🇹🇷 Turkish

Body Parts in Turkish

Turkish body part vocabulary is refreshingly simple compared to European languages — no grammatical gender, no irregular plurals, and no articles to memorize. The main challenge is learning how possessive suffixes attach to body parts and follow Turkish vowel harmony. This guide covers all the essential body parts with possessive forms and common idioms.

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Head and Face (Baş ve Yüz)

The table below shows each body part in its base form and with the "my" possessive suffix, so you can see vowel harmony in action.

TurkishEnglish
Pronunciation
Baş / BaşımHead / My head
bahsh / bah-SHUHM
Yüz / YüzümFace / My face
yooz / yoo-ZOOM
Göz / GözümEye / My eye
gurz / gur-ZOOM
Burun / BurnumNose / My nose
boo-ROON / boor-NOOM
Ağız / AğzımMouth / My mouth
ah-UHZ / ah-ZUHM
Kulak / KulağımEar / My ear
koo-LAHK / koo-lah-UHM
Diş / DişimTooth / My tooth
deesh / dee-SHEEM
Dil / DilimTongue / My tongue
deel / dee-LEEM
Saç / SaçımHair / My hair
sahch / sah-CHUHM
Alın / AlnımForehead / My forehead
ah-LUHN / ahl-NUHM
Boğaz / BoğazımThroat / My throat
boh-AHZ / boh-ah-ZUHM
Common Mistake

Notice how burun (nose) loses a vowel when a suffix is added: burun → burnum. This happens with several two-syllable body parts ending in a consonant. Similarly, ağız (mouth) becomes ağzım and alın becomes alnım. These vowel drops are predictable once you know the pattern.

Upper Body (Üst Vücut)

Upper body vocabulary with possessive forms. Notice how the possessive suffix vowel always harmonizes with the last vowel of the root word.

TurkishEnglish
Pronunciation
Boyun / BoynumNeck / My neck
boh-YOON / boy-NOOM
Omuz / OmzumShoulder / My shoulder
oh-MOOZ / ohm-ZOOM
Göğüs / GöğsümChest / My chest
gur-OOS / gurk-SOOM
Sırt / SırtımBack / My back
suhrt / suhr-TUHM
Karın / KarnımStomach / My stomach
kah-RUHN / kahr-NUHM
Kol / KolumArm / My arm
kohl / koh-LOOM
Dirsek / DirseğimElbow / My elbow
deer-SEHK / deer-seh-EEM
Bilek / BileğimWrist / My wrist
bee-LEHK / bee-leh-EEM
El / ElimHand / My hand
ehl / eh-LEEM
Parmak / ParmağımFinger / My finger
pahr-MAHK / pahr-mah-UHM

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Lower Body (Alt Vücut)

TurkishEnglish
Pronunciation
Bacak / BacağımLeg / My leg
bah-JAHK / bah-jah-UHM
Diz / DizimKnee / My knee
deez / dee-ZEEM
Ayak / AyağımFoot / My foot
ah-YAHK / ah-yah-UHM
Topuk / TopuğumHeel / My heel
toh-POOK / toh-poo-OOM

Describing Pain

The pattern for expressing pain is straightforward: body part with possessive suffix + ağrıyor (aches):

Body Part Idioms

Turkish has colorful idioms using body parts that reveal cultural values:

Pro Tip

The word parmak means both finger and toe. To be specific, say el parmağı (hand finger = finger) or ayak parmağı (foot finger = toe). This is similar to how Spanish uses dedo for both.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Turkish have grammatical gender for body parts?

No. Turkish has no grammatical gender at all — no masculine, feminine, or neuter. Body part nouns are simply nouns without any gender-based articles or endings. This is one of the features that makes Turkish vocabulary simpler than European languages for English speakers.

How do possessive suffixes work with body parts in Turkish?

Turkish adds suffixes to body part nouns to show possession: -ım/-im/-um/-üm (my), -ın/-in/-un/-ün (your), -ı/-i/-u/-ü (his/her). The vowel follows vowel harmony. For example: baş (head) → başım (my head), başın (your head), başı (his/her head). This replaces the need for separate possessive words like "my" or "your."

How do you say "my stomach hurts" in Turkish?

The pattern is [body part + possessive suffix] + ağrıyor: Karnım ağrıyor (my stomach hurts), Başım ağrıyor (my head hurts). Ağrımak (to ache) is the key verb. For sharper pain, you can use acıyor (it hurts/stings).

Are there Turkish idioms that use body parts?

Turkish is full of body part idioms: göz koymak (to put an eye on = to covet), kulak vermek (to give an ear = to listen carefully), el ele vermek (to give hand to hand = to join forces), ayağa kalkmak (to rise to foot = to stand up), dil dökmek (to pour tongue = to sweet-talk).

What is vowel harmony and how does it affect body part words?

Vowel harmony is a fundamental rule of Turkish where suffixes change their vowels to match the last vowel of the root word. Body part words follow this: baş (head) + ım = başım (my head, using "ı" to match "a"), but göz (eye) + üm = gözüm (my eye, using "ü" to match "ö"). It sounds complicated but becomes intuitive with practice.