>he doesn't speak at least 3 languages
He doesn't speak at least 3 languages
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I'm almost there greatest fren I'm practicing
>Kalaallisut
>Qallunaatut
>Tuluttut
>Utuututut
>Vodkatut
i speak english, sarcasm, and real shit
>speaking three languages
>not realizing that German is just a Latin English
>not learning German with ease by accepting that declensions exist
tell me a sentence in real shit
>German is just latin english
What?
>People called Romanis they go to the house
What are you on about mate, did someone deck you on the head with a baby seal or what
I do
Do Americans really?
German is literally English but with Latin declensions. prove me wrong
If you do not get the reference I'm gonna assume you're undergae/unerdeveloped in your painting skills, Hans
hope this is bait
if not, then the absolute state of american education
>tell me a sentence in real shit
imma keep it real with you chief, on god my nig, just speaking my mind bruh, black KANGS matter, on god, for real my nig, ya heard
>erneut, nicht erkennt, das deutsch ist einfach englisch aber mit latinisch kasus
the absolute state of English-speaking countries
Gonna do it on his behalf...
>Your flag has the color of both piss-yellow and navy-blue.
That sentence wasn't even correct, dude.
What's the situation of Greenlandic these days? I hear that it's not actually necessary to speak Greenlandic even in Greenland, and even some Inuits don't speak it these days.
>German is literally English
English is half french, half Anglo-Saxon which is closer to low german
en.wikipedia.org
So it's the other way around, at best
German is what English would look like *without* Latin influence. Over 30% of English vocabulary comes from French, which is a Latin derivative. Languages that are like Latin are in a completely different family than those that come from Proto-Germanic.
Latin = the romance languages, Proto-Germanic = the germanic languages.
tl;dr burger is wrong
Estoy tratando de aprender español. Cuando yo siento más comódo con esa lengua voy a empezar aprendiendo el japonés. Uno de los problemas de ser un hablante nativo de la lengua franca del mundo es no tiene mucho incentiva de aprender otros idiomas. Estoy celoso de los con que el inglés no es su idioma nativo. Es muy simple de aprender el inglés cuando las pelis, los videojuegos, la musíca, etc. más popular en el mundo es en inglés.
You heard correct muh nigguh. Mostly because Danes and the foeriegners they bring with. They cannot speak our language, but insist on US speaking their diarrhéa language
>Latin = the romance languages, Proto-Germanic = the germanic languages.
eh that's quite a leap, those influenced each other from the beginning and then some more over the centuries
It would be Anglish.
youtube.com
>nicht erkennen, dass deutsch mal einfach englisch aber mit latinisch kasus ist
fixed
I know of the Norman invasion and I can see that, but what I'm trying to say is that German is of the same family as English, but German actually declines its nouns
I'm not talking at fucking all about semantic etymologies, what I'm trying to convey is the idea that English and German are both part of the same family of languages (Germanic) but that German declines its nouns in a way similar to that of Latin, you stupid fucking leaf
Lern deutsch verdammt
Almost agree, but you're oversimplifiend it user...
This is true - it's a complicated topic. Was just trying to make a generalization that our burger here would understand
Indeed it would be. But it isn't
English used to have cases. Perhaps having cases isn't just a Latin thing.
>stupid fucking leaf
>t. ameritard
War of 1812.
*lateinischem kasus
Yes, german and english stem from the same language family, they're still not mutually intelligable.
Frisian is what English would look like without Latin Influence.
of course not, but they have a common ancestor (i.e. old English), and so I honestly consider them to be closer than, say, a language like French or Spanish, regardless of ease of learning or intelligibility. they're related as a family. also, thank you for correcting me, that should've taken on the dative case, genau
>war of 1812
>nicht in das eben teilgenommen hat
oh no no no
>what I'm trying to say is that German is of the same family as English, but German actually declines its nouns
well what you said is that german is more or less a latinized subset of English and that's why people reacted, because really it's the other way around
nonetheless I agree, english is so related to both german and french, those are probably the easiest languages for an englishman
english is very easy for a frenchman too, and a good gateway to german (jedoch, Deutsch ist leider ein Sprache mit zufällig Genera, wie Franzosisch)