zincirinden
Zincirinden is a Turkish grammatical form built from the noun zincir (chain) with suffixes that indicate possession and origin. The form results from attaching the genitive suffix -in to zincir to signal “the chain’s” and then the ablative suffix -den to express movement away from that chain, yielding zincirinden. In ordinary usage, zincirinden functions as a part of a larger clause and can indicate that something is coming from or breaking free from a chain, either literally (an animal or person released from restraint) or metaphorically (freedom from constraints).
Etymology and morphology: Turkish commonly stacks suffixes in a fixed order, with genitive before ablative. zincirinden
Usage: In sentences, zincirinden is typically part of a predicate or complement. For example, köpek zincirinden
See also: Turkish grammar, Turkish suffixes, ablative case, genitive case, Turkish morphology.