Overview
Turkish adjectives are refreshingly simple compared to many other languages. They do not change for gender, number, or case — an adjective has one single form regardless of what it describes. Whether you are talking about one big car or five big cars, the adjective büyük stays the same. This makes Turkish adjectives one of the easiest grammar points for beginners.
At the A1 level, learning common adjective pairs (big/small, good/bad, hot/cold) and understanding where adjectives go in a sentence will immediately expand your ability to describe the world around you. The key rule is simple: adjectives come before the noun they describe, just like in English.
How It Works
Basic Rule: Adjective Before Noun
Adjectives always precede the noun they modify:
| Turkish |
English |
Structure |
| güzel ev |
beautiful house |
Adj + Noun |
| büyük araba |
big car |
Adj + Noun |
| soğuk su |
cold water |
Adj + Noun |
| küçük çocuk |
small child |
Adj + Noun |
No Agreement
Unlike French, Spanish, or German, Turkish adjectives never change:
| Turkish |
English |
Note |
| güzel ev |
beautiful house |
Singular |
| güzel evler |
beautiful houses |
Plural — adjective unchanged |
| güzel kadın |
beautiful woman |
Female — adjective unchanged |
| güzel adam |
beautiful/handsome man |
Male — adjective unchanged |
Common Adjective Pairs (Opposites)
| Turkish |
English |
Turkish |
English |
| büyük |
big |
küçük |
small |
| iyi |
good |
kötü |
bad |
| güzel |
beautiful/nice |
çirkin |
ugly |
| sıcak |
hot |
soğuk |
cold |
| uzun |
long/tall |
kısa |
short |
| yeni |
new |
eski |
old (things) |
| genç |
young |
yaşlı |
old (people) |
| kolay |
easy |
zor |
difficult |
| hızlı |
fast |
yavaş |
slow |
| pahalı |
expensive |
ucuz |
cheap |
| temiz |
clean |
kirli |
dirty |
| açık |
open/light |
kapalı |
closed/dark |
| doğru |
correct/true |
yanlış |
wrong/false |
| mutlu |
happy |
üzgün |
sad |
Colors (Renkler)
| Turkish |
English |
Turkish |
English |
| kırmızı |
red |
mavi |
blue |
| yeşil |
green |
sarı |
yellow |
| beyaz |
white |
siyah |
black |
| turuncu |
orange |
mor |
purple |
| pembe |
pink |
kahverengi |
brown |
| gri |
gray |
— |
— |
Adjectives as Predicates
Adjectives can form complete sentences without a verb (using the zero copula):
| Turkish |
English |
Structure |
| Bu güzel. |
This is beautiful. |
Subject + Adj |
| Hava sıcak. |
The weather is hot. |
Subject + Adj |
| Yemek çok iyi. |
The food is very good. |
Subject + Intensifier + Adj |
| Ev büyük mü? |
Is the house big? |
Subject + Adj + question |
Intensifiers
| Turkish |
English |
Example |
| çok |
very |
çok güzel (very beautiful) |
| en |
most (superlative) |
en büyük (the biggest) |
| daha |
more (comparative) |
daha iyi (better) |
| biraz |
a little |
biraz zor (a little difficult) |
| oldukça |
quite |
oldukça pahalı (quite expensive) |
Comparisons
| Structure |
Example |
English |
| X, Y'den daha + Adj |
Bu, ondan daha büyük. |
This is bigger than that. |
| En + Adj |
En güzel ev |
The most beautiful house |
| X kadar + Adj |
Onun kadar uzun |
As tall as him/her |
Examples in Context
| Turkish |
English |
Note |
| güzel ev (beautiful house) |
Adjective before noun |
Basic pattern |
| büyük araba, küçük araba |
big car, small car |
Opposite pair |
| Bu çok iyi. |
This is very good. |
Predicate adjective |
| Kırmızı çanta |
Red bag |
Color as adjective |
| Hava bugün çok soğuk. |
The weather is very cold today. |
Weather description |
| Yeni telefon pahalı. |
The new phone is expensive. |
Two adjectives |
| Daha ucuz bir otel var mı? |
Is there a cheaper hotel? |
Comparative |
| En güzel şehir İstanbul. |
The most beautiful city is Istanbul. |
Superlative |
| Eski ev küçük ama güzel. |
The old house is small but beautiful. |
Multiple adjectives |
| Temiz su istiyorum. |
I want clean water. |
Adjective + noun as object |
Common Mistakes
Placing Adjectives After the Noun
- Wrong: Ev büyük bir (trying to say "a big house")
- Right: Büyük bir ev
- Why: Adjectives must come before the noun in Turkish. The word order is: Adjective + bir + Noun.
Trying to Make Adjectives Agree
- Wrong: Güzeller evler (adding plural to both)
- Right: Güzel evler
- Why: Turkish adjectives never take plural, case, or any other suffix when modifying a noun. Only the noun changes.
Confusing Eski and Yaşlı
- Wrong: Eski adam (meaning "old man")
- Right: Yaşlı adam (old man) vs. Eski ev (old house)
- Why: Eski is for things (old house, old car, former friend). Yaşlı is for people and living beings (old man, old tree).
Practice Tips
- Learn adjectives in opposite pairs: büyük/küçük, iyi/kötü, sıcak/soğuk. Your brain remembers contrasts better than isolated words, and you will use these pairs constantly.
- Practice describing things around you right now: "Bu büyük bir masa" (this is a big table), "Telefon yeni" (the phone is new). Immediate, concrete practice is the fastest way to make adjectives stick.
Related Concepts