His language doesn't has a case system

>his language doesn't has a case system

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Why didn't language evolve "simpler" over time? Case/gender is bullshit.

Then again maybe I'm just upset that I'm too lazy to learn another language

yes remove all beauty in the world, practicality is the only thing that matters

>his language has articles

>his language doesn't have gender

His language requires 10 modifications on the same word

eto bolshoy slozhno dlya ya, uchitsya russki yazika

>his language is analytic

Why didn't life forms evolve "simpler" over time? Because things don't go in linear, predictable direction.

Things that change, change to occupy the space around it, whether that means animal specialisation, or why you can't seem to save more money when you get a higher paying job.

There is some evidence that language structures are cyclical in nature, though. Also, complicated and irregular is often a feature of languages, to distinguish in-groups from out-groups. All that tribal shit, gnome sayin'?

>his language is gay lol

>eto slishkom slozhno dlya menya, uchitsya russkomu yaziku
fix

To be honest when your talking about case/gender/tense, the easiest language is mandarin chinese. It has none of those features, and despite the difficulty in the character representation and lack of an alphabet as we understand it, the grammar is very simple. In that sense it has advantages. The disadvantages relate more to the homophonic nature of mandarin and its prevalent use of idiomatic phrases.

>his language didn't stop evolving during stone age

me want beer

>his language capitalizes the first letter of every noun
Kinda jelous desu

>no number declension
>no locative case
>no instrumental case
>the genitive has almost entirely disappeared
The German """""""""case system"""""""""

Just a reminder that English does have case.

The German gender casing system is a pain in the ass to learn.
We have it too but it's restricted to vehicles.

>declension
Delete This

We have animate gender too. Obviously.

obviously. because it actually makes sense

>he is Russian

>he pretends to have a case system but he really doesn't

We used to have an actual case system, now it's all exeptions.
At least we still got gender.

>لغته تستعمل طلاسيم الخنثاء

No shit sherlock

>he will never be slightly aroused every time he takes a sip from a female cup

What's the problem? Japanese conjugates, so why's declension such a big deal?

Tvoja moja sekret raskroj bylo. Moja svoja padezh sistema ne ponimaj. Kak ja bolee daleko zhivi?

>Kak ja bolee daleko zhivi?
*Kak moja bolee daleko zhivi?
fixed

>be american
>english is the only language i need to know

feels good brehs

>his language has less than seven cases

>tfw English has all but lost it's case system
>tfw just about the only cases left in English are pronouns (I/me, he/him, etc.)
>tfw English's only linguistic richness comes from its relatively extensive vocabulary

I can't count the amount of words that don't exist in english and I'm not even german.

This. Truly plebeian.

German is cheating though, since they just run words together like Neanderthals.

>"hans"
>ja
>"I am having idea about der words "
>was ist das mein Freund
>"we are putting them together, so no more 'declaration of Independence,' now it ist 'declarationofindependence'
>oh mein gott sind sie ein wunderkind

>(s)he posts anime outside fuck off

>und now 'declarationofindependence' ist eine new wört :-DD

Japanese verb conjugation isn't decided by gender, number, first/second/third person.
In addition, nouns never change.

thats one of the factors that makes japshit unique, its not really a negative element of it.

Most languages do get simpler over time. An extreme example is Chinese which barely has any grammar.

But mine does.

Magar myaani cha.

>his language have declensions
>his language isnt aggluantative
>his language have articles
>his language have genders
>his language have cases

You mean Unabhängigkeitserklärung?

My language:
>the best, goodest
Your language:
>the shittest, baddest

Disgusting

we have 15 :^)

>maybe

>Lia lingvo ne estas la universala lingvo
Kiu feko estas tiu

Although Japanese verb conjugation is unaffected by those factors, it's still got some pretty weird cases. Let's take a simple 五段 verb, like 釣る, and look at some (relative to other languages) odd conjugations:
>釣る ・ It's catching/will catch
>釣って ・ It's catching/will catch (and there's more information to come)
>釣らせられる ・ It caused itself to be caught

That last one confuses the heck out of non-native speakers lol.

Case system allows language the breathe free without retarded tense constructs.
>DUDE LETS HAVE GARBAGE NON-WORDS LIKE "HAVE BEEN" TO DESCRIBE MOMENT FROM THE MOMENT BEFORE MOMENT THAT LASTED SOME TIME WHILE SOMEBODY FARTED
Fuck you english

assuming the 7th case is vocative, there is a serious debate if vocative is a proper case or not

vocative in slavic is different from nominative in masculine

What do tenses have to do with noun cases?

Shit language, shit culture, shit streets, shit everything

But the cup is male

That doesn't necessary make vocative a case but rather just a special noun form which is what some linguists claim. Their argument is that vocative expressions are not syntactically connected to other words in sentence, thus making vocative just a special noun form.
Anyway, I find it interesting. Do all Slavic languages have 7 cases?

t. Alberto Linguação

>faroe islands
>manly vikings
>gay kissing every time they take a drink

The door isn't.

The door is a very pretty and independant female

>tfw you speak the most streamlined and logical language in existence, unburdened by any unnecessary case system or extensive conjugation system, but with a rich vibrancy that other languages simply cannot match

This, doors are female

>the most streamlined and logical language in existence
>English
do u even lojban

>do u even lojban
Meme languages don't count. There's no beauty in constructed languages. They're cold and unloved - the test tube babies of languages.

Hmm I'm native so I don't find what looks odd to you. Pls tell me, because l have a friend who has learned japanese, understanding what is difficult for learners is good.
Last one means passive+spontaneous? It looks "someone is forced to fish" to me.

Both function as ways to give a sentence specific context - define object, subject, time etc
Cases are much more elegant because instead of modifying the entire sentence to fit your purpose your merely add pre/suf/postfixes

>english

>streamlined
Yes, its babbys first germanic
>logical
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHA

>logical language in existence
>what are perfect tenses

Well then, take it from someone that speaks English natively but also speaks Hebrew and Japanese as second and third languages. Both of those are more "streamlined and logical" than English.
>I am going to send you to the store. (10 syllables, 9 words, takes up a lot of space when written)
>אשלח אותך לחנות. (7 syllables, 3 words, takes up little space when written)
>君を店に遣わす。 (10 syllables, 3 words[+2 particles], takes up little space when written)

Gendered languages are dumb

English confirmed mongolic.

Common denominator of meme languages

It's not the meaning which is confusing exactly, but merely because it is expressed so differently from in English.
>I'm forced to scrub the toilet.
This is a normal English sentence.
>僕はトイレを擦らせられる。
This is a normal Japanese sentence, accurately translated from the English sentence above (I think; please correct me if my Japanese is wrong :D). The issue is, if literally translated back into English, it's a very odd.
>I am caused to be scrubbing the toilet.
It's not that outrageously strange, but it can lead to quite a bit of confusion and clunky sentence-making by learners of the language.

>Finnish
>Estonian
>Hungarian
>...English
We finno-ugric now

>Animate/inanimate

Romance >> Germanic = Slavic >> Indo-Iranian >>>>>> my dog barking >>>>>>>> Asian

based turks

>n-noo that table is a SHE! You're wrong!

No we a pidgin language now. A creole of bastardized germanic, romance, and insular celtic.

>his country doesn't have a caste system

Ha, I know, obviously tables are irregularly masculine (they're declined like feminine nouns but they're treated grammatically like masculine nouns [so that adjectives and such need to be masculine])

We called it colonialism, poojeet.

...

>jealous
That must be annoying as fuck.

not a helluva lotta celtic in here bud

>oo oo ah ah is a real language

Languages without cases are ooga-booga-tier, fampai.

>his country doesn't have a loo system

...

>his country doesn't have Sharia
Oh wait...

The radical orthographic and grammatical differences between continental Germanic languages and English and only be explicated by the pidiginization Anglo-Saxon languages underwent during contact with the indigenous peoples of Britain.

English poetry is full fucking kek
>its called f-free verse
>poetry d-doesn't have to rhyme
Whats it like to speak language so poor that you run out of words

>paroli esperanton en 2016
ayyy, frato

Idk which is more grammatically correct, but やらされる is preferred rather than やらせられる at least in conversation. It sounds more clearly to me.
>擦る
こすって洗う or more simply 掃除する is better
And these phrases consist of やる(五段verb)+せる(auxiliary verb)+られる(auxiliary verb) all of them are change to comply with grammar.
Japanese has less inanimate subject sentence than English.
The way to grasp things and express differs from languages but the languages have already preposition or particles, almost no need to use declension.

That's a common myth. English has very little influence from Celtic languages:
arrantpedantry.com/2014/12/01/celtic-and-the-history-of-the-english-language/

>and insular celtic.

which modern language is most like latin?

>his language is cucked into a very strict word order that he cannot deviate from
>his language doesn't have subjunctive
>his language doesn't have gender
>his language doesn't have diminutives
>his language doesn't have maximizers
>his language requires pronouns
I have to wonder how you guys even write literature.

Italian.

no. I know Russian and Slovak languages don't have Vocative.

>Church Latin
Thanks for ruining latin, italofags

>two forms of the verb "to be"
Let's be honest, was that really necessary?

Modern standard Arabic

Ser and Estar don't mean the same, so they are both required.
Just like Haber and Tener or Querer and Amar.

...