Stupid kot

Stupid kot

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ru.wiktionary.org/wiki/Ксюша
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>Russian hates pussy
Who would've thought?

Dumb kot

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Dumb coбaкa

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AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHH DON'T SAY MEAN WORDS TO THE кoт YOU RUSSIAN FAGGOT
Now post more кoт content, please.

Chu say monke

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Based ceiling кoт.
Russian posters are the best.

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W-what?
Is...
Is кoт dead?

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Russia is country with most кoтoв in the world.

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666

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>ksiusze
what a shitty name

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It's ksyusha

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there is e in the end not a nor ya

It's because it says to beloved Ksyushe

K-syushé

which case is that? The 3rd one?

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what a gay language

cute kot

Fuck. Changes to word endings due to grammatical changes: my arch-nemisis.
So would the name be in the prepositional case, then?

Dative case

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Same ( O Ksyushe )

Wait, is Кcюшe Ksyu-sha and not Ksyu-shye?

oh, now i get it, i forgot that russian use a fucking k in the 3rd case and write their prepositions as suffixes

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>implying i know which one is dative
i googled it and it is a 3rd case. Both our languages order cases the same way, why are you making it hard by using english names when you can simply just tell me its number?

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Scary

doesn't german do the same? I fail to spot any differences between changing word endings and changing article endings

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No, I think I just fucked up.
The Russian in the thread would know better; although you're right that the к preposition requires dative, and that they occasionally prefix their prepositions.
That said, if you're right, would the cat's name actually be Cyusha?

>why are you making it hard by using english names when you can simply just tell me its number?
Dativ.
Dude, I don't bother with the numbering. I find it dumb to have accusative (Akkusativ) as the fourth case rather than second.
And I'm pretty sure the case names are of Latin descent.

I still can't understand why it's Ksyusha and not Ksyushye.
Can someone explain it to me or at least link me the explanation to why it's pronounced like that?

True, although the changes are rarely to the nouns themselves.
Only in genitive singular masculine and neutral (add an -s, similar to English's "apostrophe s"), as well as dative plural (end the noun with -en).
Historically, they also jammed an e on the end of dative singular as well.
I still have to learn the word ending tables for Russian.

Ksyusha is short name from Ksenia.

And who the fuck calls pets human names?

>That said, if you're right, would the cat's name actually be Cyusha?
ja vohl herr klaus
>And I'm pretty sure the case names are of Latin descent.
The problem is that we use native names in polish and Nom Gen Dat Acc Ins Loc Voc order just like russians do, so despite having different names we can still express them through their numbers.

Names are nominative case. ksyushe is an accusative case version of the nominative ksyusha because if a noun in acc. ends with an -e it means it ends with an -a in nominative.

Verstanden, Kowalski.
Although it scares me that you've further split prepositional up into locative and vocative.
English only has two cases: subjective and objective.

>ksyushe is an accusative case version
*dative
ru.wiktionary.org/wiki/Ксюша

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>*dative
i told you, i don't really know english names and i often mess them up, you're obviously right
>English only has two cases: subjective and objective.
i guess that since it uses a stiff word order and the articles to mark the nouns it doesn't really needed to keep its archaic case system.

Ksyusha is a nickname for Kseniya

Nominative singular case - Ksyusha / Kseniya
Genitive singular case - Ksyushi / Ksenii
Dative singular case - Ksyushe / Ksenii
Accusative singular case - Ksyushu / Kseniyu
Instrumental singular case - Ksyushey / Kseniyey
Prepositional singular case - Ksyushe / Ksenii

Nominative plural case - Ksyushi / Ksenii
Genitive plural case - Ksyush / Kseniy
Dative plural case - Ksyusham / Kseniyam
Accusative plural case - Ksyush / Kseniy
Instrumental plural case - Ksyushami / Kseniyami
Prepositional plural case - Ksyushah / Kseniyah

Thanks based rus.

>i told you, i don't really know english names and i often mess them up
Sorry, slipped my mind. It is dreadfully late.