A2 Expression Informell

Hafta sonu planın ne?

What are your weekend plans?

Bedeutung

Asking someone about their activities for the upcoming weekend.

🌍

Kultureller Hintergrund

In big cities like Istanbul, weekend plans often involve 'AVM' (malls) or 'Sahil' (coastline). People love to walk by the sea. Sunday is traditionally 'Family Day'. Many people visit their parents or elders for a big dinner. The 'Serpme Kahvaltı' is a staple of weekend plans. It involves dozens of small plates shared among friends. For many, the weekend plan is entirely dictated by their team's match schedule (Beşiktaş, Fenerbahçe, Galatasaray).

💡

The 'No Plan' Rule

If a Turk says 'Planım yok', they are usually inviting you to suggest one. Don't just say 'Okay'!

⚠️

Watch the Suffix

Always use '-ınız' for people older than you, even if you are friendly. It shows 'saygı' (respect).

Bedeutung

Asking someone about their activities for the upcoming weekend.

💡

The 'No Plan' Rule

If a Turk says 'Planım yok', they are usually inviting you to suggest one. Don't just say 'Okay'!

⚠️

Watch the Suffix

Always use '-ınız' for people older than you, even if you are friendly. It shows 'saygı' (respect).

🎯

Add 'İçin'

Adding 'için' (for) makes you sound more advanced: 'Hafta sonu için planın ne?'

💬

Breakfast is Key

If you don't have a plan, suggesting 'Kahvaltı yapalım mı?' is the ultimate Turkish social move.

Teste dich selbst

Fill in the missing suffix for 'your plan' (informal).

Hafta sonu pla___ ne?

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: n

The suffix '-ın' (or just '-n' after a vowel, but here 'plan' ends in a consonant) indicates 'your' (singular/informal).

Which one is the most formal way to ask this question?

Choose the formal version:

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Hafta sonu planınız ne?

The suffix '-ınız' is the formal/plural version of 'your'.

Complete the dialogue with a natural response.

Ayşe: Hafta sonu planın ne? Mehmet: ________. Evde dinleneceğim.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Planım yok

'Planım yok' (I have no plan) is the most logical lead-in to 'I will rest at home'.

Match the phrase to the correct situation.

Phrase: 'Hafta sonu ne akıyoruz?'

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Talking to a group of young friends

'Akıyoruz' is slang used among young people.

🎉 Ergebnis: /4

Visuelle Lernhilfen

Formal vs Informal

Informal (Sen)
Planın ne? What is your plan?
Formal (Siz)
Planınız ne? What is your plan?

Aufgabensammlung

4 Aufgaben
Fill in the missing suffix for 'your plan' (informal). Fill Blank A2

Hafta sonu pla___ ne?

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: n

The suffix '-ın' (or just '-n' after a vowel, but here 'plan' ends in a consonant) indicates 'your' (singular/informal).

Which one is the most formal way to ask this question? Choose A2

Choose the formal version:

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Hafta sonu planınız ne?

The suffix '-ınız' is the formal/plural version of 'your'.

Complete the dialogue with a natural response. dialogue_completion A2

Ayşe: Hafta sonu planın ne? Mehmet: ________. Evde dinleneceğim.

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Planım yok

'Planım yok' (I have no plan) is the most logical lead-in to 'I will rest at home'.

Match the phrase to the correct situation. situation_matching B1

Phrase: 'Hafta sonu ne akıyoruz?'

✓ Richtig! ✗ Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Talking to a group of young friends

'Akıyoruz' is slang used among young people.

🎉 Ergebnis: /4

Häufig gestellte Fragen

10 Fragen

Only if you use the formal version: 'Hafta sonu planınız ne, hocam?'

It's a loanword from French, but it's used universally in Turkish now.

Say 'Gelecek hafta sonu planın ne?'

You say 'Planım yok' or 'Henüz bir planım yok'.

It's a bit early. Better to wait until Wednesday or Thursday.

'Planın' is singular (your plan), 'planların' is plural (your plans). Both are fine, but singular is more common.

Yes, that is actually slightly more common in casual spoken Turkish.

Usually, yes. Socially, the weekend starts on Friday evening.

Say 'Hafta sonu çalışıyorum' (I am working on the weekend).

Yes, 'Hafta sonu ne akıyoruz?' is very popular among youth.

Verwandte Redewendungen

🔗

Hafta sonu ne yapıyorsun?

similar

What are you doing this weekend?

🔗

Boş musun?

builds on

Are you free?

🔗

Planım var

contrast

I have a plan

🔗

Hafta içi

contrast

Weekdays

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