How to say "to feel sad" in Turkish?

In Turkish "to feel sad" translates to  üzgün hissetmek 

Transliteration: ooz-goon hees-set-mehk

🇹🇷 Bugün kendimi çok üzgün hissediyorum.

🗣️ Boo-gun kehn-dee-mee chook oo-z-goon hees-seh-dee-yor-oom.

🇺🇸 Today I feel very sad.

🇹🇷 Bugün kendimi çok üzgün hissediyorum.

🗣️ Boo-gun kehn-dee-mee chook oo-z-goon hees-seh-dee-yor-oom.

🇺🇸 Today I feel very sad.

🇹🇷 Bugün kendimi çok üzgün hissediyorum.

🗣️ Boo-gun kehn-dee-mee chook oo-z-goon hees-seh-dee-yor-oom.

🇺🇸 Today I feel very sad.



Start learning Turkish with glot.space


🇹🇷

Turkish

Native speakers
76M 🗣️
Official language in
Turkey 🌍
Active vocabulary
15k-25k 📚
Difficulty
medium-hard 🤔
Closest langauges
Azerbaijani, Turkmen
⏳ Avg. time to basics
900-1100 hours ⏳

Why learn Turkish?

Learning Turkish opens up opportunities in a country that bridges Europe and Asia, offering geopolitical and economic significance in sectors like tourism, textiles, and construction. Turkey's unique culture and history make the language valuable for cultural enthusiasts and academics. For basic fluency, English speakers need about 1,500-2,000 vocabulary words and may require 900-1,100 hours for general proficiency. Key Turkish grammar elements include vowel harmony, agglutination, and the use of suffixes to convey relational meaning. The language's subject-object-verb structure and absence of gendered nouns offer a different linguistic perspective. Mastering Turkish enables more nuanced interactions, both professionally and culturally, in this transcontinental setting.



Frequently Asked Questions

How to say "to feel sad" in Turkish?

You can use the word "üzgün hissetmek" which translates to "to feel sad".

How to pronounce "üzgün hissetmek" (to feel sad) in Turkish?

The word "üzgün hissetmek" is pronounced as "ooz-goon hees-set-mehk".

Do you have an audio recording on how to pronounce" üzgün hissetmek" (to feel sad) in Turkish?

Not yet, but this functionality is coming soon. We're focusing on the quality of the written content first.