A few observations before I hit my chronological stride: Dresden is really cold. I mean, at the moment it's only really cold for August, in that I'm wishing I'd packed some sweaters, and sleeping happily under a substantial down duvet, and throwing on the occasional jacket. But dear Lord, what can this imply about winter here? The way I see it,
(
Read more... )
Comments 12
Reply
Reply
You see, lj user="kalliwoda", in English we have the damn sense not to distinguish further between direct and indirect objects than context clues and word order make possible. It's pretty clear, in the sentence "He gave the girls the book", that "book" is the direct object (what he gave) and "the girls" are the indirect object (to whom he gave it). We only make a distinction for pronouns, (some of)which have two forms: I/me, he/him, we/us, etc. "He gave it to me", but "I gave it to him".
In German, every single word has four cases (both singular and plural), one of which is the dative; you use it for indirect objects and with certain prepositions and verbs. So 4 cases x 2 (singular and plural) x 3 (masculine, feminine, neuter) means I have to learn 24 different endings. Latin has 6 cases x 2 x five possible patterns, or 60 possible endings. Russian has 6 x 2 x 3, or 36 endings. And that's just nouns; adjectives have different endings that also change. And every language has irregular words ( ... )
Reply
Reply
2. Of course you wanted to see the monkey dance, who wouldn't?
Reply
ЧТО СЛУЧИЛОСЬ!!!!!!!
http://www.history-compass.com/AuthContrib2.asp?ref=930
БОЖЕ МОЙ!
Спасибо - лев
Reply
Reply
German capitalizes all nouns and substantive adjectives, no nationalities, and pronouns only in the polite forms (you plural, sometimes ["Ihr"], and always you formal ["Sie"]). And of course the first word of every sentence... but not, interestingly (to me), the first word of the first sentence after the greeting in a letter, because evidently the salutation itself counts as the first element.
Now ask me about word order.
Reply
From what I understand, though (25-year-old nurse), they don't replicate themselves directly. And I am momentarily (hahahahahahaha) lacking the means in question. But I'll get back to you.
Reply
Leave a comment