Do you mind if users are having alternative accounts?
Do you mind if users are having alternative accounts?
Do you think you‘d sell your soul
To just have one thing to turn out right?
In regards of the English language, I have a problem with prepositions. In English, there are no rules for prepositions, you just have to learn them. I find it very annoying, although it has its historical reasons.
Another thing I sometimes have an issue with, is subject-verb agreement. If I write in a hurry, I could say something like "The things I learnt is good" instead of "the things I learnt are good". The reason for this is that in my native language, we don't have subject agreement in that sense as the verb never changes in relation to the subject. It is "I are, you are, he are, we are".
Do you think you‘d sell your soul
To just have one thing to turn out right?
If someone who has very little exposure to a language makes mistakes that do not impede understanding (using the wrong article gender, or pluralizing something that's already plural, does not impede understanding), yes, I would say that person uses the language well. If somebody from Africa with little exposure to English said, "Fishes you made for dinner is delicious," I would tell them their English is good - I understood exactly what they were saying, and the missing article, mis-pluralization of "fish", and subject-verb disagreement are small mistakes that don't cause a problem. Good thing you're not a language teacher; your students would get depressed and give up hope of learning. :P
English has just as many rules for prepositions as any other language - basically, there are quite a few rules rules, but there are also a bunch of exceptions that require one to just memorize and get used to it. All four languages I know prepositions in have the same level of rules - and prepositions just flat out suck in every language when you're trying to learn it. Try learning a Slavic language and suddenly English prepositions will seem easy because they're much more similar to Germanic![]()
When you post something off-topic in a thread like this, moderators are less likely to see it, which might explain why no one gave you an answer and not that someone is "scared" of you. When you have a question about the rules, it's a good idea to post a new thread in the Offspring.com Talk thread.
As one of the moderators who created the rule against multiple accounts, it's to discourage the amount of trolling and sockpuppeting that people do here and give the moderators a way to keep that nonsense under control. You might want to try asking the moderator who PMed you for more information in the future.
Sign this petition Suzy made for me to get my interview with Greg K: http://www.thepetitionsite.com/873/7...ew-you-dammit/
The Offspring UG interview me about said Greg K interview: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=52j5kjyuug0
Actually, the plural just puts the verb back in its base form, the infinitive; therefore, the plural never changes the verb (the only exception is with "to be"). Only 3rd person singular needs verb conjugation - and that's actually one of the easier things about English, considering verb conjugation is typically MUCH more complicated in other languages.
Sign this petition Suzy made for me to get my interview with Greg K: http://www.thepetitionsite.com/873/7...ew-you-dammit/
The Offspring UG interview me about said Greg K interview: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=52j5kjyuug0
No, it really doesn't change the spelling. Look.
Verb: to have
I have
You (informal singular) have
He/she/it [the cat] has
We have
They [the cats] have
You (formal/plural) have
Verb: to do
I do
You (informal singular) do
He/she/it [the cat] does
We do
They [the cats] do
You (formal/plural) do
The ONLY way the verb's spelling changes (aka, the verb is conjugated) is when you're using third person singular. Pluralization does NOT change the spelling of the verb; like nearly ever other case, it is infinitive.
Compare it to a language like Slovene
Verb: to do (delati)
Jaz delam
Ti delaš
On/ona/oni dela
Mi/me delamo
Vi/ve/vi delate
Oni/one/ona delajo
Unlike in Germanic languages, German and English, the verb conjugates so that it is never the infinitive... which is ridiculous. English conjugation is EASY, and in German you still have things like "wir machen, sie machen, Sie machen" - all three of those are infinitive, which is fabulous.
Edit: by the way, RageandLov, are you saying that in Norwegian, there's NO verb conjugation whatsoever and you just use the infinitive all the time?? Cause that's kinda awesome.
Last edited by Llamas; 12-16-2012 at 04:57 AM.