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durumunu

Durumunu is a Turkish noun phrase that comes from durum, meaning state or condition, combined with possessive and case markers to form a definite direct object. In Turkish grammar, the form expresses “his/her/its state” when the possessed noun is the object of the verb. The word is not a proper noun but a grammatical construction used in everyday and formal Turkish.

Usage and meaning

Durumunu translates roughly as “his/her/its state/condition,” with the sense of a specific state belonging to someone

Morphological notes

Durum is the base noun meaning state or condition. The ending -u in durumunu marks the third-person

Related concepts

Durum as a general word for state or condition appears across Turkish discourse, from everyday conversation

or
something.
It
is
used
when
the
speaker
is
referring
to
that
person’s
or
thing’s
condition
as
something
being
acted
upon
or
described.
For
example:
Onun
durumunu
öğrenmek
istiyorum
(“I
want
to
learn
his/her/its
condition”).
Yetkililer
durumunu
değerlendirecekler
(“The
authorities
will
evaluate
his/her/its
condition”).
The
form
is
productive
in
both
spoken
and
written
Turkish.
possessive
(his/her/its)
for
the
possessed
noun,
and
the
overall
form
is
further
shaped
by
Turkish
case
and
harmony
rules
to
indicate
it
as
a
definite
direct
object.
Because
Turkish
morphology
stacks
suffixes,
the
exact
surface
form
can
vary
with
vowel
harmony,
but
durumunu
is
the
standard
citation
form
for
“his/her/its
state”
in
the
object
position.
to
journalism.
The
construction
exemplifies
Turkish
agglutinative
morphology,
where
multiple
suffixes
attach
to
a
stem
to
encode
possession,
definiteness,
and
grammatical
role.