13 Hilarious Sounds Turks Make In Conversation | Sound More Turkish
2021 ж. 7 Қаң.
292 796 Рет қаралды
Some sounds aren't really words but clearly make sense. Have you ever heard the Turkish version of "ewww" or "wow"?
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I was waiting for "Oha" throughout the video. It's my favorite
i was waiting for that too, this sound represent shocking or you didnt believe on what you see or hear
@@14Absuma02 maybe .....
@@14Absuma02 Maybe he just forgot about it. Meh, it's fine.
It is not a sound. It is a word
what is the meaning of oha i always hear it in dizis
I’m Pakistani not Turkish but how did you forget “OHA” 😂
Hahahhahahahha 😅
I'm from Afganistan not Turkish but how did he forget; Haaydaaa. First when I came to Turkey, i was so confused of that sounds. Also surprised that how they use them that much frequently. Also there is lots of words they use too much like: tamam, aynen, yani, iyi, efendim.....
@@esrasama3536 😂😂😂 hahahha u r more turkish than some Turks
The word oha is used when grazing cattle. so it is a bit rough word but it is used a lot in daily life.
@@zeynepsahi23 o gurup burası?
Bu kadar garip sesler çıkardığımızın hiç farkında değildim
Garip da ne garip😂
Vallah bende hiç fark etmedim şimdiye kadar! Vay he... 😂😂
çin mantısı olduğun içindir
@@erdincylmaz7180 KDKDLFNFLRKFPFHRO herhalde ondan
Oha yi nasil kacirdin
I'm Turkish and I've never seen someone say "ishhhhh!" when sth hurts tho-
fr its not that common
only heard my cousin say that in my entire life :D
aynen
Aynen
O zaman türk değilsin knk
I think, you forgot the "a-a" sound which is used when you are surprised or shocked. I hear it very often in the series and in the everyday language, too
Sometimes I use the sound. My mom always use the sound.
I was waiting for that too lol. How come he forgot it?
I was veeery surprised, that it isn't included, too 😅
I always use it
I was waiting for that too 😂😂😂😂
I remember a turkish student clicking his tongue and we all found it weird because clicking tongue sounds like mwah (kiss) here LMAOOOOOOO
lmaoo i should keep that in mind in case i ever go abroad
LOOOOOL
where is that??? I should be careful if I find myself there
@@nursah5256 Indonesia hahahhaha
@@rjleysaid *never clicks tongue around Indonesian friends again
You forgot "Yuhh!" , I hear this a lot in Turkish tv shows.
Yeah, it means wow or omg in english
@@pseidee yes but it’s not polite to say
It is something like shocked a lot to anything. Yuhh aq :)
Oha And yuh Are the same Noises.
It's a little like "wtf"
I never use iş(ish) when i get hurt, this is the first time me hearing someone makes that sound in Turkish🤷♀️ Am I the only one?
As a Turkish, I have never heard it too.It might be regional.
@@sukranercanl7128 yeah maybe. Happy to see someone like me🙂
@@Leyla-pq3fe I think he misspelled it... We sometimes say something similar to "ıyş" or "ıyh" when we are hurt...
Yes it's not commonly used but I've heard it.
Genelde kırsal kesim kullanıyor olabilir ya da belli bir yöre, bilemeyeceğim. Tek bildiğim bizim köyde çok kullanıyorlardı ve bu sesi de çok fazla duydum
We have the same sounds in Greece 🤣 obviously being close neighbors
Thank you for your neighbourhood
and in Bulgaria, it's the 500 years together, then the neighbours 😊
@@rumikarapetrova5540 sending love to bulgaria i really miss it there my moms immigrated from there in 1989. they are turkish you know the rest but i love it there i have so many relatives there
@@rumikarapetrova5540 What shocked me in Bulgaria was experiencing the exact opposite in head movement to imply "Yes" and "No". Completely opposite of what whe have here, it was amazing. (move head side to side to say yes)
Hellooo naber komşu
Kral seni kültür elçisi ilan ediyorum.
ahshshhs teşekkür ederim 😄
OSGAOAGSOSGWOHDDO
hahahhaa ben de 😁
Finally I found a Turk :>
@@Lisek_Mappingözellikle yunanların türkleri kötülediği videolarda
this is so interesting, in romanian we have many of these (the no clicky sound, the oooff, vay, even "hadi be" is extremely similar to our "haide bă", the yes and no uh-uh). i guess they are signs of our past ottoman influence :)
Îhî :)
Balkan country Turks dialect haida ba
It's because of past history. The Ottomans ruled a very large area.
1. Half of it we use in Serbia, but more importantly 2. You guys are adorable! God luck with the channel.
much love from Turkey to Serbia!
I was in Serbia once and it was really nice!
@@unknownv1065 Well what-do-you-know! I was in Turkey once and it was really nice! :)
Same here in Macedonia we use all of those sounds expect the one where for pain it's similar but not like he described it in the video.
@@veratisium Not offense but its because Ottoman Empire.
I watch turkish dizi so much...almost all of these have become a habit 😂😂😂🤣
ahahahah glad to hear that 😄
Same😂🙈
Oh my God, same!
yes, exactly! I was surprised to know all the sounds...and use them on daily basis. They come in super handy :D and I enjoy being the one using "Turkish sounds" but nobody else in my surroundings knows.
@@annal.4259 😂ikr
The “so what” noise is my favourite 😂
Same😄
@@Turkishle there is also one karma -type exclamation tone Eee like in " Eee , çalma elin kapısını çalarlar kapını " Eee tone general meaning : conclusion ,expected result .
eeeee ? :)
Eeee? :D
Eeee? ;D
Hayret ilk defa bi videoda türklerle ilgili bi içerik üretilmiş ve türkler yorumlara doluşmamış xjfnngmgmfmfög
Gayet doluşmuşlar:)
@@logosnaki evet. Tam ben de emin misin demeye gelmiştim.
@@logosnaki yani doluşmuşlar ama ingilizce olarak ğxnepvbelfhekhfj
Kendi videomuza da doluşmayalım artık
Adam Türk zaten :D
I'm a Singaporean and is obsessed with Turkish shows! I noticed how they use this "sounds" when making conversations and had no clue what it means. English subtitles really helped me understand better tho! We too here use the "clicking" sound but it just means "ughhh" or sigh. hahhaah sometimes unknowingly, i tend to make this sound when speaking and the other party will look at me weirdly lolllll
i think the clicking is sometimes used as sigh in Turkey too
@@reichiquita889 yeah we definitely use it as sigh too
You missed the one which is Oohaa and an other one is Ohooooo... these are personally my much favorite.
Yess
oha is similar to "whoa!" in english ohoo.... is hard to explain but i can say that it's an exclamation to express a person that he's too late. like u wanna play a game with your friend and your friend says let's play blablabla and you say ohoooo i already played that game.. or you wanna meet with ur friend in a place and u agreed at 8 oclock. u go to that place but ur friend is late and you call your friend. he says that he's at home. and you say ur friend that "ohoooo u are still home? it's 8.30 oclock!!!" hope you can understand :)
@@Galanoth I already know there meaning and usage.
@@Galanoth interesting "Oho" means "wow" in lithuanian
"Oha" is considered more as a whole word in and of itself, rather than a sound.
Benim ülkem Kazakstan, ama biz bu seslerdı kollanyoruz! bu arada, annelere ve babalare asla kı "tuh!" soyulur kötü şey haha! 🇰🇿🇹🇷
tüh bizde kötü bir kelime değil
Bizde aileye “offf” demek kötü
Çünkü Türksün kardeşim :)
Tükürmek anlamındaki "tü" olmasın o? 😀 Kazakistan'a selamlar kardaş.
Дым естіген емеспн:')
I am a Hebrew speaker and many of these sounds exist in Hebrew as well. I guess they entered either directly from Turkish during Ottoman times or through Arabic
Yeah some of them are defo international, but may not have come from turkey
all of them are Turkic, central asian culture. Off course because of the Ottoman Empire, we lived together 400-500 years.
I'm Kashmiri, I swear we make all these sounds, lol. By the way, Ramadan Mubarak ❤️
Vay, this is amazing content, great job! Very informative, spot on, and great that you added all those sections from series and movies. Keep up the great work! ♥
Thanks a lot!
Abi inanamıyorum sana cidden, hala tonla Darwincileştirmediklerimizden olan insanlar var ve sen video çekeceğine yorum yazmakla vakit harcıyorsun . I cast kent biliv.
@@TheAmanov şaka yapmış gibi geldi bana aslında ama sjsjsjsjsj
@@TheAmanov ironi
@@zuzu.k_ Tenks for ekspileneyşın.
Çok sevimli. Hahaha. 😅 I really like listening to Türkçe. Merhaba from Philippines 🤗
Merhaba selamlar filipinlere 😉
Kumusta from Turkey : )
Greetings from Turkey to Philippines
Greetings from Turkey 💗
I was born to a Turkish family in the UK and always did these sounds whenever I would be talking to my friends in school in english 😂 Some people would have weird reactions, I never understood why until now 😂 Man this is a lil bit embarrassing hahaha
@ALPER TÜRKMEN I so consider my self very much Turkish, but there are also people born into Turkish families who are more foreign to their culture than foreigner
thats why the world dont move forward. Bad communication. Just 10 seconds to ask, but we dont do it and live a whole life with wrong understanding.
@@Levo_D_Angelo abartma
@@Shaytan.666 Bunu bir seytan mi diyor bana ? Kapa ceneni
as a brazilian i can say that we also make some of this sounds, like exaclty the same hahaha i'm shook
Turkish people are so much expressive which is good. This is my observation. . love you guys. .
Yeah, even Erdoğan had been visibly expressive with Ms. Ursula Von Der Leyen in Ankara😂 As it was so evident, it went all over the world😂 Recommendation: do not forget to take a chair with you next time when you go to Turkey, especially if you are a female. Now, don't come over me. I just commented what I saw.
@@elisabetta4478 You are right, this was disrespect, but your generalization of the Turkish people over erdoğan is sad
@@elisabetta4478 it was later said by the commite in brussel that they made a mistake it wasn't turkey's fault the chair wasn't there brussel gave faulty information
I'm no turkish but when I watched this video it reminds me of Kara Sevda Nihan always say off and Kemal always say ehh
LMAO
jules malfoy hahahah I got addicted with turkish dizis
@@littlemissautumn2226 There's too many awkward scenes in turkish dizis lol
Where y'all from
@@kasadam85 I'm Turkish u?
as a Lebanese, all I can say is that we do almost all of these sounds as well 👀 and they have the same meaning 🇱🇧🤝🏼🇹🇷
Ottomans.
What is your most common expression??
Dizilerden kesitler koyman videoyu hem daha anlaşılır hem de daha eğlenceli bir hale getirmiş. Ama Çok da iyi olmuş ama bunun ikinci kısmının gelmesi lazım. Mesela oha, yuh, çüş, aha (İşte bu, anladım anlamındaki.), ahanda (orada), aaaa (öyle miymiş anlamındaki.) , üf (sıkıldım, yeter), e (cümlelerin falan başına gelen, atıyorum ''E öyle zaten'' derken olan.), cıss (Çocuklara söylenen.) he (bunun da çok anlamı var aklıma gelenlerden ikisi efendim ve evet.) , heğ (anladım) gibi. ''Ay'' için ayrı bir yer açıyorum. Yazdığım sözlerin hepsinin başına ''Ay'' getirin uygun olacak. ''Öyle miymiş, acıdı, teşekkür ederim, hayır, evet, yeter, yok ya, o ne ya, iğrenç...'' bunlardan fazlası var eksiği yok. Bir de şunu fark ettim, muhtemelen bu seslerle ,neredeyse hiç doğru düzgün kelime kullanmadan, geçirdiğim günler olmuş.
o ne uzun bi yazı ben okumaya üşeniyorum 😂
"lan" da ekleyebiliriz
@@127bubbles Evet evet vazgeçilmezimiz. :)
Hahahahaha amazing video. I'm from Greece and I know Turkish very well and I enjoyed this one. Bravo 😁❤️
Greetings to Greeks 😚
♡♡♡
@@callmekhaleesi hellooo🧿❤️❤️
@@burcinra ❤️❤️
Türkçe öğrenmesi zor bir dil, sabrın için tebrik ediyorum seni.
I just love turkish language,and I am learning it too, love from India. Tesekkúrlar.
Teşekkürler*. Ş=sh, ü=ue.
@@ardabarsozelmas4626 thanks for the update. 🙃🤭
Oh my God 😍 1:04 my favorite series when i was a child in 2005😍 and yeah i have Türk roots. Greetings from Canada 💝
Greetings to Canadaa ^^
Avrupa Yakası is the best Turkish sitcom ever existed 😂
Ya ben türküm ben niye bunları izliyorum 😄 ama baya eğlenceli bi video olmuş
Literally this sound is also used in india😁 i was just love turkey after ertugrul gazi and many more Turkish drama 💕💕💕🇮🇳🇮🇳
"ya" and "be" are used in India. That's right.
@@Isabella0274 yes right
I love the Turkish sounds very much! 😍😍 They're so expressive to me! My favorites: 'Hadi be' (Yamaç in Çukur uses this a lot) 'Offfff yaaa' 'Allah Allah' (I know this is not a sound😂)
Çok güzel olmuş... Elleriniz sağolsun... Güney Azerbaycandan🇹🇷🇦🇿🇺🇿🇹🇲🇰🇬🇰🇿
Also “Ayy” as in “Ay ne güzel” and “Ohh” as in “Ohhh çok rahat” or “Of deme Oh de” as in be grateful “Oh çok şükür” Great video! Thanks!
Hey brothers! This is video about Turkey but... Two countries, one nation 🇦🇿❤️🇹🇷 *I'M FROM AZERBAIJAN 🇦🇿*
As a southern Italian, these sounds so similar and relatable. 🤣🤣🤣
Greetings from Greece we use like half of these 🇬🇷
Greetings from other side of Aegean we have common culture i can't understand why some people try to separate us
@@gorkem5154 lna
@@gorkem5154 Because of politics. In the end of the day we're pretty the same aka Greek.
@@unknownv1065 hahaahahah😀😀😀 bro stahp. I love you tho. No homo tho
@@aykut2606 me too
Yorumlarda Türk arayan kardeşim yalnız değilsin
Bütün yabancılar toplanmış maşaallah
Ben aslında yabancı arıyodum
@@aeuuuu 😂
We have similar sounds in Italian 😅
In Romanian too!
Both are close countries mediterranian and black sea region :D
Same for Bosnia
Italians and Ottomans was in a good friendship and were trading doing bussines. For balkan countries, you know it.
I am an Indian , we indians also do the same😃 human psychology didn't differs dosen't matter from where are you
I’m amazed how similar some of these expressions are in Australia.
Which ones do you using?
Such as
It’s hard to explain but if not exactly the same, many are quite similar so that you can easily comprehend. One example is the one older people (like Aunts and Uncles) use for disapproval “Tsk Tsk” whilst shaking their head. 😊
@@pruhorwood8473 move is same but voice is different. I got it
@@benjaminflash1108 yes, very similar
Just saw this video. LOVE it! I'm American and a lot of this translates well. Your English by the way is EXCELLENT! I would love to visit Turkey-the people and the music are so beautiful. I had a friend from Greece who made the same clicking sound for disapproval and would always say "so kitsch", like German. He took me to a Greek restaurant and we saw a Bulgarian dancer dancing to Turkish music. She wore high heels that looked like clear Plexiglass. He did that sound and "so kitsch". Alex was great.
Yeah. Its all about Ottomans. Ottomans was a turkish empire that lived 600 years and that has land in whole Balkans, (Greece, Bulgaria,Serbia etc.) (Even Balkan word is Turkish LOL) north africa and arabia. So these people lived together under one state. They affected so much from turks for 600 years and its still continuing 🙂
@@pseidee I know of the Ottoman Empire. Even Napoleon didn't want to tangle with them but I didn't know that "Balkan" is a Turkish word. Thank you for the comment. I can always learn something new.
@@billd3356 You're welcome. Have a nice day :)
We do almost all of these in Greek too and I always thought they are pretty universal until I was hanging out with some friends from other European countries and realized that they weren't understanding when I was doing any of these, especially the yes and no sounds, they had no clue what I was doing 😂
Turkey is the amazing country. And I am Turkısh.🇹🇷
Guys the most beautiful sound we as Turks make and which is definetly unique in the world is „pisi pisi“. When you are in a interaction with a cat or you want to call a cat to yourself, you make this sound. Make this sound on a street in Istanbul all cats will watch to you 🤣🤣🤣🐱!
The sound "yoooo" is the sound that I love the most tbh. You can express any emotion with it. Let me give you some examples: Do you love me? -Yoooo (joking) Did you call your grandparents? -Yoo (feeling guilty) Get out of my room!! (sister or brother) -Yoooooğooo (to piss them off)
Çok faydalı bir ders! Keep them coming Can bey! These lessons are so unique because no other channel seems to explain these little common ways of communicating everyday feelings/meanings in Turkish! It really helps me to understand Turkish TV and film too! Harika!
Thanks a lot! Glad you found it helpful :)
We use a lot of the last ones in England too! Thanks for these videos, I am finding them useful while in Istanbul 😁
I love this channel, it helps me a lot in my studies of Turkish ❤️🇧🇷
I'm from Mexico, in my state called Tabasco, we also make these sounds very often and for the same reasons: 5:03, 5:24 & 5:38
We have some of these sound expressions in Albania too
I learned all of the sounds by watching turkish dramas ... 🇹🇷🇹🇷❤❤
which veins did you watch ☺
we use almost the same sounds with the same meaning in Bulgarian! I was surprised "adi be" is also used in Turkish😃
Great video! I laughed a lot as I recognized most of the sounds. It’s amazing how many Turkish people are watching your videos!!!😃
I am surprised how many expressions i was able to guess right. Thanks to turkish series with English subtitles.
Oh my Gosh i remember my friend celal always using that sound when we talking each other 😂😂😂
Eu gosto de ouvir alguns desses sons. 😂🇧🇷 "yaaa" "öff" "Oha" "Vay" Muito bom seu vídeo!! 👏
Os sons correspondentes ( evet ve hayir) são os mesmos em Língua Portuguesa.
I am from Bulgarian and we use every single one of them. It's very funny, I thought we were the only ones that did these sounds.
I mi koristimo skoro sve🙂
You give the best information on everyday conversation! Thanks especially for yaa
19 yıldır türkiyede yaşıyorum burda büyüdüm ilk defa canımız yanınca ish dendiğini duyuyorum.
Kendi adına konuşuyorsun. Ben bizim köyde çok fazla duydum. Hep birinin canı yandığına "İşş!" derlerdi. Bizim köy Düzce'de Batı Karadeniz'de belki sizin çevreniz farklıdır
@@bilge2786 orta karadenizdeyim ben,burda insanlar bir yere vurduklarında derin bir nefes alıp yanaklarını şişirerek,kaşlarını çatarak oflarlar. Üfleme sesinin daha yoğun olduğu bir of
Ben hiç duymadım şahsen kaç yıllık türküm.
Ordu ağzında var aktif olarak kullanılıyor..
Samsun'da kullanılıyor.
In love with Turkish people and Turkish language, you're amazing guys ❤
This channel is my fav as it made learning Turkish easier for me and actually more fun ❤️
Love the Turkish language!!! And I've learned so much from this vid. Tesekkurler!!
bts grubundan üyelere "Ulan çok tatlısın" yazmıştı bir türk, çocuk da ulan ne demek diye sordu yüzlerce türk bir araya geldik açıklayamadık :D ulan ı nasıl açıklarız?
hala düşünür gülerim wlacnalcnalland
ulan/lan - "oğlan" kelimesinin yamulup bükülmüş halidir Oğ"lan"
@@emba76 sen ciddi misin
@@emba76 her gün yeni bir şeyler öğreniyorum
Bir lisanı iyi bilme incelikleridir bazı kelimeler. " Lan deme bana, lan !" nasıl anlatılır başka lisanda?
I have shared this video to one of my isrealite friends who is going to love it when he watches no longer he will be able to say tık tık tık evladım
I'm glad I found your channel. I'm currently learning turkish and I think your channel will be a good resource, For listening practice too.
Çok güzel bir vidyo, teşekkürler. Tek düşünceler arasındaki eeeeeeee sesini özledim, beni deli ediyor. :-)
It is very interesting ,some of those sounds mean completely something else in other cultures and it is funny to see how you can communicate or have a conversation just by sounds😄..I really like the video. Çok teşekkür ederim.
Its awesome! I'm from Bulgaristan and i adore your videos! So interestingly made! You're helping me indeed! Maşallah! Çok yaşa! Teşekkür ederim! ❤️🇹🇷❤️
Now I can use some of these expressions familiar to me when I visit Turkey next month!👏
@mel I made a list of the most common phrases before going to Turkey and it helped me a lot! Tesekkur Ederim!!!
It’s funny because we have them all in Romanian as well 😂
We are same brother 🤗
@@mehmetozturk1665 no
@aq Br Of course I do 🤦🏿♀️
@aq Br because
Detaylı olmuş. Türkçe öğrenmek isteyen birisi için harika hizmet.
I liked all of it. You‘re doing well! And with charm☺️. Thank you. Good work!
Love your video. Have been watching Turkey tv and now understand some stuff. You are amazing
These all voices are so commonly used in pakistan also ❤️
@@No-ts4fl merhaba! because urdu is originated from turkish and many other languages and word urdu (ordu in turkish)is also turkish which means army!! So no need to worry about that we are similar 🇵🇰🇹🇷🤲🏻 türkiyeden selam
These sound also used in india
i was surprised when my pakistani friend used the word 'tamam', he said it is an urdu word. I wonder how they're connected
@@dusia08 tamam is basically arabic
@@dusia08 tamaam means "complete" in urdu 😂 Not same like Turkish tamam
Interesting video! I'm Mexican-American, and in the Mexican Culture, we use a lot of these expressions . Thanks for this video!
I loved this. I’m in Istanbul for a long vacation and this has been enlightening!
Such great videos, Can! Teşekkür ederim! Çok kullanışlı.
Wow we have so Many come things.. in expressions ❤️❤️ Love from India 🇮🇳
Now I can impress my Turkish friends with these tips !
Definitely😄
Thanks!
Where are you living?
This is one of my favorite videos! Thank you!
"Can" you are so delightfully entertaining I'm almost enjoying, finally, your very difficult language. I should continue watching your videos.
I don't know why but I love when I hear the clicking of the tongue in the Turkish series.💗
Hi I m from India .. I really love to visit Turkey .. After Watching ur video I noticed .. We Indians also do same reactions as Turkish ppl do.. Like u say shhh we say shhshh or shuk shuk.. Or we do shhh to make some one quite.. Other is ishhh in India in Maharashtra state maharashtrain ppl say ishh whn they feel shy..
We Turks also use "shhh" to silence the noise makers too. 😀 Mothers also use the same sound to make their babies sleep...😊
Really loved your expression, and the way you explain things it's really commendable and easy to understand 😊
Very informing and entertaining video. Keep up the good work!
Indians do also use these sounds such as "chhhchhhhhchhh" when u are pitying someone , tut sound to say no, "THUH" to show disgust, " Bey " when someone is fighting, like saying Kyu bey , kya dikkat hai teri (hey dude what's your problem)and it is extremely informal to use it . Indians add "ABEY "at the beginning of the sentence and end it by adding "BEY " here's an example " abey yrr mujhe yeh samaj nahi aa raha hai , meri maddad kar bey(hey dude I'm unable to understand this, help me, dude). It simply means "DUDE" in both situations by using BEY or ABEY and when you don't want to say or yes, we simply nod the head up and down for yes and to and fro motion for no like you did in the video.
I noticed that here in lebanon we do almost all of these sounds and even the gestures
Amazing information!! Thank you so much 🌹
Efsane👏Konu, anlatım, canlandırma, araştırma, detay... Helal olsun sana💪
Teşekkürler!
I think it's clear but let me remind you, all of these are informal.
I'm amazed on how similar those noises can be to my Brazilian Portuguese. We also click the tongue once meaning that we don't believe something, so instead of saying "I can't believe it, or you're kidding me" - we just click the tongue. We also click three times - but we mostly use it to talk to kids, when we want signalize reproval of their behavior/tantrum...
Thanks for sharing! Really interesting :)
Can, harikasın kardeşim, açıklamalar, anlatımlar çok iyi, videolarının resmen bağımlısı oldum. Eğlenerek izliyorum, eline sağlık. Bizi dünyaya bu kadar içten ve doğru anlatman tardire şayan. :)
I haven't realized that we make this sounds until you share it :D thanks dostum.
Haha with almost every word I thought of vartulu from çukur saying it. I don’t know why. 🤣🤣🤣 amazing
Actually, people should not prefer using those sounds, you can use them to your close friends. When I was a child I remember when I used "Yaaaa" sound my mom or my teacher always warned me, they asked me not to make those sounds and speak clearly and gently.. So, We Turkish people actually shouldn't prefer using those words. However, surely they sound very intimate :))
It's so useful, joyful teaching technique and entertaining content... I started following u now.. Keep it up thanks alot for your efforts