of course

listen to the pronunciation of of course
English - Turkish
elbette

Sana yardım edeceğim, elbette. - I will help you, of course.

Elbette o İngilizce konuşabilir. - Of course she can speak English.

hayhay
öyle ya
(Konuşma Dili) tabii ki

Tabii ki sana yardım edeceğim. - Of course I'll help you.

Ne istersen yapabilirsin tabii ki de. - You can do whatever you want to, of course.

tabii ki elbette
kuşkusuz
tabi

Tabii ki sana yardım edeceğim. - Of course I'll help you.

Tabii ki, ben Japonya'da iken Çin hakkında ders kitaplarından öğrendim, ama benim kendi adıma Çin'de gördüğüm bu ders kitaplarında anlatıldığından tamamen farklıdır. - Of course, I learnt about China from textbooks when I was in Japan, but what I see for myself in China is completely different from what is described in those textbooks.

elbet

Sana yardım edeceğim, elbette. - I will help you, of course.

Ben, elbette, savaşa karşıyım. - I am against the war, of course.

kuşkusuz ki
tabi istersen
tabii

Tabii ki de savaşa karşıyım. - I am against the war, of course.

Tabii ki caz müziğine aşina idi. - Of course he was familiar with jazz.

pek tabii
şüphesiz

Tom, şüphesiz, çok yorgundu. - Tom was, of course, very tired.

Şüphesiz gidersen sorun değil. - Of course it's not a problem if you go.

English - English
Asserts that the associated phrase should not be argued, particularly if it is obvious or there is no choice in the matter

You will, of course, surrender all your future rights to the property.

Indicates enthusiastic agreement

Of course I'll go with you.

Acknowledges the validity of the associated phrase

Of course, there will be a few problems along the way.

emphasis You use of course in order to emphasize a statement that you are making, especially when you are agreeing or disagreeing with someone. `I expect you're right.' --- `Of course I'm right.' `You will strictly observe your diet: no wine or spirits, very little meat.' --- `Of course.'
emphasis Of course not is an emphatic way of saying no. `You're not really seriously considering this thing, are you?' --- `No, of course not.'
as might be expected; "naturally, the lawyer sent us a huge bill"
formulae You use of course as a polite way of giving permission. `Can I just say something about the cup game on Saturday?' --- `Yes of course you can.' `Could I see these documents?' --- `Of course.'
You say of course to suggest that something is normal, obvious, or well-known, and should therefore not surprise the person you are talking to. Of course there were lots of other interesting things at the exhibition `I have read about you in the newspapers of course,' Charlie said The only honest answer is, of course, yes. = naturally
certainly, surely
{ü} certainly
of course
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