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  • (Score: 2) by tangomargarine on Friday October 03 2014, @05:14PM

    by tangomargarine (667) on Friday October 03 2014, @05:14PM (#101457)

    At least English doesn't suffer from the common annoyance of conjugating every goddamn part of speech. Do we really need to genderize adjectives, adverbs, verbs, prepositions...? Just leave it at subject-verb and be done with it.

    Oh, and another thing...are there any languages where the genders actually make any sense? I've taken German and there at least it seems almost totally random what gender all kinds of inanimate things are going to end up with, instead of just making them all neuter.

    On the other hand, English spelling is horrible. German is at least predictable in regards to spelling (except maybe double-vowel umlauts).

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  • (Score: 2) by mcgrew on Friday October 03 2014, @06:10PM

    by mcgrew (701) <publish@mcgrewbooks.com> on Friday October 03 2014, @06:10PM (#101468) Homepage Journal

    Well, the only languages I'm very familiar with are English, Spanish, and Thai (I never did speak Thai that well) and unfamiliar with German. Maybe it was because I was in middle school when I learned Spanish, but the gender-specific verbs weren't that much of a difficulty for me. Far harder was remembering "crap, what's the word for 'basement'?"

    I took that class out of curiosity, because I'd pick up Spanish language radio on the AM radio from Mexico (AM skips like short wave) and wondered what they were saying. It turned out to be very useful when I lived in California and especially Florida; you actually had to know Spanish to shop at the convenience store by my apartment, and half the foreign tourists I dealt with at work spoke only Spanish.

    It's been so long since I've used it, I have to admit that I don't remember if they made any sense, so I don't know.

    Thai was a bitch to learn, I was 21 by then. Learned from a book and the help of the Thais themselves; I was in the USAF and that's where they sent me. Knowing the language saved my life once!

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