it's overcast.
- Kapanmak vs. Kilitlenmek
- While kapanmak is just 'to close,' kilitlenmek means 'to be locked.' A door can be kapalı (closed) but not kilitli (locked). In technology, kilitlenmek is used when a computer freezes, while kapanmak is when it shuts down.
Masa örtüyle örtüldü, ama dükkan çoktan kapandı.
In professional settings, you might use feshedilmek or tasfiye edilmek instead of kapanmak. These are more formal terms for the dissolution or liquidation of a company. While kapanmak is common in daily speech ('The cafe closed'), a legal document would say 'The corporation was dissolved' (Şirket feshedildi). Similarly, for accounts or debts, kapatılmak (the passive of the causative) is often used interchangeably with kapanmak, but kapatılmak emphasizes that an external authority performed the closing.
For abstract endings, sonlanmak (to be finalized) or bitmek (to end) are strong alternatives. If a project is finished, you say Proje bitti. If a legal case is closed, you can say Dava kapandı. The difference is that kapanmak implies that the 'file' or 'door' on the matter is now shut, whereas bitmek simply means it has reached its conclusion. In the context of feelings, soğumak (to cool down) might be used when someone 'closes' their heart to another person, though içine kapanmak is better for general social withdrawal.
- Summary of Alternatives
-
- Sönmek: For lights/fires 'going out'.
- Kesilmek: For sounds or utilities (water/electricity) 'cutting out'.
- Tıkanmak: For pipes or noses 'getting blocked'.
- Mühürlenmek: For a place being 'sealed' by authorities.
Elektrikler kesildi, bu yüzden bilgisayar kapandı.
Choosing the right word depends on the 'how' and 'what' of the closing. If it's a physical barrier, kapanmak is usually safe. If it's an abstract ending, think about whether you want to emphasize the 'completion' (bitmek) or the 'sealing off' (kapanmak). By diversifying your vocabulary with these synonyms, you will be able to describe the world around you with much greater precision and emotional depth.
How Formal Is It?
حقيقة ممتعة
The root 'kap' is also the source of the word 'kapı' (door) and 'kaplan' (tiger - the one who seizes).
دليل النطق
- Pronouncing 'k' like 'g' (gapanmak).
- Stress on the first syllable (KAPAN-mak).
- Mixing up 'kapanmak' with 'kapamak'.
- Shortening the 'a' sounds too much.
- Softening the 'n' so it sounds like 'kapamak'.
مستوى الصعوبة
Easy to recognize in text due to common root.
Difficult to remember when to use -n- vs -t-.
Requires practice to use naturally for weather and seclusion.
Clear pronunciation makes it easy to hear.
ماذا تتعلّم بعد ذلك
المتطلبات الأساسية
تعلّم لاحقاً
متقدم
قواعد يجب معرفتها
Passive voice with -n
Kapamak -> Kapanmak
Dative case for direction
Eve kapanmak
Aorist for general rules
Dükkanlar erken kapanır.
Gerund -ip for sequence
Odaya kapanıp ağladı.
Negative aorist for impossibility
Bu kapı kapanmaz.
أمثلة حسب المستوى
Kapı rüzgardan kapandı.
The door closed because of the wind.
Simple past tense (-dı).
Pencereyi ört, çok soğuk, hemen kapansın.
Cover the window, it's very cold, let it close immediately.
Optative mood (-sın).
Dükkan saat kaçta kapanıyor?
What time does the shop close?
Present continuous for habitual action.
Kutu kapandı.
The box closed.
Intransitive usage.
Gözlerim yorgunluktan kapanıyor.
My eyes are closing from tiredness.
Metaphorical but common physical use.
Okullar tatilde kapanır.
Schools close during holidays.
Aorist tense for general facts.
Kitap kapandı.
The book closed.
Simple subject-verb agreement.
Burası kapandı, başka yere gidelim.
This place closed, let's go somewhere else.
Use of 'burası' as the subject.
Hava bugün çok kapandı.
The weather turned very cloudy today.
Idiomatic use for weather.
Bilgisayarım aniden kapandı.
My computer suddenly shut down.
Used for electronic devices.
Yollar kar nedeniyle kapandı.
The roads closed due to snow.
Passive meaning: roads are blocked.
Telefonun şarjı bitti ve kapandı.
The phone's charge ran out and it turned off.
Sequential actions in the past.
Banka hafta sonları kapanır.
The bank closes on weekends.
Aorist plural for regular schedules.
Zarfın ağzı iyice kapandı mı?
Is the envelope's opening closed well?
Interrogative with 'mı'.
Televizyon kendi kendine kapandı.
The TV turned off by itself.
Reflexive phrase 'kendi kendine'.
Maçtan sonra stadyum kapandı.
The stadium closed after the match.
Postposition 'sonra'.
Bütün gün odasına kapanıp ders çalıştı.
He shut himself in his room all day and studied.
Gerund '-ip' connecting two verbs.
Ameliyat izi zamanla kapandı.
The surgery scar closed over time.
Used for medical healing.
Bu tartışma burada kapandı, bir daha açmayalım.
This discussion is closed here, let's not open it again.
Metaphorical use for topics.
Şirket iflas edince fabrika kapandı.
The factory closed when the company went bankrupt.
Causal clause with '-ince'.
Hesabınız güvenlik nedeniyle geçici olarak kapandı.
Your account was temporarily closed for security reasons.
Adverbial phrase 'geçici olarak'.
O yazar son yıllarda kendi içine kapandı.
That author has become withdrawn in recent years.
Psychological reflexive use.
Mutfak saat on birden sonra kapanıyor.
The kitchen closes after eleven o'clock.
Specific time reference.
Eski yaralar hiçbir zaman tam kapanmaz.
Old wounds never fully close.
Negative aorist for general truths.
Sınavlara hazırlanmak için kütüphaneye kapandık.
We shut ourselves in the library to prepare for exams.
Purpose clause with 'için'.
Üniversite yıllarımda o da kapandı.
She also started wearing a headscarf during her university years.
Social/religious connotation.
Dosya delil yetersizliğinden kapandı.
The case was closed due to lack of evidence.
Legal terminology.
Gelecek hafta tüm yollar trafiğe kapanacak.
All roads will be closed to traffic next week.
Future tense with 'trafiğe'.
Ekran kapandığında yansımamı gördüm.
I saw my reflection when the screen turned off.
Temporal clause with '-duğunda'.
Olayın üstü örtüldü ve konu kapandı.
The incident was covered up and the matter was closed.
Idiomatic pair.
Kışın bazı oteller tamamen kapanıyor.
In winter, some hotels close down completely.
Adverb 'tamamen'.
Yara kapandı ama izi kaldı.
The wound closed but the scar remained.
Contrastive conjunction 'ama'.
Tarihin bu sayfası artık kapandı.
This page of history is now closed.
High-level metaphorical use.
Şehir, yoğun sis tabakasının altına kapandı.
The city was enclosed under a thick layer of fog.
Literary description.
Zihin, travma sonrası dış dünyaya kapanabilir.
The mind can close off to the outside world after trauma.
Psychological context.
Derneğin faaliyetleri mahkeme kararıyla kapandı.
The association's activities were shut down by court order.
Formal administrative use.
Kapandıkça daha çok üreten bir sanatçıydı.
He was an artist who produced more as he secluded himself.
Adverbial '-dıkça' (as/the more).
Gözleri sonsuza dek kapandı.
His eyes closed forever (he passed away).
Euphemism for death.
Siyasetin kapıları ona tamamen kapandı.
The doors of politics were completely closed to him.
Abstract power dynamics.
Bu yara kolay kolay kapanmaz.
This wound won't close easily.
Idiomatic 'kolay kolay' (easily/anytime soon).
Varlık, kendi içine kapandığı ölçüde derinleşir.
Existence deepens to the extent that it closes in on itself.
Philosophical construction.
İmparatorluğun ihtişamlı devri bu yenilgiyle kapandı.
The magnificent era of the empire closed with this defeat.
Historical narrative style.
Şiir, okuyucunun yorumuna kapandığında ruhunu kaybeder.
Poetry loses its soul when it closes itself to the reader's interpretation.
Aesthetic criticism.
Gök kubbe üzerimize kapandı sanki.
It was as if the celestial dome closed down upon us.
Poetic hyperbole.
O, toplumsal normlara kapanmış bir hayatı reddetti.
He rejected a life closed off within social norms.
Sociological analysis.
Hukuk sistemindeki bu boşluk nihayet kapandı.
This loophole in the legal system has finally been closed.
Technical legal metaphor.
Zamanın kapandığı o noktada her şey durdu.
At that point where time closed, everything stopped.
Metaphysical description.
Kapanan her kapı, yeni bir başlangıcın habercisidir.
Every door that closes is the harbinger of a new beginning.
Proverbial participle 'kapanan'.
تلازمات شائعة
العبارات الشائعة
— To become withdrawn or introverted. It describes someone who stops communicating with others.
Olaydan sonra kendi içine kapandı.
— To lean over something or to fall onto something. Often used for grief (leaning over a coffin).
Çocuğunun üzerine kapanıp ağladı.
— To be closed to traffic. Usually due to construction or an event.
Meydan yarın trafiğe kapanacak.
— For a lid to close. Used literally or as a metaphor for something fitting perfectly.
Tencerenin kapağı tam kapanmıyor.
— For a legal or administrative file to be closed. Implies the end of an investigation.
Polis dosyayı kapattı, dosya kapandı.
— For a door to close. Also used metaphorically for a lost opportunity.
Yüzüme kapı kapandı.
— Similar to 'kendi içine kapanmak', focusing on the psychological state of being quiet.
Çok içine kapanık bir çocuk.
— To be closed temporarily. Common on signs.
Müze tadilat nedeniyle geçici olarak kapandı.
— To close forever. Used for death or permanent business failure.
Gözleri sonsuza dek kapandı.
يُخلط عادةً مع
Kapamak is the active 'to close something'. Kapanmak is the passive 'to be closed'.
Kapatmak is the causative 'to make something close/to turn off'. Kapanmak is the result.
Kapışmak means to fight or scramble for something, though it shares the same root.
تعبيرات اصطلاحية
— To let bygones be bygones; to stop talking about past events or grudges.
Artık barıştık, eski defterler kapandı.
informal— To be rejected everywhere; to find no opportunities.
İş ararken bütün kapılar yüzüme kapandı.
neutral— To be silenced or to stop talking (often due to being proven wrong).
Gerçeği görünce ağzı kapandı.
informal— To feel like the world is crashing down; to experience great despair.
Haberden sonra dünya başına kapandı.
emotional— To recover from a psychological pain or trauma.
Zamanla bu yara da kapanır.
metaphorical— To be grabbed by whoever gets there first; first come, first served.
İndirimli ürünler kapanın elinde kaldı.
idiomatic— To be covered up or forgotten (usually a scandal or a mistake).
Olayın üstü hemen kapandı.
neutral— To be on the verge of sleep or to die.
Hastanın gözleri yavaşça kapandı.
neutralسهل الخلط
Both mean 'to end'.
Bitmek is for processes or resources (the movie finished, the milk ran out). Kapanmak is for structures or states (the shop closed, the wound closed).
Süt bitti ama market kapandı.
Both involve covering.
Örtmek is active (I cover the table). Kapanmak is the state (The sky is covered/closed).
Masayı örttüm, ama hava kapandı.
Both can mean 'stopping'.
Kesilmek is for flows (water, electricity, sound). Kapanmak is for systems or physical openings.
Elektrik kesilince televizyon kapandı.
Both mean 'turning off'.
Sönmek is for lights and fires. Kapanmak is for devices with screens or systems.
Lamba söndü, bilgisayar kapandı.
Both mean 'no longer open'.
Tıkanmak is for blockages in pipes or airways. Kapanmak is for doors or lids.
Lavabo tıkandı, dükkan kapandı.
أنماط الجُمل
[Object] kapandı.
Kapı kapandı.
Hava [Adverb] kapandı.
Hava çok kapandı.
[Place]-e kapanmak
Kütüphaneye kapandım.
[Topic] kapandı.
Bu konu kapandı.
[Reason] nedeniyle kapandı.
Kar nedeniyle yollar kapandı.
[Abstract Subject] kapandı.
Devir kapandı.
Kendi içine kapanmak
Olaydan sonra kendi içine kapandı.
[Participle] kapanan ...
Kapanan kapılar açılmaz.
عائلة الكلمة
الأسماء
الأفعال
الصفات
مرتبط
كيفية الاستخدام
Extremely frequent in daily life, news, and literature.
-
Ben kapıyı kapandım.
→
Ben kapıyı kapattım.
You cannot use an object with 'kapanmak'. Use 'kapatmak' for active closing.
-
Dükkan bitti.
→
Dükkan kapandı.
Businesses 'close' (kapanmak), they don't 'finish' (bitmek) unless you mean the building vanished.
-
Evde kapandım.
→
Eve kapandım.
Use the dative (-e) to show you went *into* seclusion.
-
Lamba kapandı.
→
Lamba söndü.
Lights 'go out' (sönmek) rather than 'close' (kapanmak).
-
Konu kapatıldı.
→
Konu kapandı.
While 'kapatıldı' is correct, 'kapandı' is more common to say the matter is naturally over.
نصائح
Weather Talk
Always use 'Hava kapandı' when clouds block the sun. It's the most natural way to describe an overcast sky in Turkey.
Passive vs Active
Remember: Kapı kapandı (The door closed) - no object. Kapıyı kapattım (I closed the door) - requires 'kapıyı' (accusative).
Social Sensitivity
Be aware of the religious connotation. If someone says 'O kapandı', they are likely talking about a woman's headscarf.
Old Notebooks
Use 'Eski defterler kapandı' to end an argument about the past. It's a very powerful and common idiom.
Device Shutdown
For computers and phones, use 'kapanmak' for the state of turning off. 'Bilgisayarım kapandı' is what you say when the screen goes black.
Exam Prep
Tell your friends 'Eve kapandım' when you can't hang out because you need to study hard.
Healing
Use 'yara kapandı' to describe a cut that is no longer an open wound. It's a sign of recovery.
Case Closed
In professional life, 'konu kapandı' or 'dosya kapandı' signals that no further action will be taken.
Sleepiness
When you are nodding off, say 'Gözlerim kapanıyor'. It's more idiomatic than saying 'Uykum var' in that specific moment.
Roadblocks
Check the news for 'yollar kapandı' before traveling in winter. It means the road is impassable.
احفظها
وسيلة تذكّر
Think of a 'CAP' (KAP) being put on a bottle. When the 'CAP' is 'ON' (AN), the bottle is 'KAPANMAK' (closed).
ربط بصري
Imagine a heavy metal shop shutter rolling down with a loud 'clank'. That shutter is 'kapanıyor'.
Word Web
تحدٍّ
Try to use 'kapanmak' in three different ways today: for a door, for the weather, and for your computer.
أصل الكلمة
Derived from the Old Turkic root 'kap-' which means to cover, to close, or to seize. The '-an' suffix makes it passive or reflexive.
المعنى الأصلي: To be covered or to close oneself off.
Turkicالسياق الثقافي
When discussing people 'closing' (religious context), use the word neutrally and respectfully as it is a personal choice.
English uses 'close' for both 'I close' and 'It closes'. Turkish requires 'kapatmak' for the former and 'kapanmak' for the latter.
تدرّب في الحياة الواقعية
سياقات واقعية
At a store
- Kaçta kapanıyor?
- Maalesef kapandık.
- Dükkan kapandı mı?
- Öğle arası kapalı.
Weather
- Hava kapandı.
- Güneş kapandı.
- Gökyüzü kapandı.
- Hava kapanıyor, yağmur yağabilir.
Technology
- Bilgisayar kapandı.
- Telefon kapandı.
- Uygulama kapandı.
- Ekran kapandı.
Health
- Yara kapandı.
- Ameliyat yeri kapandı.
- Dikişler kapandı.
- Kesik kapandı.
Social/Emotional
- İçine kapandı.
- Eve kapandı.
- O defter kapandı.
- Konu kapandı.
بدايات محادثة
"Dün akşam bilgisayarım aniden kapandı, ne yapmalıyım?"
"Hava çok kapandı, sence bugün yağmur yağar mı?"
"Sınav haftasında sen de eve kapanır mısın?"
"Mahalledeki o eski kütüphane neden kapandı biliyor musun?"
"Bu tartışma artık kapandı mı yoksa hala konuşacak mıyız?"
مواضيع للكتابة اليومية
Hayatında tamamen kapandığını düşündüğün bir sayfa var mı?
Kendini dış dünyaya kapattığın zamanlarda neler yaparsın?
En son ne zaman bir dükkanın kapısına kadar gidip kapalı olduğunu gördün?
Hava kapandığında modun nasıl değişir?
Bir yara kapandığında sadece fiziksel olarak mı iyileşir?
الأسئلة الشائعة
10 أسئلةIt's better to use 'sönmek' or 'kapatılmak'. Using 'kapanmak' for a light bulb sounds slightly unnatural, though people will understand you.
'Kapandı' means it closed (could be by itself or just the state). 'Kapatıldı' explicitly means someone or something closed it (passive voice). Example: 'Kapı kapandı' (The door closed) vs 'Kapı kapatıldı' (The door was closed by someone).
You should use the active form: 'Kapatıyorum'. If you say 'Kapanıyorum', it sounds like you are personally shutting down or wearing a headscarf.
Not necessarily. It could just mean it's the end of the work day. Context like 'tamamen' (completely) or 'iflas' (bankruptcy) clarifies if it's permanent.
Usually negative, as it implies it's going to rain or the sun is gone. However, in very hot Turkish summers, some might welcome the shade!
Yes. 'Kitap kapandı' means the book was shut. Metaphorically, it means the story or the matter is over.
Simply say 'Yara kapandı'. It implies the skin has grown back over the cut.
It is a religious term meaning to prostrate oneself in prayer, literally 'closing/falling' onto the prostration position.
Not exactly. 'Kısılmak' or 'mahsur kalmak' are better for being trapped. 'Kapanmak' implies a voluntary or natural closing.
Yes, a team can 'defansa kapanmak' (shut themselves into defense), meaning they are playing very defensively.
اختبر نفسك 200 أسئلة
Write a sentence about a shop closing at 9 PM.
Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.
Write a sentence about the weather turning cloudy.
Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.
Write a sentence about your phone turning off.
Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.
Write a sentence using 'eve kapanmak'.
Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.
Write a sentence about a wound healing.
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Write a sentence about a topic being closed.
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Write a sentence about a road closed due to snow.
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Write a sentence about an era ending.
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Write a sentence about someone becoming introverted.
Well written! Good try! Check the sample answer below.
Write a sentence using 'kapanacak' (future).
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Write a sentence using 'kapanır' (aorist).
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Write a sentence using 'kapanıyor' (present continuous).
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Translate: 'The door closed suddenly.'
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Translate: 'The case was closed.'
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Translate: 'The computer shut down.'
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Translate: 'The era of peace closed.'
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Translate: 'The wound closed well.'
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Translate: 'The sky is closing (turning cloudy).'
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Translate: 'Shut yourself in the library.'
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Translate: 'The shop is closed.'
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Tell a friend that the shop is closed.
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Say that you are very tired and your eyes are closing.
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Ask what time the museum closes.
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Say that the weather turned cloudy.
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Tell someone that the discussion is over.
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Say that you will shut yourself in the house to study.
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Explain that your computer shut down suddenly.
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Say that the roads are closed due to snow.
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Say that the wound on your hand has healed.
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Use the idiom 'eski defterler kapandı'.
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Ask if the bank is closed on Saturdays.
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Tell your cat that its eyes are closing.
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Say that the app on your phone closed.
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Say that the era of empires has ended.
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Say that someone became very introverted.
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Say that the library closes at 8 PM.
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Say that the lid of the jar won't close.
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Say that the account was closed for security.
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Say that the schools will close tomorrow.
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Say that the matter is finally closed.
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قلت:
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Listen and identify the verb: 'Kapı kapandı.'
Listen and identify the state: 'Hava kapandı.'
Listen and identify the object: 'Dükkan kapandı.'
Listen and identify the reason: 'Yollar kar yüzünden kapandı.'
Listen and identify the feeling: 'Gözlerim kapanıyor.'
Listen and identify the idiom: 'Eski defterler kapandı.'
Listen and identify the tense: 'Okullar kapanacak.'
Listen and identify the place: 'Eve kapandım.'
Listen and identify the subject: 'Yara kapandı.'
Listen and identify the time: 'Market dokuzda kapanır.'
Listen and identify the technology: 'Bilgisayar kapandı.'
Listen and identify the context: 'O geçen yıl kapandı.'
Listen and identify the legal term: 'Dosya kapandı.'
Listen and identify the historical term: 'Devir kapandı.'
Listen and identify the psychology: 'İçine kapandı.'
/ 200 correct
Perfect score!
Summary
Kapanmak is the 'happening' version of closing. Use it when something closes by itself or when the focus is on the state of being closed rather than who did it. Example: 'Kapı kapandı' (The door closed).
- Kapanmak means to close, shut down, or be covered. It's the passive or reflexive form of 'kapamak'.
- It is used for physical objects (doors), technology (phones), weather (clouds), and business (bankruptcies).
- It has a specific cultural meaning referring to a woman starting to wear a headscarf.
- It also means to seclude oneself (eve kapanmak) or to heal (yara kapanmak).
Weather Talk
Always use 'Hava kapandı' when clouds block the sun. It's the most natural way to describe an overcast sky in Turkey.
Passive vs Active
Remember: Kapı kapandı (The door closed) - no object. Kapıyı kapattım (I closed the door) - requires 'kapıyı' (accusative).
Social Sensitivity
Be aware of the religious connotation. If someone says 'O kapandı', they are likely talking about a woman's headscarf.
Old Notebooks
Use 'Eski defterler kapandı' to end an argument about the past. It's a very powerful and common idiom.
محتوى ذو صلة
مزيد من كلمات business
alışveriş
A1Shopping
ambalaj
B1التغليف هو المادة المستخدمة لحماية المنتجات.
angaje
C1committed or engaged in a specific cause or activity
atılım
C1طفرة أو مبادرة كبيرة أو قفزة نوعية في مجال ما.
bakiye
B1balance, remainder
banka
A1bank
bedel
B1Price, cost, value, or compensation
bildirmek
B1يبلغ أو يخبر بشكل رسمي.
borç
B1debt or duty
bütçe
B1الميزانية هي خطة مالية توضح الدخل والنفقات المتوقعة لفترة معينة.