A1 Questions 1 min read Easy

Asking 'Where' (Nerede/Nereye)

Grammar Rule in 30 Seconds

Turkish splits 'where' into 'where at' (Nerede) and 'where to' (Nereye) based on movement.

  • Use 'Nerede' for static locations like 'Where is the cat?' (Kedi nerede?)
  • Use 'Nereye' for movement or destinations like 'Where are you going?' (Nereye gidiyorsun?)
  • Use 'Nereden' to ask about origin or 'where from' (Nereden geliyorsun?)
📍 Nere + Case Suffix (-de / -ye / -den) = ❓ Where?

Meanings

The root 'nere' (what place) combines with Turkish case endings to specify if one is asking about a fixed location, a destination, or an origin.

1

Static Location

Asking where someone or something is currently located using the locative suffix -de/-da.

“Anahtarlarım nerede?”

“Siz şimdi neredesiniz?”

2

Direction/Destination

Asking about the target of a movement using the dative suffix -(y)e/-(y)a.

“Bu akşam nereye gidiyoruz?”

“Topu nereye attın?”

The 'Nere' Question Family

Turkish Word Suffix Used English Meaning Function
Nerede -de (Locative) Where / Where at Static location
Nereye -ye (Dative) Where to Destination/Movement
Nereden -den (Ablative) Where from Origin/Source
Neresi -si (Possessive) Which place Identifying a place

Colloquial Contractions

Standard Casual/Spoken Example
Nerede Nerde Nerde kalıyorsun?
Nereden Nerden Nerden biliyorsun?

Reference Table

Reference table for Asking 'Where' (Nerede/Nereye)
Form Structure Example
Location Nere + de Ofis nerede?
Destination Nere + ye Okula nereye?
Origin Nere + den Nereden geliyorsun?
Subject Nere + si Burası neresi?
Plural Location Nere + ler + de Nerelerdesin? (Where have you been?)
Personalized Nere + de + sin Neredesin? (Where are you?)

Formality Spectrum

Formal
Nereye teşrif ediyorsunuz?

Nereye teşrif ediyorsunuz? (Asking about destination)

Neutral
Nereye gidiyorsunuz?

Nereye gidiyorsunuz? (Asking about destination)

Informal
Nereye gidiyorsun?

Nereye gidiyorsun? (Asking about destination)

Slang
Nereye böyle?

Nereye böyle? (Asking about destination)

The Nere- Tree

Nere

Location

  • Nerede At where

Direction

  • Nereye To where

Origin

  • Nereden From where

Nerede vs Nereye

Nerede (Static)
Oturmak To sit/live
Beklemek To wait
Nereye (Moving)
Gitmek To go
Koşmak To run

Choosing the Right 'Where'

1

Is there movement?

YES
Use Nereye
NO
Is it a location?
2

Is it a location?

YES
Use Nerede
NO
Use Neresi (Subject)

Common Verbs for Each

📍

Nerede Verbs

  • Var
  • Yaşamak
  • Çalışmak
🏃

Nereye Verbs

  • Gitmek
  • Bakmak
  • Yürümek

Examples by Level

1

Tuvalet nerede?

Where is the toilet?

2

Nereye gidiyorsun?

Where are you going?

1

Dün akşam nereye gittiniz?

Where did you (plural) go last night?

2

Sizin eviniz tam olarak nerede?

Where exactly is your house?

1

Nerede olduğumu tahmin et!

Guess where I am!

2

Nereye bakarsan bak, onu göremezsin.

No matter where you look, you can't see it.

1

Bu tartışmanın sonu nereye varacak?

Where will the end of this discussion lead?

2

Şehrin neresinde oturuyorsunuz?

In which part of the city do you live?

1

Nereden nereye geldik, hala inanamıyorum.

I still can't believe how far we've come (from where to where).

2

Bu projenin neresinde hata yaptık?

In which part of this project did we make a mistake?

1

Hakikatin nerede gizli olduğu kadim bir tartışmadır.

Where truth is hidden is an ancient debate.

2

Nereye evrileceği belli olmayan bir süreçteyiz.

We are in a process whose evolution (where it will evolve to) is uncertain.

Easily Confused

Asking 'Where' (Nerede/Nereye) vs Nerede vs. Neresi

Learners use 'Nerede' to ask 'What is this place?'.

Asking 'Where' (Nerede/Nereye) vs Nereye vs. Nereden

Mixing up 'to' and 'from' directions.

Asking 'Where' (Nerede/Nereye) vs Nerede vs. Nerde

Thinking they are different words.

Common Mistakes

Nerede gidiyorsun?

Nereye gidiyorsun?

Movement verbs like 'go' require the dative case (-ye).

Kitap nereye?

Kitap nerede?

Asking for the location of a static object requires the locative case (-de).

Burası nerede?

Burası neresi?

When asking 'What is this place?', use the subjective form 'neresi'.

Nereye yaşıyorsun?

Nerede yaşıyorsun?

Living (yaşamak) is a state, not a movement toward a destination.

Nereden geldiğini biliyor musun?

Nereye gittiğini biliyor musun?

Contextual confusion between origin and destination in complex sentences.

Neresinde olduğunu anlamadım.

Nerede olduğunu anlamadım.

Over-complicating the structure when a simple locative is sufficient.

Sentence Patterns

[Subject] nerede?

[Time] nereye gidiyorsun?

Burası neresi?

Real World Usage

Travel & Navigation constant

Pardon, müze nerede?

Texting Friends very common

Neredesin? Geç kaldın!

Job Interviews occasional

Daha önce nerede çalıştınız?

Ordering Food common

Siparişim nerede kaldı?

💡

The Verb is Key

If the verb is 'gitmek' (go), 'gelmek' (come), or 'bakmak' (look), you almost always need 'Nereye' or 'Nereden'.
⚠️

Don't forget the 'y'

When adding the -e suffix to 'nere', you must use the 'y' buffer: Nere-y-e. 'Neree' is incorrect.
🎯

Neresi for Identity

Use 'Neresi' when you want to know the name of the place you are currently standing in.

Smart Tips

Check if the verb involves a change of location. If yes, use Nereye.

Nerede gidiyorsun? Nereye gidiyorsun?

Always use 'Burası neresi?' to ask locals where you are.

Burası nerede? Burası neresi?

Drop the middle 'e' in Nerede to sound more natural.

Nerede yaşıyorsun? Nerde yaşıyorsun?

Pronunciation

/ne.ɾe.de/

The Soft 'e'

The 'e' in 'nere' is open and clear, like the 'e' in 'pet'.

ner-de

Contraction in Speech

In fast speech, the middle 'e' in 'nerede' often disappears.

Question Rise

Nereye gidiyorsun? ↑

The pitch rises slightly on the question word 'Nereye' and falls at the end.

Memorize It

Mnemonic

Nere-DE is for 'DE-stination' (where you are), Nere-YE is for 'YE-onder' (where you're going).

Visual Association

Imagine a red pin on a map for 'Nerede' (static). Imagine a green arrow pointing to a city for 'Nereye' (movement).

Rhyme

Nerede is where you stay, Nereye is on your way.

Story

A traveler arrives at a station. He asks 'Neredeyim?' (Where am I?). He sees a bus and asks 'Nereye gidiyor?' (Where is it going?). He meets a friend and asks 'Nereden geliyorsun?' (Where are you coming from?).

Word Web

NeredeNereyeNeredenNeresiNeredesinNereyece

Challenge

Look at 5 objects in your room and say out loud '[Object] nerede?'. Then, think of 3 places you want to go and say 'Yarın [Place]-ye/ya gideceğim'.

Cultural Notes

When someone asks 'Neredesin?' (Where are you?), it is often a friendly way to start a conversation or invite someone for tea, rather than just tracking location.

In some rural Anatolian dialects, 'Nereye' might be pronounced as 'Nere' or 'Neriye'.

Derived from the Old Turkic root 'ne' (what) and 'ara' (middle/space/interval).

Conversation Starters

Affedersiniz, en yakın metro istasyonu nerede?

Bu hafta sonu nereye gitmek istiyorsun?

Sizce Türkiye'nin en güzel yeri neresi?

Journal Prompts

Write about your dream vacation. Where do you want to go and why?
Describe your current city. Where are the best restaurants and parks?
Imagine you are lost in Istanbul. Write a dialogue asking for directions.

Test Yourself

Fill in the blank with Nerede or Nereye.

Sen şimdi _______ oturuyorsun?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Nerede
The verb 'oturmak' (to live/sit) describes a static state, so we use the locative 'Nerede'.
Choose the correct question for the answer: 'Okula gidiyorum.' Multiple Choice

Which question matches the answer?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Nereye gidiyorsun?
Since the answer indicates a destination (Okula), the question must use 'Nereye'.
Correct the mistake in the sentence. Error Correction

Find and fix the mistake:

Burası nerede? (Meaning: What is this place?)

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Burası neresi?
To identify a place as the subject, 'Neresi' is required.
Translate 'Where are you from?' to Turkish. Translation

Where are you from?

Answer starts with: Ner...

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Nereden geliyorsun?
'Where from' translates to 'Nereden'.

Score: /4

Practice Exercises

4 exercises
Fill in the blank with Nerede or Nereye.

Sen şimdi _______ oturuyorsun?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Nerede
The verb 'oturmak' (to live/sit) describes a static state, so we use the locative 'Nerede'.
Choose the correct question for the answer: 'Okula gidiyorum.' Multiple Choice

Which question matches the answer?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Nereye gidiyorsun?
Since the answer indicates a destination (Okula), the question must use 'Nereye'.
Correct the mistake in the sentence. Error Correction

Find and fix the mistake:

Burası nerede? (Meaning: What is this place?)

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Burası neresi?
To identify a place as the subject, 'Neresi' is required.
Translate 'Where are you from?' to Turkish. Translation

Where are you from?

✓ Correct! ✗ Not quite. Correct answer: Nereden geliyorsun?
'Where from' translates to 'Nereden'.

Score: /4

FAQ (6)

Yes, `Nerde` is the common spoken form. In formal writing, stick to `Nerede`.

`Neresi` asks 'What is this place?' (Subject), while `Nerede` asks 'Where is it located?' (Location).

Turkish vowel harmony rules require 'e' after 'e'. The 'y' is a buffer to separate two vowels.

You use the plural locative: `Nerelerdeydin?` or simply `Neredeydin?`.

Yes! In Turkish, you look 'to' something, so you ask `Nereye bakıyorsun?` (Where are you looking?).

Usually, yes, but Turkish word order is flexible. `Nerede anahtarlarım?` is also understood but less common.

Scaffolded Practice

1

1

2

2

3

3

4

4

Mastery Progress

Needs Practice

Improving

Strong

Mastered

In Other Languages

Spanish high

¿Dónde? / ¿Adónde?

Turkish uses suffixes, while Spanish uses prefixes/prepositions.

French low

French does not change the question word based on movement.

German high

Wo / Wohin / Woher

German uses separate words/compounds, Turkish uses case suffixes.

Japanese moderate

Doko (どこ)

Both are agglutinative, but the specific particles differ in nuance.

Arabic moderate

Ayna (أين) / Ila ayna (إلى أين)

Turkish is suffix-based; Arabic uses separate prepositions.

Learning Path

Prerequisites

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