• @glorkon@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    “for monolingual speakers of english, it’s hard to learn a language with grammatical genders, but if you already speak a language with those, that won’t be a problem”

    Not necessarily. I’m German and I still have to learn French grammatical genders by heart, because they don’t necessarily match ours. Familiarity with the concept doesn’t make it any easier, just less weird.

    Example: The tower. LA tour, feminine. DER Turm, masculine.

    • Fushuan [he/him]
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      -210 days ago

      That’s more of a Germanic vs Latin languages. Most genders on french and Spanish match.

      • @owsei@programming.dev
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        410 days ago

        What? no

        I know portugueses and spanish and I’m learning french and it make it all even more complex

        Since in one language it’s something, in anofher it’s something else

      • @jmcs@discuss.tchncs.de
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        210 days ago

        Lol, they don’t even match consistently between Portuguese and Spanish which are much closer, even when the noun is literally the same (e.g.a água vs el água)