Is Turkish really this complicated?
TÜRKİYE MENTİONED
>>222756069that's the assyrian flagwhat does this mean?
You VILL listen to my entire story until you get the verb for context und you VILL be happy.
>>222756069english order: haluaisin sovittaa pukua jonka olen nähnyt hotelliamme vastapäätä olevassa kaupassaturkish order: hotelliamme vastapäätä olevassa kaupassa on puku jota haluaisin sovittaaCan't every language do this?
>>222756611you can change the order in turkish as well but it won't work out if you put everything exactly parallel to english orderit seems to be the same in your language as well
>>222756611what a disgusting language, you should just speak russian and drop the retardspeak
>>222756611What a beautiful language. You should speak Finnish and drop Swedish from the curriculum.
No country with a complicated language is a nice country
>>222756069Uyghur:méhmanxanaimizning qarshisidiki dukanda körgenim bir kiyim sinishni xalaymen (istimen)
>>222756069The word order doesn't matter in Latin and that's fine to read, it's not as bad as it sounds.
>>222757376>drop Swedish from the curriculumDon't make me come down and give you some schwedentrunk.
very fine
turkish language is like retard talk
Turkish language is the best language in the world.
>>222756069>complicated It's just the opposite of the English order though
>>222756069>>222756069>A hotelünkkel szemben lévő boltban látott ruhát fel akarom próbálni.It's logical
>>222757383>says the American before eating his cucumber (read ˈkjuˌkʌmbɚ)
>>222756069Sometimes it feels like English is the only language that makes sense.
>>222757178Yeah, I accidentally changed it a lot to make it feel more natural. Didn't even realize when I wrote it, oops.But it's curious how languages can control the flow of your thoughts.It's a bit clunky to fabricate an english sentence that starts from the hotel.Our hotel is across the street from a shop in which I've seen a suit that I'd like to try on?
>>222756069>>222757637Really makes you think how millions of caucasoids speak a language as alien as japanese today
>>222758004"Cucumber" follow the regular rules of English orthography THOUGH. It's not like "debt" or "island."
>>222757637>>222756069I loathe Turks because they are living on easy mode when learning Japanese.
>>222756069It just werks>>222758587Not really, the grammar is the easiest part even for Anglos anyways
>>222756611Korean is also quite flexible when it comes to word order thanks to its system of particles
>>222757862because its language of wild central asian primitive savages
>>222757501super coolthat's almost the same as turkish other than some different vocabulary
>>222758904>Not really, the grammar is the easiest part even for Anglos anywaysCompletely delusional. Learning vocab is a grind but people actually can't read Japanese even with a popup dictionary correctly.
>>222758004>that flag>that post
>>222756523We do this too though
>>222761887kekblatonwajowksjy (pronounced john) from wzwskisusieizieyim (pronounced warsaw) is acting up
>>222762501That the joke was.
>>222761887>>222762950Polish is a phonetic language with a predictable pronunciation, save for some loanwords like the weekend. It also has less overall sounds to learn. I still can't perfect English pronunciation because of some hundred unwritten rules and exceptions.
>>222756611English:>Es vēlētos uzmērīt uzvalku ko redzēju veikalā pāri ielai nu jūsu hoteļaTurkish>No jūsu hoteļa pāri ielai veikalā es redzēju uzvalku ko uzmērīt es vēlētosThe Turkish one feels cumbersome, it flow better as>No jūsu hoteļa pāri ielai esošajā veikalā es redzēju uzvalku ko vēlētos uzmērītThe English feels the most natural to me, but I don't know how to speak like a normal person so I am not the one to consult about this.
>>222758073>Cucumber>Cyocamber, not Ku-kum-ber
>>222763231"Wzwzwzwzzzwwwswzesezcchchczeezzzcjchchczzwszzwwzzchchcłzwzwzhh" - translates to "Hello there"
>>222764763It's cyew-cum-ber
>>222765024I can hear it with and without w.probably one of the reason English has so many accents and dialects.British say it like>kyew-kam-baho algo
>>222756069>inverse>complicated
>>222765113Well they're pronouncing it wrongModern British English is a bastardizationAmericans unironically pronounce things way better
>>222757336sounds more sensible when you read it like it was slovenian
>>222765246No, I agree.Americans pronounce words closer to how they are written, making them in my eyes the true custodians of the language.British accents just don't feel "pure" enough to be a baseline
>>222756069It's agglutinative language. You can do a lot of cool stuff with it
>>222765386Is it like 会えそうにないそうだ?
>>222756611Talar du svenska!
>>222756611>From our hotel, across the street in a shop, I've seen a suit; trying it on, I'd like.
>>222765800i don't speak japanese also not the anon you replied to but i think soit's just a 3 letter root word + bunch of suffixesthere is also a specific suffix in turkish that you use for things you heard about other people it has other uses as well but that is the most common thing it's used for
>>222767274>things you heard about other people*things you heard *from* other people
>>222767274>i don't speak japanese also not the anon you replied to but i think soYeah it's like 会え (be able to meet) そう (looks like is about to) にない (not) そう (different from previous one here - marking it's hearsay) だ (here just marking the sentence as positive and a bit more exclamatory vs skipping it).
>>222756611holy shit
>>222760128japanese grammar is extremely easy once you understand particles are just case markers
>>222771714Ok then explain which case は and も mark.
>>222771821japanese is a pro drop language, a sentence is は is a sentence where the nominative is usually dropped. は marks the topic