A2 Expression 非正式 1分钟阅读

O da ne?

What is that?

Phrase in 30 Seconds

A versatile Turkish expression used to ask 'What is that?' with a tone of surprise or sudden curiosity.

  • Means: 'What on earth is that?' or 'What is that also?'
  • Used in: Reacting to strange noises, unexpected gifts, or weird sights.
  • Don't confuse: With 'O ne?' which is a simple, less emotive question.
😲 (Surprise) + ❓ (Question) = O da ne?

适合你水平的解释:

This is a simple way to ask 'What is that?' when you are surprised. 'O' means 'that', 'ne' means 'what'. The 'da' makes it sound more natural. Use it when you see something strange.
At this level, you can use 'O da ne?' to react to things around you. It's better than just 'O ne?' because it shows you are surprised. It is used for objects or sounds that you don't recognize immediately.
This expression functions as an emotive interrogative. The inclusion of the focus particle 'da' serves to emphasize the speaker's state of surprise or confusion. It's commonly used in narrative storytelling to create suspense or to engage the listener in a shared moment of curiosity.
In B2, we recognize 'O da ne?' as a fixed idiomatic expression where the particle 'da' loses its literal 'also' meaning and becomes a modal marker of surprise. It is essential for achieving a natural-sounding flow in informal Turkish conversations, particularly when reacting to environmental stimuli.
From a linguistic perspective, 'O da ne?' illustrates the use of the 'da/de' clitic as an intensifier in wh-questions. This structure shifts the focus to the unexpected nature of the referent. Advanced learners should master the prosodic stress—usually falling on the 'ne'—to convey the correct level of astonishment.
This phrase represents a pragmatic peak in Turkish interrogative syntax. It demonstrates the subtle interplay between deictic pronouns and additive particles to construct a 'mirative' meaning—a grammatical category expressing surprise or unprepared mind. Mastery involves distinguishing its use from 'O da nesi?', which carries a more formal, almost theatrical nuance of bewilderment.

意思

Asking about an unknown object or event.

🌍

文化背景

In Turkish culture, curiosity is often seen as a sign of being 'awake' and engaged with the community. Asking 'O da ne?' about a neighbor's new purchase is common and not always seen as nosy. This phrase is a classic 'cliché' in old Turkish movies, often used by the protagonist right before they discover a secret or a villain. On Twitter or Instagram, 'O da ne?' is often used as a caption for 'cursed images' or weird viral videos. Many Turkish ghost stories or urban myths begin with someone hearing a sound and asking 'O da ne?'.

🎯

The Eyebrow Raise

To sound like a native, raise your eyebrows slightly when saying 'O da ne?'.

⚠️

Spelling Matters

Always keep 'da' separate. 'Odane' is a common typo to avoid.

🎯

The Eyebrow Raise

To sound like a native, raise your eyebrows slightly when saying 'O da ne?'.

⚠️

Spelling Matters

Always keep 'da' separate. 'Odane' is a common typo to avoid.

💬

Don't be shy

Turkish people love reacting to things. Using this phrase makes you sound much more integrated.

自我测试

Choose the most natural reaction to hearing a loud 'BANG' in the next room.

Mutfaktan büyük bir gürültü geldi!

✓ 正确! ✗ 不太对。 正确答案: a

Since it's a noise (an unknown event), 'O da ne?' is the perfect expression of surprise.

Complete the sentence with the correct particle.

Gökyüzünde garip bir uçak var. O ___ ne?

✓ 正确! ✗ 不太对。 正确答案: da

Vowel harmony with 'O' requires 'da'.

Match the phrase to the situation.

You see a purple dog walking down the street.

✓ 正确! ✗ 不太对。 正确答案: O da ne?

A purple dog is a surprising sight, requiring 'O da ne?'.

What would the second speaker say?

A: Bak, kutunun içinden yeşil bir duman çıkıyor! B: ________

✓ 正确! ✗ 不太对。 正确答案: O da ne?

Green smoke is unexpected and requires a question of surprise.

🎉 得分: /4

视觉学习工具

练习题库

5 练习
选择正确答案 Fill Blank

✓ 正确! ✗ 不太对。 正确答案:
Choose the most natural reaction to hearing a loud 'BANG' in the next room. Choose A2

Mutfaktan büyük bir gürültü geldi!

✓ 正确! ✗ 不太对。 正确答案: a

Since it's a noise (an unknown event), 'O da ne?' is the perfect expression of surprise.

Complete the sentence with the correct particle. Fill Blank A2

Gökyüzünde garip bir uçak var. O ___ ne?

✓ 正确! ✗ 不太对。 正确答案: da

Vowel harmony with 'O' requires 'da'.

Match the phrase to the situation. situation_matching A1

You see a purple dog walking down the street.

✓ 正确! ✗ 不太对。 正确答案: O da ne?

A purple dog is a surprising sight, requiring 'O da ne?'.

What would the second speaker say? dialogue_completion A2

A: Bak, kutunun içinden yeşil bir duman çıkıyor! B: ________

✓ 正确! ✗ 不太对。 正确答案: O da ne?

Green smoke is unexpected and requires a question of surprise.

🎉 得分: /5

常见问题

10 个问题

Generally no. Use 'O kim?' for people. Using 'O da ne?' for a person implies they are an object or something monstrous.

'O' is for things further away, 'Bu' is for things you are holding or are very close to.

No, it's a standard expression of surprise. However, don't use it in very formal meetings.

It acts as an intensifier, turning 'What is that?' into 'What on earth is that?'.

Yes! That means 'What was that?' and is used for sounds or sights that have already passed.

Yes: 'Onlar da ne?' (What are those?).

Usually with 'Bilmem' (I don't know) or by identifying the object: 'Sanırım bir kedi' (I think it's a cat).

In this specific phrase, it's more of an emotional marker than a literal 'also'.

Only in a very casual email to a close friend. Otherwise, it's too spoken-style.

Writing it as one word: 'Odane'.

相关表达

🔗

Bu da ne?

similar

What is *this*?

🔗

O da nesi?

specialized form

What on earth is that?

🔗

Ne oluyor?

similar

What is happening?

🔗

O ne be?

informal

What is that (rough)?

🔗

Neler oluyor?

builds on

What things are happening?

在哪里用

🌙

Hearing a noise at night

Ayşe: Şşşt! Duydun mu?

Mehmet: Evet, o da ne?

informal
🐛

Seeing a weird bug

Can: Duvarın üstündeki şeye bak!

Elif: O da ne? Çok ayaklı!

informal
📱

Receiving a strange text

Ali: (Shows phone) Bu mesaj geldi.

Veli: O da ne? Kimden gelmiş?

informal
🏗️

Seeing a new building

Selin: Buraya yeni bir şey yapmışlar.

Murat: O da ne? Müze mi acaba?

neutral
🍲

Finding something in your food

Mert: Çorbamda bir şey var.

Garson: O da ne efendim? Hemen bakalım.

informal
🪄

Watching a magic trick

Seyirci: Şapkadan tavşan çıktı!

Arkadaş: O da ne? Nasıl yaptı?

informal

记住它

记忆技巧

Think of 'O' (Oh!) + 'da' (The) + 'ne' (New thing). 'Oh, the new thing? What is it?'

视觉联想

Imagine a person walking in a dark forest who suddenly sees a glowing purple mushroom. They point their finger, eyes wide, and say 'O da ne?'

Rhyme

Gördüm bir sahne, dedim 'O da ne?'

Story

You are at a birthday party. A giant box is brought in. It's moving! You point at it and ask your friend, 'O da ne?'. Inside is a tiny puppy. Now you'll never forget the phrase for unexpected surprises.

In Other Languages

Similar to the English 'What on earth?' or the German 'Was ist das denn?'. It adds a layer of 'flavor' to a basic question.

Word Web

OBuNeŞuNedirNesiOlaySürpriz

挑战

Next time you see a weird ad on social media, say 'O da ne?' out loud to yourself.

Review this phrase whenever you encounter something unexpected in your daily life.

发音

重音 The primary stress is on 'ne', usually with a rising intonation to indicate a question.

Like the 'o' in 'more' but shorter.

Short 'a' sound, like 'u' in 'cup'.

Like 'ne' in 'net'.

正式程度

正式
Bu nesnenin mahiyeti nedir?

Bu nesnenin mahiyeti nedir? (Identification)

中性
Bu nedir?

Bu nedir? (Identification)

非正式
O da ne?

O da ne? (Identification)

俚语
O ne be?

O ne be? (Identification)

Derived from Old Turkic roots. 'O' (ol) has been the third-person pronoun for over a millennium. 'Ne' is the ancient interrogative. The addition of 'da' as a focus particle evolved in Middle Turkish.

Old Turkic:
Ottoman Turkish:
Modern Turkish:

趣味小知识

The 'da' in this phrase is so powerful that it can change the meaning of the sentence just by how long you hold the 'a' sound.

文化笔记

In Turkish culture, curiosity is often seen as a sign of being 'awake' and engaged with the community. Asking 'O da ne?' about a neighbor's new purchase is common and not always seen as nosy.

“Komşunun bahçesinde yeni bir makine var. O da ne?”

This phrase is a classic 'cliché' in old Turkish movies, often used by the protagonist right before they discover a secret or a villain.

“Karanlıkta bir karaltı... O da ne?”

On Twitter or Instagram, 'O da ne?' is often used as a caption for 'cursed images' or weird viral videos.

“Bu videoyu izledim, o da ne öyle?”

Many Turkish ghost stories or urban myths begin with someone hearing a sound and asking 'O da ne?'.

“Gece yarısı ormanda bir fısıltı duydum. O da ne?”

对话开场白

Yolda yürürken yerde parlayan bir şey gördün. Ne dersin?

Arkadaşın sana çok garip bir hediye verdi. Tepkin ne olur?

Gece yarısı mutfaktan 'tık' diye bir ses geldi. Yanındaki kişiye ne sorarsın?

常见错误

O dane?

O da ne?

wrong conjugation
The particle 'da' must always be written separately in Turkish when it means 'also' or acts as an intensifier.

L1 Interference

0

O da ne? (pointing to a person)

O kim?

wrong context
Using 'ne' (what) for a person is rude. Use 'kim' (who) unless you are implying the person is a monster or an object.

L1 Interference

0 1

O de ne?

O da ne?

wrong conjugation
Vowel harmony: 'O' is a back vowel, so it requires 'da', not 'de'.

L1 Interference

0

O da ne! (in a formal report)

Bu durum şaşırtıcıdır.

wrong register
The phrase is too informal for academic or professional writing.

L1 Interference

0

In Other Languages

Spanish Very Similar

¿Y eso qué es?

Spanish puts the 'and' at the beginning.

French moderate

C'est quoi, ça ?

French is more focused on the demonstrative 'ça'.

German Very Similar

Was ist das denn?

German uses 'denn' instead of an additive particle.

Japanese moderate

Sore wa nani?

Japanese lacks the specific 'surprise' particle in this basic form.

Arabic Different

Ma hadha?

Arabic doesn't have a built-in 'surprise' particle in the question itself.

Chinese Different

Na shi shenme?

Relies on sentence-final particles for emotion.

Korean moderate

Geuge mwoya?

Focuses more on the relationship between speakers.

Portuguese moderate

O que é isso?

Uses a definite article 'O' at the start.

Spotted in the Real World

📺

(2011)

“O da ne? İsmail Abi yine ne yapıyor?”

Mecnun sees his friend İsmail doing something absurd on the coast.

🎵

(2020)

“Tık tık tık, o da ne? Kapıda kim var?”

A song teaching kids to identify sounds.

容易混淆

O da ne? 对比 O ne?

Learners don't know when to add the 'da'.

Use 'O ne?' for simple facts. Use 'O da ne?' for surprises.

O da ne? 对比 O da mı?

Sounds similar but means 'That one too?'.

Listen for the 'mi' at the end, which makes it a yes/no question.

常见问题 (10)

Generally no. Use 'O kim?' for people. Using 'O da ne?' for a person implies they are an object or something monstrous.

usage contexts

'O' is for things further away, 'Bu' is for things you are holding or are very close to.

basic understanding

No, it's a standard expression of surprise. However, don't use it in very formal meetings.

cultural usage

It acts as an intensifier, turning 'What is that?' into 'What on earth is that?'.

grammar mechanics

Yes! That means 'What was that?' and is used for sounds or sights that have already passed.

grammar mechanics

Yes: 'Onlar da ne?' (What are those?).

grammar mechanics

Usually with 'Bilmem' (I don't know) or by identifying the object: 'Sanırım bir kedi' (I think it's a cat).

practical tips

In this specific phrase, it's more of an emotional marker than a literal 'also'.

grammar mechanics

Only in a very casual email to a close friend. Otherwise, it's too spoken-style.

usage contexts

Writing it as one word: 'Odane'.

common mistakes

Learning Path

Prerequisites

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