A1 Case System 1 min read Leicht

Grammar Rule in 30 Seconds

The locative case (-de/-da/-te/-ta) tells you where something is located or when something happens.

  • Use -de/-da after voiced consonants or vowels (e.g., evde).
  • Use -te/-ta after unvoiced consonants (e.g., sokakta).
  • Vowel harmony: use 'e' if the last vowel is e, i, ö, ü; use 'a' if a, ı, o, u.
Noun + (de/da/te/ta) = Location

Meanings

The locative case indicates the location of an object, person, or event in space or time.

1

Physical Location

Where something is physically situated.

“Okuldayım.”

“Çanta sandalyede.”

2

Temporal Location

When an event occurs.

“Akşamda görüşürüz.”

“Yazın (exception) - wait, stick to standard: Saat beşte.”

3

State of Being

Describing a state or condition.

“O, uykuda.”

“İşteyim.”

Locative Suffix Rules

Last Vowel Last Consonant Type Suffix Example
a, ı, o, u Voiced -da Okulda
e, i, ö, ü Voiced -de Evde
a, ı, o, u Unvoiced -ta Sokakta
e, i, ö, ü Unvoiced -te Ofiste

Reference Table

Reference table for Locative Case (-de/-da)
Form Structure Example
Affirmative Noun + Suffix Evde
Negative Noun + Suffix + değil Evde değil
Question Noun + Suffix + mi? Evde mi?
Negative Question Noun + Suffix + değil mi? Evde değil mi?
Proper Noun Proper Noun + ' + Suffix İstanbul'da
Time Time + Suffix Saat beşte

Formalitätsspektrum

Formell
Evde bulunmaktayım.

Evde bulunmaktayım. (General)

Neutral
Evdeyim.

Evdeyim. (General)

Informell
Evdeyim.

Evdeyim. (General)

Umgangssprache
Evdeyim.

Evdeyim. (General)

Locative Case Map

Locative (-de/-da)

Place

  • Evde At home

Time

  • Saat 5'te At 5 o'clock

State

  • Uykuda Asleep

Beispiele nach Niveau

1

Evdeyim.

I am at home.

2

Çanta masada.

The bag is on the table.

3

Okulda mısın?

Are you at school?

4

İstanbul'dayım.

I am in Istanbul.

1

Toplantı saat üçte.

The meeting is at three o'clock.

2

Sokakta kimse yok.

There is no one on the street.

3

Ofiste çalışıyorum.

I am working at the office.

4

Cüzdanım arabada.

My wallet is in the car.

1

Bu konuda haklısın.

You are right about this subject.

2

Hafta sonunda tatile gidiyoruz.

We are going on vacation on the weekend.

3

O, derin bir uykuda.

He is in a deep sleep.

4

Sınavda başarılı oldum.

I was successful in the exam.

1

Şirketimiz büyük bir krizde.

Our company is in a big crisis.

2

Bu fikir üzerinde düşünmeliyiz.

We should think about this idea.

3

Olay yerinde inceleme yapıldı.

An investigation was conducted at the scene.

4

Gözlerinde hüzün var.

There is sadness in your eyes.

1

Tarihsel süreçte bu değişti.

This changed in the historical process.

2

Toplumda derin yaralar açıldı.

Deep wounds were opened in society.

3

Kendi dünyasında yaşıyor.

He lives in his own world.

4

Siyasi arenada yeni gelişmeler var.

There are new developments in the political arena.

1

Edebiyatımızda bu tema çok işlenmiştir.

This theme has been treated extensively in our literature.

2

Felsefi düzlemde tartışmak gerekir.

It must be discussed on a philosophical plane.

3

Kadim geleneklerde bu ritüel kutsaldır.

This ritual is sacred in ancient traditions.

4

Hukuki metinlerde bu ifade yer alır.

This expression appears in legal texts.

Leicht verwechselbar

Locative Case (-de/-da) vs. Dative (-e/-a)

Learners mix up 'at' (locative) and 'to' (dative).

Locative Case (-de/-da) vs. Ablative (-den/-dan)

Learners mix up 'at' (locative) and 'from' (ablative).

Locative Case (-de/-da) vs. Possessive (-in)

Learners confuse the genitive suffix with locative.

Häufige Fehler

Istanbulda

İstanbul'da

Proper nouns need an apostrophe.

Kitapda

Kitapta

P is an unvoiced consonant, so d becomes t.

Ev-de

Evde

Do not use a hyphen.

Okul-a

Okulda

Confusing dative and locative.

Saat beşde

Saat beşte

Five ends in a hard consonant.

Ofisde

Ofiste

S is unvoiced.

O, evde değil mi

O, evde değil mi?

Missing question mark.

Konu da

Konuda

Locative is a suffix, not a separate word.

Hafta sonuda

Hafta sonunda

Suffix attaches to the last word of the phrase.

Kriz-de

Krizde

No hyphen needed.

Siyasi arenada ki

Siyasi arenadaki

The relative suffix -ki attaches to the locative.

Tarihsel süreç de

Tarihsel süreçte

Suffix must be attached.

Kendi dünya da

Kendi dünyasında

Must include possessive suffix first.

Satzmuster

___ ___.

___ ___ ___.

___ ___ ___ ___.

___ ___ ___ ___ ___.

Real World Usage

Texting constant

Evdeyim, gel.

Ordering food very common

Pakette mi?

Job interview common

Şirkette çalıştım.

Travel common

İstanbul'dayım.

Directions common

Sokakta sağda.

Social media very common

Tatildeyim!

💡

Apostrophe Rule

Always use an apostrophe for proper nouns like cities or names. It separates the name from the suffix.
⚠️

Unvoiced Consonants

If the word ends in f, s, t, k, ç, ş, h, p, the suffix must start with a 't'.
🎯

Time Expressions

You can use the locative case for time too! Just add it to the time word.
💬

Natural Sounding

Locative is used so often that it sounds very natural to native speakers. Don't be afraid to use it.

Smart Tips

Always look at the last vowel first, then the last consonant.

Ofis-da Ofiste

Remember the apostrophe for proper nouns.

Ankarada Ankara'da

Treat time expressions like nouns.

Saat beş Saat beşte

Think 'T' for 'Tough' consonants.

Sokakda Sokakta

Aussprache

ev-DE

Suffix stress

The stress usually falls on the syllable before the suffix, unless it's a place name.

Question intonation

Evde mi? ↑

Rising pitch at the end for questions.

Einprägen

Eselsbrücke

Think of 'D' as 'Dwell'—where you dwell, you use -de.

Visuelle Assoziation

Imagine a tiny 'D' sitting inside a house (Evde) and a 'T' standing on a street corner (Sokakta).

Rhyme

Vowel a, ı, o, u needs a 'da', e, i, ö, ü needs a 'de', if it's hard, make it a 't'!

Story

Ali is at home (Evde). He looks out the window at the street (Sokakta). He checks his watch; it is five o'clock (Beşte). He is happy.

Word Web

EvdeSokaktaOkuldaOfisteMasadaSaat beşte

Herausforderung

Look around your room and label 5 items using the locative case (e.g., 'Kitap masada').

Kulturelle Hinweise

Locative is used for time, which is very common in Turkish culture for appointments.

The locative suffix originates from Proto-Turkic *da/de.

Gesprächseinstiege

Neredesin?

Toplantı saat kaçta?

Bu konuda ne düşünüyorsun?

Siyasi arenada neler oluyor?

Tagebuch-Impulse

Describe your room.
Describe your daily routine.
Write about a recent crisis or challenge.
Discuss a social issue.

Test Yourself

Fill in the correct suffix.

Ben ev___.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: de
Ev ends in a voiced consonant and has 'e' as the last vowel.
Choose the correct form. Multiple Choice

Kitap ___.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: masada
Masa ends in a vowel, so -da is correct.
Correct the mistake. Error Correction

Find and fix the mistake:

Istanbulda yaşıyorum.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: İstanbul'da
Proper nouns need an apostrophe.
Reorder the words. Sentence Reorder

Arrange the words in the correct order:

All words placed

Click words above to build the sentence

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Ben bugün evde değilim
Standard Turkish word order is Subject-Time-Location-Verb.
Translate to Turkish. Übersetzung

He is at the office.

Answer starts with: O o...

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: O ofiste
S is unvoiced, so -te is used.
Match the word to the suffix. Match Pairs

Match each item on the left with its pair on the right:

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Okulda, Sokakta, Evde, Ofiste
Correct harmony and assimilation.
Build a sentence. Sentence Building

Saat 5 / evde /yim

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Saat beşte evdeyim
Beş ends in a hard consonant.
Choose the correct form. Multiple Choice

Bu ___ haklısın.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: konuda
Konu ends in a vowel, so -da.

Score: /8

Ubungsaufgaben

8 exercises
Fill in the correct suffix.

Ben ev___.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: de
Ev ends in a voiced consonant and has 'e' as the last vowel.
Choose the correct form. Multiple Choice

Kitap ___.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: masada
Masa ends in a vowel, so -da is correct.
Correct the mistake. Error Correction

Find and fix the mistake:

Istanbulda yaşıyorum.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: İstanbul'da
Proper nouns need an apostrophe.
Reorder the words. Sentence Reorder

evde / ben / bugün / değilim

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Ben bugün evde değilim
Standard Turkish word order is Subject-Time-Location-Verb.
Translate to Turkish. Übersetzung

He is at the office.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: O ofiste
S is unvoiced, so -te is used.
Match the word to the suffix. Match Pairs

Okul, Sokak, Ev, Ofis

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Okulda, Sokakta, Evde, Ofiste
Correct harmony and assimilation.
Build a sentence. Sentence Building

Saat 5 / evde /yim

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Saat beşte evdeyim
Beş ends in a hard consonant.
Choose the correct form. Multiple Choice

Bu ___ haklısın.

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: konuda
Konu ends in a vowel, so -da.

Score: /8

FAQ (8)

Check the last vowel of the word. If it's a, ı, o, u, use -da. If it's e, i, ö, ü, use -de.

The vowel harmony rule still applies. Check the last vowel before the consonant.

If the word ends in an unvoiced consonant (f, s, t, k, ç, ş, h, p), the 'd' changes to 't'.

No, only for proper nouns like names of people, cities, or countries.

Yes, it is very common for specific times like 'saat beşte' (at five).

Yes, the dative case (-e/-a) indicates movement towards a place, while the locative (-de/-da) indicates being in a place.

Forgetting the apostrophe for proper nouns or failing to change 'd' to 't' after unvoiced consonants.

Yes, it is used in all registers, from casual texting to formal academic papers.

Scaffolded Practice

1

1

2

2

3

3

4

4

Mastery Progress

Needs Practice

Improving

Strong

Mastered

In Other Languages

Spanish high

en

Turkish uses a suffix attached to the word; Spanish uses a separate word.

French moderate

dans/à

Turkish doesn't distinguish between 'in' and 'at' with different suffixes.

German moderate

in/an

Turkish is agglutinative; German is prepositional.

Japanese partial

ni/de

Japanese particles are separate words; Turkish suffixes are not.

Arabic low

fi

Word order and attachment method are completely different.

Chinese low

zài

Chinese is analytic; Turkish is agglutinative.

Learning Path

Prerequisites

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