please respond
/lang/ - Language Learning General
>tfw not northwestern european
>tfw only 175cm or 5'9
>tfw 27 and still not fit
おいで
太陽を見た
死んでよかった
嫌いだった
無駄だよ
死ぬのはたいてい人にとって不便な状態です
晴れてても行かなかっただろう
雨が降ってたことを自分で見たって? つまり、ほんとに水が空から落ちていたことを見たよね
タイに行ったときはいつだっけ?
せっかく話しているから、今いつ行くか決めようね
The limit is irrelevant to the captcha. Just copy all your typed up shit and reload the post form, man.
>is spoken Finnish easier than the written language?
no. Hearing Finnish is obviously more difficult than reading lol. And what you learn from the grammar books is not quite the way average Finns speak.
What's wrong with conjugation?
www.guidetojapanese.org/particles3.html
www.imabi.net/karanodenoda.htm
ja
>Was/Welches ist das beste Gebäude Deutschlands (/in Deutschland)?
if you wanted you could say
>Ich mag es, am Wochenende bowlen zu gehen - I like to go bowling on the weekend
>Am Wochenende mag ich bowlen gehen - I want to go bowling on the weekend
yes but more narrowly it means 'come to a halt/stop moving', so that wouldn't make sense with 'state of emergency'
cheer up Giovanni
>Ich schaue die Sonne an
+t, this is present tense
>Es gefiel mir
>Gibt es nichts, das du tun kannst - Is there nothing you can do?
>Es gibt nichts, das du tun kannst - There's nothing you can do
Alright lads, I'm in the market for a dead language. My goal isn't to have a new language to actually use. I just want to learn something fun and challenging. Also, picking a dead language is more intertwined with history, and I'm a big history nerd so I think it'll be more fun for me to learn something like Latin instead of Italian.
I think I've about got my choices narrowed down. It's between Old Norse, Old English, Latin, and Gothic. Latin will for sure be the easiest to find learning materials on, and Gothic will probably be the hardest. Latin will also be the easiest in terms of alphabet, because if I learn one of the 3 Germanic languages, then I'm 100% going to use the runic alphabet instead of the Latin alphabet.
Anyone currently learning one of these languages who can clue me in on how hard they are? I'm not sure which I'm gonna go for yet, but I'm leaning towards Latin just because there's going to be an ample amount of resources available. But if someone knows of some solid resources for learning Gothic, Old Norse, or Old English, then I'd totally be down to check it out.
>Old English
Hold on, I'mma call my Serbian nibba here to guide you
>>Ich schaue die Sonne an
>+t, this is present tense
Ich habe die Sonne anschaut
?