Moshi
The best Codidactyl!
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| website | https://tinyurl.com/moshiblog |
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See all 44 »I've been studying German lately, and came across something that sparked my curiosity: The way to say "me too" in German is "ich auch" - that is, "I too". A shallow glance at other Germanic languag...
1 answer · posted 3y ago by Moshi · last activity 3y ago by Jirka Hanika
A quick search gives a regular pattern in the form of trisyllabic laxing Trisyllabic laxing, or trisyllabic shortening, is any of three processes in English in which tense vowels (long vowels or d...
posted 5y ago by Moshi
What arguments are used to answer this question? Does it stem from a lack of agreement over how to define a pronoun? Essentially, yes. Even your own Wikipedia quote has the infamous [citation ...
posted 5y ago by Moshi · edited 4y ago by Jirka Hanika
I recently stumbled upon this wikipedia page and it got me thinking. Take a look at the following table (terms are lifted from the Wikipedia page) W (interrogative) H (proximal) T (medial)...
0 answers · posted 3y ago by Moshi
Consider the following sentences: "She was against his joining the team." "She was against his joining of the team." "She was against him joining the team." Instinctively, the first just so...
1 answer · posted 3y ago by Moshi · last activity 2y ago by Eric Isaac
It's built just like the normal present perfect. I have had it. Have you had it?
posted 4y ago by Moshi
Generally speaking, German verbs inflect with the following table Person Inflection Example ich -e sage, arbeite du -(e)st sagst, arbeitest er/sie/es -(e)t sagt, a...
1 answer · posted 3y ago by Moshi · last activity 3y ago by Jirka Hanika
As far as my knowledge of Japanese goes, there are two ways to form polite negative forms of verbs, the direct conjugation ~ません and the plain negative conjugation ~ない with です added. Take for insta...
3 answers · posted 5y ago by Moshi · last activity 2mo ago by saeed-barari
Many quantity words trigger agreement with their object rather than themselves. For instance, syntactically, "a lot, "a bunch", "an amount" seem to all be singular. However, as a native speaker, "T...
1 answer · posted 3y ago by Moshi · last activity 3y ago by Jirka Hanika
After researching a bit more, I found this StackExchange answer. Their answer is very informative, and includes a partial translation of a Japanese research paper (which I'm sadly not at the level ...
posted 5y ago by Moshi
The final forms of ך, ן, ף, and ץ are the original forms. From a Quora answer to What's the origin of the final (sofit) forms for some of the Hebrew alphabet? Four of the five “sofit” letters ...
posted 5y ago by Moshi
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| Answers | 20 | |
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