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Thread: VERBS

  1. #16

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    Ugh. English is such a dumb language.

    On topic (kinda): This thread gives me an excuse to conjugate "shank". I did this once in my English class. It was awesome. If you need to conjugate a verb in your English class, conjugate shank. It will be awesome.

    I shank.
    You shank.
    He shanks.

    I have shanked.
    You have shanked.
    He has shanked.

    Future perfect!!
    We will have shanked.
    You will have shanked.
    They will have shanked.

  2. #17
    The Dork Next Door Montoya's Avatar
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    Ghoeti.
    Anon say I. Photobucket

  3. #18
    Thou shall not speak... Randgris's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Rubah Lapah View Post
    mga na pipino.
    translation: The Cucumbers (the "na" commonly follows an adjective: mga hilaw na pipino)


  4. #19
    A Big Deal? Recognized Member Big D's Avatar
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    'To be' is pretty irregular, it reminds of its equivalent in German, which is 'sein'.

    Ich (I) bin
    Du (you) bist
    Er/sie/es (he/she/it) ist
    Wir (we) sind
    Ihr (they) seid
    Sie/sie (you [formal]/you [plural]) sind

    Compare it to 'gehen' - 'to go':

    Ich gehe
    Du gehst
    Er/sie/es geht
    Wir gehen
    Ihr geht
    Sie/sie gehen

    Regular verbs are good, they make language nice and formulaic and easy to learn... the irregular kind are just there to make things difficult

  5. #20
    One Hundred Chimneys Recognized Member Tavrobel's Avatar
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    Maybe languages have evolved so that irregular verbs are the ones that you NEED to know. After all, there needs to be a way to differentiate them. Well, with regular, it's like, "ohh those are regular, I can't screw those up" and then you get to "to be" and it goes "ohh SNAP there's TWO of them?"

    Or our ancestors were sadistic pigs. Either way.

  6. #21
    Draw the Drapes Recognized Member rubah's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Randgris View Post
    Quote Originally Posted by Rubah Lapah View Post
    mga na pipino.
    translation: The Cucumbers (the "na" commonly follows an adjective: mga hilaw na pipino)

    Would you like to read a story a friend of mine wrote?

  7. #22
    (。◕‿‿◕。) Recognized Member Jojee's Avatar
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    One of my TAs this semester gets mad whenever we use that verb more than a few times in any of our essays. Just let us be free, dude =(


    Wat
    is
    going
    on
    wtf
    rawr

  8. #23
    Back of the net Recognized Member Heath's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Big D View Post
    'To be' is pretty irregular, it reminds of its equivalent in German, which is 'sein'.

    Ich (I) bin
    Du (you) bist
    Er/sie/es (he/she/it) ist
    Wir (we) sind
    Ihr (they) seid
    Sie/sie (you [formal]/you [plural]) sind

    Compare it to 'gehen' - 'to go':

    Ich gehe
    Du gehst
    Er/sie/es geht
    Wir gehen
    Ihr geht
    Sie/sie gehen

    Regular verbs are good, they make language nice and formulaic and easy to learn... the irregular kind are just there to make things difficult :aimmad:
    I was going to give the example of German too. Though in all honesty, I think sein is probably the easiest irregular verb to deal with because you use it so much. After a while (before even covering the grammar around it) it's just natural to say "ich bin," "du bist," and so on.

    Regardless of that, regular verbs are a lot nicer to deal with in any language. Naturally I don't have much trouble with them in English because I'm fluent and it's just something you know as a native speaker, but when learning other languages it makes life simpler.
    Not my words Carol, the words of Top Gear magazine.

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