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grubu

Grubu is the accusative singular form of the Turkish noun grup, meaning "the group." It is used when the group is the direct object of a verb, as in Grubu gördüm, which translates to I saw the group.

In Turkish, nouns are inflected with suffixes to express case, number, and possession rather than prepositions.

Usage notes:

Grubu frequently appears in everyday Turkish, as well as in sociological, organizational, and academic contexts, where

Etymology and related terms:

The Turkish word grup is a loanword that entered Turkish from European languages, reflecting the same root

Overall, grubu functions as a common grammatical form in Turkish to denote a specific group acting as

The
base
form
grup
means
"group."
Other
forms
include
grubun
(genitive,
"of
the
group"),
gruba
(dative,
"to
the
group"),
grupta
(locative,
"in/on
the
group"),
and
gruptan
(ablative,
"from
the
group").
The
plural
is
gruplar,
and
the
accusative
plural
is
grupları.
The
specific
form
grubu
marks
a
definite
singular
direct
object.
hablar
about
groups,
committees,
or
teams
is
common.
The
word
retains
the
core
sense
of
a
collection
of
people
or
things
forming
a
unit,
such
as
a
study
group,
work
group,
or
social
group.
When
discussing
ownership
or
characteristics
of
a
group,
possessive
forms
like
grubun
(the
group’s)
or
grupların
(the
groups’)
are
used.
meaning
found
in
many
languages.
Grubu,
as
the
object
form,
is
a
regular
inflected
variant
rather
than
a
separate
semantic
term.
the
object
within
a
sentence,
while
the
broader
word
grup
covers
the
concept
of
a
collection
or
unit.