Yusuf Dikeç is popular not only because he shoots without a gadget. With his posture, look, gray hair and glasses, he resembled someone you might see in a movie about a "hitman, assassin or spy". This is why his teammate and other contestants who shot without a tool were not as popular as Dikeç.
Zeynep KORKMAZ "sub > suw > suy: su" dönüşümünün bir sonucu olduğunu düşünür. (KORKMAZ, 2009: 260) Ayrıca "suy" biçimi 14. yy.'da tanıklanmıştır. (ÇEBİ, 2022: 118)
La palabra Turca "kahvaltı: desayuno", que significa "la comida que se come antes del café", es una combinación de las palabras "kahve: café" y "alt: bajo". La palabra "alt: bajo/debajo" se utiliza en el sentido de "antes de / delante de" de una forma a la que no estamos acostumbrados hoy en día.
The etymology of İstanbul: making optimal use of the evidence - Marek Stachowski, Robert Woodhouse www.ejournals.eu/SEC/2015/Iss...
Körklüg tonug ȫzüŋke Tatlıg aşıg aḍınka Tutgıl konuk agırlıg Yaḍsun çawıŋ buḍunka
'Army, host' = Old Turkish: ortu id. = Kyrg: ordo 'large yurt, residence', Uig.: o(r)da 'palace', Chag. / Kazakh: orda 'camp of the Khan, palace; army' (Polish: horda > German: Horde). ℹ️ STACHOWSKI, 2019: 268 Prehaps from orta: 'middle, centre' < *or 'place, accommodate'. (1/2)
ἔντομος 'entomos': cut into pieces, cut up Based on this understanding, the word can also be used for 'etymology'. For example, the Arabic word for 'etymology', اِشْتِقَاق || (ištiqāq), derives from the meanings of "to divide, split, cut". 🤯😄