Using the semitic name of Saturday

>Using the semitic name of Saturday
What a cuck lol

Other urls found in this thread:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_case
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelmus
twitter.com/SFWRedditVideos

>mfw

are albanians the true sons of rome

>Sonnabend

>meeting of friends
is [s4s] basque?

>estonia is not nor-

>n*Rdics bathe only one day a week

>coming from he who uses garlic for deoderant

>bath day
everyday is supposed to be bath day

...

>jamal

>back in the day when weekdays were named nordics at least did bathe unlike the rest

>bog
Absolutely disgusting

>bath day

...

> jamal

Sweden
YES

kek

>Meeting of friends
Shit, if we followed that in English I'd never have a Saturday. Fucking REEEE.

>grammatical cases
One of the worst things ever

So are grammatical genders, and French gender is particularly offensive.

bath day is so fucking funny

why garlic

>18
Kill it with fire already.

Wtf is a grammatical case
t. knows English and French only

>en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_case

meant for

thank god romance languages lost that useless shite from latin

>15
I only use 12 tho

7/8 is sensible but I can't see how one would need to express that many different complements each in a different way -unless those cases were grouped into not-so-different families which is fully what I'd expect from the Finnish language

Oh shut faggot spoydah

The words change depending on their grammatical usage.
"The man loves his wife."
"The woman loves the man."
Even though man is the subject in the first sentence and the object of the verb in the second sentence, we still write "man" both times. Languages with cases might write man differently depending on how its used, e.g. Latin.
"Vir amat uxorem."
"Femina amat virum."
The word for man, "vir," changes form.

Jewish people made Europe what it is today. They are hated and curse wherever they go but yet they build nations out of the ground

In a nutshell:
Who, Whose, Whom
those are 3 different cases of the same word.

What IE do with adverbs, they do with cases

>18

People actually believs the Dane.

>Trust a dane, feel the pain

Romanian still has 3.

English:
Here is: man
about : man
from : man
to : man

Icelandic:
Here is (Hér er): Maður
About (Um) : Mann
from (frá): Manni
to (til): manns

nom. case Burri- the man
gen. case i/e Burrit - of the man
dat. case Burrit - to the man
acc. case Burrin - about the man
abl. prej Burrit - by the man

how would you say
>i give the man the burrito

Une i jap burrit burriton.

do you know what an ó sounds like?

its 8 cases, one isn't formally acknowledged

Most American post in a good while, I was very entertained

Soviet Union is located mostly in Asia, tho I guess you're right about the rest of warsaw pact, they sure helped make that happen :^)

Oh this is one map I'm glad we weren't included in.

French grammar is the most disgusting thing to ever exist.
Literally everything is irregular. Simply retarded.

>burrit burriton
kek

Like how you say: he, his, him, or who, whose, whom.
Pretty much this for every noun, adjective, pronoun, etc.

ο άνθρωπος
του ανθρώπου
τον άνθρωπο
άνθρωπε

οι άνθρωποι
των ανθρώπων
τους ανθρώπους
άνθρωποι

Ancient is the same except there is the dative case: τω(ι) ανθρώπω(ι), τοις ανθρώποις, and τον άνθρωπο becomes τον άνθρωπον (although in some dialects, e.g. Cypriot, it's still like this).

Ancient greek also has optative mood which you don't have anymore

EU SUNT TRUE ROMAN, DA?

>American education

That's a verb mood. Nothing to do with nouns.

"from latin day of saturn"
LOL

σαββατο is a modern day word coming from the romans saturn which the romans took it from the ancient originally saturday naming of kρονια which literally means saturn day

>you're a stupid American for not speaking a third language like 99% of the world and every human being before the 20th century

Why are so many scared of grammatical cases?

Now, I know why Swedes worship the negro.

fucking Alla
hahahahaha

Korean is worse.

What's even worse is using the latin names of the months. Truly cucked to be still bowing to a long dead empire.

...

So you are emberassed of your semitic heritage?

Roman empire set way for how world functions today, its not really dead

>Roman empire set way for how world functions today
Where's the gladiator fights with tigers, and women banging horses

...

It's dead in the sense that it doesn't exist anymore. There's no reason you should use names based on roman gods and emperors anymore.

>black
does this mean neutral

thanks to Rome i live in one of most developed places on Earth

Romans came up with concept of months and there being 12 of them, i dont see why you would want to use different names, its not like we are using nigger or arab names for them, Romans are unironically ancestors :) to everyone living in Europe

you just have to know right people

What's the story between Poland and Italy?

>its 8 cases, one isn't formally acknowledged
which one is that???

> netherlands
> israel in green
What the fuck

>Romans are unironically ancestors :) to everyone living in Europe

No, Rome never reached even half of the area currently thought of as Europe.

The Dutch were seafaring Jews, it makes sense.

Catholic church

no need for that, laws, stadiums, roads and lot of other shit you dont even realise come directly from Romans, our culture is result of way Romans lived

>holland
>israel

um sweaty we mention the english in ours xx

>wales
>country

We have four cases though.
Except for the nominative and genitive they're just not used very often.

...

This is the translation of the stanze in question:
Like David, who was forced to flee
from Saul, the tyrant.
I had to sigh,
as did many other nobles.
But God raised him,
relieving him of despair,
and gave him a kingdom
very great in Israel.

don't you do this again fucker

Ahahahahaha

cucks

> wales
> country

napolean made poland a country again after be btfo prussia/austria/russia

>calling us cucks because of a reference to the old testament
t. mohammed

Hey, I like Star Wars but I don't sing about it in my national anthem.

I'm not a fucking welsh""""man""""

*tips fedora vigrorously*

Its just banter m8
I'm actually jewish

>sestdiena
>šeštadienis
Cro: Šesti dan (Sixth day)

Woah

woah, my dudes

WOAH

Are they, /ourguys/?

>Cossacks
>another state for Ukraine
Ummmm

It's the oldest national anthem.
If yours had any history at all it would have mentioned the bible as well.

NOM. Čovjek
GEN. Čovjeka
DAT. Čovjeku
ACC. Čovjeka
VOC. Čovječe!
LOC. Čovjeku
INS. Čovjekom

>1932

Pfft. Don't you know what de jure means?

>oldest
If you change the lyrics then you have to count from this date onwards. Sorry.

It would mean that you don't have an anthem, and obviously making it official in legislation seems strange if you're the first one to have an anthem.
Too bad you don't make the rules.
The separate wikipedia page mentions it as the oldest anthem as well.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelmus

Our national anthem is the sound produced when killing cathocucks.

>Mentioning Israel 400 years before Israel existed

Seems legit