A1 Proverb Formel

Dost kara günde belli olur

Friend in need

Signification

True friends help in trouble.

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Contexte culturel

The concept of 'Kara Gün' is deeply tied to the 'Ağıt' (lament) tradition in Anatolia, where black is the color of mourning and ultimate sorrow. In Sufi tradition, 'Dost' often refers to God or a spiritual guide. The 'black day' can be seen as the 'dark night of the soul' where one's faith and true companions are tested. In big cities like Istanbul, this proverb is often used ironically to complain about the loneliness and transactional nature of modern life. In Kazakh and Kyrgyz cultures, similar proverbs exist, emphasizing the horse and the friend as the two things tested in 'kara' times.

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Use it for Gratitude

It's a very polite and deep way to thank someone who helped you through a hard time.

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Don't Overuse

If you use it for every small favor, it loses its emotional power.

Signification

True friends help in trouble.

💡

Use it for Gratitude

It's a very polite and deep way to thank someone who helped you through a hard time.

⚠️

Don't Overuse

If you use it for every small favor, it loses its emotional power.

🎯

The '-muş' Variation

Use 'Dost kara günde belli olurmuş' when you want to sound like you've just learned a life lesson.

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Vefa is Key

Understand that this proverb is the verbal expression of the concept of 'Vefa'.

Teste-toi

Fill in the missing word in the proverb.

Dost ____ günde belli olur.

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : kara

The proverb uses 'kara' (black) to symbolize bad days.

Which situation best fits this proverb?

When would you say 'Dost kara günde belli olur'?

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : When a friend helps you after a car accident.

The proverb is used for serious 'black days' or troubles.

Match the Turkish words to their English meanings in this context.

Match the following:

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : Dost:Friend, Kara:Black/Bad, Gün:Day, Belli olmak:To become evident

These are the core components of the proverb.

Complete the dialogue with the correct form of the proverb.

Ahmet: 'İflas ettiğimde kimse yanımda yoktu, sadece sen vardın.' Mehmet: 'Üzülme Ahmet, biliyorsun ki ____.'

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : dost kara günde belli olur

This is the appropriate proverb for loyalty during financial ruin.

🎉 Score : /4

Aides visuelles

Arkadaş vs. Dost

Arkadaş
Good times İyi günler
Casual Sıradan
Dost
Black days Kara günler
Deep Derin

Banque d exercices

4 exercices
Fill in the missing word in the proverb. Fill Blank A1

Dost ____ günde belli olur.

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : kara

The proverb uses 'kara' (black) to symbolize bad days.

Which situation best fits this proverb? Choose A2

When would you say 'Dost kara günde belli olur'?

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : When a friend helps you after a car accident.

The proverb is used for serious 'black days' or troubles.

Match the Turkish words to their English meanings in this context. Match A1

Associez chaque element a gauche avec son pair a droite :

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : Dost:Friend, Kara:Black/Bad, Gün:Day, Belli olmak:To become evident

These are the core components of the proverb.

Complete the dialogue with the correct form of the proverb. dialogue_completion B1

Ahmet: 'İflas ettiğimde kimse yanımda yoktu, sadece sen vardın.' Mehmet: 'Üzülme Ahmet, biliyorsun ki ____.'

✓ Correct ! ✗ Pas tout à fait. Rponse correcte : dost kara günde belli olur

This is the appropriate proverb for loyalty during financial ruin.

🎉 Score : /4

Questions fréquentes

12 questions

No. 'Arkadaş' is a general friend or acquaintance. 'Dost' is a much deeper, soul-level friend.

Technically yes, but it sounds wrong. Proverbs are fixed phrases; 'kara' is the required word.

Yes, it is extremely common in daily life, TV shows, and social media.

It can be anything from a death in the family to losing all your money or a serious illness.

It's the aorist tense, used for universal truths that are always true.

Only if you have a very close, long-term relationship with the person. Otherwise, it's too personal.

There isn't a direct opposite proverb, but the term 'İyi gün dostu' describes the opposite person.

In metaphors, yes (e.g., kara haber, kara sevda). In literal use, it just means black.

You can say 'Her zaman yanındayım' (I'm always by your side) or 'Dostluk bunu gerektirir' (Friendship requires this).

It's 'frozen' register, meaning it's a classic that works in both formal and informal settings.

No, it will sound sarcastic or weirdly dramatic.

Not in the canonical form, but it has a rhythmic 1-2-1-2 beat.

Expressions liées

🔗

İyi gün dostu

contrast

Fair-weather friend

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Dost acı söyler

similar

A true friend tells the bitter truth

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Kardeşten öte dost

builds on

A friend closer than a brother

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Dostlar alışverişte görsün

contrast

Doing something just for show

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