sorgul wrote:oki .........so did i win?
we gota wait for heval to decide
Piling wrote:I know ek, ine, etc... It is the first courses you learned when you are students you know... I just wonder if there is another meaning, though for a name if seems sstrange to call someone "a heart". But if is "wish" in Turkish, ok, it is like Arzu.



Diri wrote:Piling wrote:I know ek, ine, etc... It is the first courses you learned when you are students you know... I just wonder if there is another meaning, though for a name if seems sstrange to call someone "a heart". But if is "wish" in Turkish, ok, it is like Arzu.
I didn't say you CALL anybody "Dilek"...I said it is a suffix to show the amount... "ek" is always put on the ending of words - mostly nouns - to decide how MANY... "Derek" - A DOOR... Malek - A HOUSE... Yeah?
![]()
You can't call anybody "Malek" either... LOOOOOL![]()
But I don't see why you are mixing in the Turkish word... Because we are only looking for Kurdish words...![]()
Arzu is Persian... In Kurdish we say Daxwaz/Daxaz...

ChiChalok wrote:Diri wrote:Piling wrote:I know ek, ine, etc... It is the first courses you learned when you are students you know... I just wonder if there is another meaning, though for a name if seems sstrange to call someone "a heart". But if is "wish" in Turkish, ok, it is like Arzu.
I didn't say you CALL anybody "Dilek"...I said it is a suffix to show the amount... "ek" is always put on the ending of words - mostly nouns - to decide how MANY... "Derek" - A DOOR... Malek - A HOUSE... Yeah?
![]()
You can't call anybody "Malek" either... LOOOOOL![]()
But I don't see why you are mixing in the Turkish word... Because we are only looking for Kurdish words...![]()
Arzu is Persian... In Kurdish we say Daxwaz/Daxaz...
yes u can .. u can say " tu milakamni " .. ahem



I didn't say you CALL anybody "Dilek"... Shocked I said it is a suffix to show the amount... "ek" is always put on the ending of words - mostly nouns - to decide how MANY... "Derek" - A DOOR... Malek - A HOUSE... Yeah? Wink
You can't call anybody "Malek" either... LOOOOOL Laughing
But I don't see why you are mixing in the Turkish word... Because we are only looking for Kurdish words
Dilek is Turkish for "Wish"... But in Kurdish it means "a heart"...


Diri wrote:ChiChalok wrote:Diri wrote:Piling wrote:I know ek, ine, etc... It is the first courses you learned when you are students you know... I just wonder if there is another meaning, though for a name if seems sstrange to call someone "a heart". But if is "wish" in Turkish, ok, it is like Arzu.
I didn't say you CALL anybody "Dilek"...I said it is a suffix to show the amount... "ek" is always put on the ending of words - mostly nouns - to decide how MANY... "Derek" - A DOOR... Malek - A HOUSE... Yeah?
![]()
You can't call anybody "Malek" either... LOOOOOL![]()
But I don't see why you are mixing in the Turkish word... Because we are only looking for Kurdish words...![]()
Arzu is Persian... In Kurdish we say Daxwaz/Daxaz...
yes u can .. u can say " tu milakamni " .. ahem
No you can't "You are a House of mine" - what YOU are saying is a Kurdish oral thing - it is said in a metophoric way... Not a direct way...

Piling wrote:I didn't say you CALL anybody "Dilek"... Shocked I said it is a suffix to show the amount... "ek" is always put on the ending of words - mostly nouns - to decide how MANY... "Derek" - A DOOR... Malek - A HOUSE... Yeah? Wink
You can't call anybody "Malek" either... LOOOOOL Laughing
But I don't see why you are mixing in the Turkish word... Because we are only looking for Kurdish words
I KNOW this story of suffix, it is the ABC of a Kurdish grammar LOL.
But I know a girls who calls Dilek and it seemed strange to have for name : A HEART instead of HEART, for example.Dilek is Turkish for "Wish"... But in Kurdish it means "a heart"...
YOU spoke of the Turkish meaning lol ! so I say OK, the Turkish name Dilek is like Arzu (whis is Persian by the way...).






Diri wrote:@ Chichalok...
Well...
We call "Liver" for "Cerg" in Standard Kurmancî - but also in my dialect it is Cerg...![]()
It must be a special Badînî thing...




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