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Better late than never : tonight, Treasure Planet.
i've never actually watched treasure planet
and i just found this thing and can someone confirm if learning a new language is like this
i'll watch it... when i can and i just found this thing and can someone confirm if learning a new language is like this
Finnish has 6 moods. Indicative, Conditional, Potential, Ambitious, Disappointed, Regretful.
They say Hungarian has 18 cases. You don’t know what they are or how they work. Only that they exist and there are 18 of them. You are scared.
One of the first things you will hear when someone is describing Hungarian to you is that it has “over twenty cases” (exact number depends on the source). This is pure hogwash.From learning a Slavic language (Czech) and German, I have a pretty good idea what a grammatical case is; Genitive, Accusative, Dative, Vocative etc. and while I have my ways of getting through these (described in the Czech/German guides linked above), they are still quite a lot of work and will slow you down when you are learning a language.Hungarian’s “cases” are nothing like these. There is almost no complexity to them at all! It’s just a fancy name for “the preposition gets attached to the end of the word”. So while in Czech, any case requires you to know (or at least extrapolate) up to fourteen possible combinations per word (which luckily follow patterns) for each case, Hungarian just has two or three, which are almost always totally obvious.
Let me just note here real quick that no Hungarian person in their right mind thinks of them as cases.To quote Benny Lewis: