benim

Etymology
From, from , from , from. Equivalent to en. Compare 🇨🇬.

Verb

 * 1)  To take away; rob; deprive; ravish
 * 2) * 1900, Guillaume (de Lorris), Jean de Meun, Frederick Startridge Ellis, The Romance of the Rose - Volume 2:
 * To visit I should much prefer Some sick but wealthy usurer : With patience would I comfort him, In hope some deniers to benimme, And when pale death steals o'er his face, Transport him to the burial-place.
 * 1) * 1900, Guillaume (de Lorris), Jean de Meun, Frederick Startridge Ellis, The Romance of the Rose - Volume 2:
 * To visit I should much prefer Some sick but wealthy usurer : With patience would I comfort him, In hope some deniers to benimme, And when pale death steals o'er his face, Transport him to the burial-place.
 * To visit I should much prefer Some sick but wealthy usurer : With patience would I comfort him, In hope some deniers to benimme, And when pale death steals o'er his face, Transport him to the burial-place.

Etymology
, reinterpreted as I, me.

Pronoun

 * 1)  I, me

Usage notes
Often interpreted as talking about yourself in third person.

Etymology
Genitive case of. It was in Bilge Khagan and Kul Tigin inscriptions,  in Tonyukuk inscriptions. Cognate with 🇨🇬.

Pronoun

 * 1) my, mine, of mine.

Usage notes

 * One of only three irregular Turkish genitive cases (the others being and ).