Happy Azumarill
All society is one big pie
- 179
- Posts
- 14
- Years
- Age 34
- Australia, The Grass Is Greener
- Seen Mar 26, 2013
yeh you are right, i remember watching it 10 years ago, but now i really i wanted to watch it again and it is really great
Never heard of Sailor Moon. Although it probably wasn't shown in Ireland, as, like I've stated several times before, we never get any good anime over here. D:
I wonder if I recall my friend saying that SM was in Gaelage (sp) over there, but I can't remember. Though you'd be too young to have seen it when it first came out.
It's needlessly complicated and hardly anybody in this country still speaks it, so I don't know why they don't just let it go.
But to me, all languages are complicated, especially French with its male/female words.
(even though with those patterns, there's a billion exceptions that you just have to memorize)
so it's not too bad.
T_Tthere's a billion exceptions that you just have to memorize
French isn't so bad with the genders once you figure out the patterns. I speak French and I remember having a problem at first remembering what's masculine and what's feminine and whatnot. But you learn patterns (even though with those patterns, there's a billion exceptions that you just have to memorize), so it's not too bad.
Verb conjugation is hell, though. -____-
German genders are the worst. There are three, so it really trips me up.
Yeah French gender isn't too bad. If the noun ends in an 'e', it'll most likely be feminine.
Indonesian is also much easier than English (people don't know how difficult English can be). In Indonesian, there are no conjugations, no past/future tense and there are very few prepositions.
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Question: If there are no tenses and prepositions in Indonesian, does, like, what you're saying heavily rely on context? Like, how do people know whether you're referring to something in the past, or something in the future? I don't know if that question made too much sense, haha.