The first and most frequently used nouns have to do with our gender, but also with our relationships. If ” homme ” and ” mari ” are two distinct words, the word ” femme ” in French designates both gender and marital status. The word ” jour ” is widely used to express temporali...
[hú] complete a set in Mahjong 你 [nǐ] (~lternative feminine form: 妳 nǐ) you, your;你们nǐmen you (plural) 地 [dì] earth, ground, soil, place, position, distance;地支dìzhī the Twelve Terrestrial Branches[de] <adverbial particle: descripion + 地 + verb>, ~ly;快地走 kuàide...
There are 7 cases (and 2 additional rarely used ones) of the nouns in the Lithuanian language. The verbs have only 4 tenses, however. There is singular and plural. Unlike in English (but like in most other languages) there are genders, with each word being either masculine or feminine. ...
English is excellent. Know a bit of French, Dutch, German. I wish I could learn Urdu as well. But as future maths teacher can't help dening that all our world is just the limited system...and all languages also...the most difficult language(-s) is(are) in your mind the better ...
1)-eis often f. (like in German, and equally unreliable; of course from Latin-aexcept when it’s not); 2)-age, -ège, -ige, -au(but noteau),-ment, -ismeare masculine; 3) m. is a sort of default (because the Latin n. merged into it); ...
That, like privacy, is a purely modern phenomenon, and even Benjamin Franklin would splatter (still no pun intended) his newspaper with scatological four letter verb or nouns that would have gotten him arrested in the mid-twentieth century. It took the Victorians to come along and make ...