August 9, 200916 yr i have to go now, see you tomorrow! g'night people! or have a good day:lol: it depends where you are:P bye!:D
August 9, 200916 yr Olkaa hyvää. :smiley: I looked them up on a website, and knew some of those from before. I also know how to say I'll kick your arse, but I'm not too sure how to write it. It's probably "mä vedän sua turpaan." :D hyvä :D btw why if ja means and.... to ask "what about you/ and you" we say entä sinulle? :thinking: so reviewing: minä olen Ari, olen spanjalainen; puhun espanjaa, englantia, ranskaa ja portugalia. (i'm ari, i'm spanish, i speak spanish, english, french and portuguese). (should i add here finnish, or not yet? :rolleyes: ) today is... Tänään on sunnuntai. tomorrow will be... Huomenna on maanantaiona. (?) yesterday was... Eilen lauantaina. crest hän puhuu englantia ja portugalia. nina han puhuu englanta, (slovene?) ja ranskaa. you're welcome:nice: i wrote it above;) grazie. :nice:
August 9, 200916 yr I am back to teach anything you want to know :D (if I know it) capicua... 19191 post when i quoted that one :o you have a lot. so what lesson today will be?
August 9, 200916 yr I post too much :uhoh: do you want to know anything Ari? i'd like to know some words... (nouns) if possible related with food. :)
August 9, 200916 yr Author ok :nice: kuppi = cup kahvi = coffee lasi = glass maito = milk liha = meat muna = egg juusto = cheese makkara = sausage :D
August 9, 200916 yr and what about basic food verbs? (to eat, to cook, to drink). ah and to like / to have kiitos. :D i ask too much :uhoh:
August 9, 200916 yr Author it's ok, it's good you want to learn! (letters with dots bolded) drink = juoda eat = syoda cook = keitaa like = pitaa to have = taytya hope I'm right....
August 9, 200916 yr it's ok, it's good you want to learn! (letters with dots bolded) drink = juoda eat = syoda cook = keitaa like = pitaa to have = taytya hope I'm right.... kiitos. :nice: juoda, syöda 2nd type then.... minä juoden - syöden sinä juodet - syödet hän juodee ? or juodon? - syödee / syödon me juodemme - syödemme te juodette - syödette he joudevät - syödevät so keitää, pitää and täytyä be in which group type? (1,2,3,4,5,6) anyways: minä juoden kahvi ja maito. (i drink coffee and milk) minä syöden liha, muna, juusto ja makkara. (i eat meat, eggs, cheese and sausages). in a cup of / in a glass of ? :scholar:
August 10, 200916 yr btw why if ja means and.... to ask "what about you/ and you" we say entä sinulle? :thinking: Because it's another language and not every languages have exactly the same phrases? so reviewing: minä olen Ari, olen spanjalainen; puhun espanjaa, englantia, ranskaa ja portugalia. (i'm ari, i'm spanish, i speak spanish, english, french and portuguese). (should i add here finnish, or not yet? :rolleyes: )olen espanjalainen. ;) I think you should add finnish, too. So the sentence would probably be: Minä olen Ari, olen espanjalainen, puhun espanjaa, englantia, ranskaa, portugalia ja suomea. today is... Tänään on sunnuntai. tomorrow will be... Huomenna on maanantaiona. (?) yesterday was... Eilen lauantaina.Google translator says it should be just maanantai. maanantaina means "on Monday". So you add -na suffix to say "on __day". maanantaina tiistaina keskiviikkona torstaina perjantaina lauantaina sunnuntaina crest hän puhuu englantia ja portugalia. nina han puhuu englanta, (slovene?) ja ranskaa.You don't use hän here; only the verb. ;) slovene = slovenia She speaks slovene. = Hän puhuu sloveniaa. Nina speaks slovene. = Nina puhuu sloveniaa. ok :nice: kuppi = cup kahvi = coffee lasi = glass maito = milk liha = meat muna = egg juusto = cheese makkara = sausage :DCool, thanks for that! :D Kiitos! juoda, syöda 2nd type then....Yeah, but the stem for juoda is juo and for syöda is syö, so the forms are: minä juon - syön sinä juot - syöt hän juo - syö me juomme - syömme te juotte - syötte he jouvät - syövät Keitää, pitää and täytyä are in first group of verbs, I think. anyways: minä juoden kahvi ja maito. (i drink coffee and milk) minä syöden liha, muna, juusto ja makkara. (i eat meat, eggs, cheese and sausages). in a cup of / in a glass of ? :scholar:Don't know.... Crests, do you know it?
August 10, 200916 yr Because it's another language and not every languages have exactly the same phrases? olen espanjalainen. ;) I think you should add finnish, too. So the sentence would probably be: Minä olen Ari, olen espanjalainen, puhun espanjaa, englantia, ranskaa, portugalia ja suomea. Google translator says it should be just maanantai. maanantaina means "on Monday". So you add -na suffix to say "on __day". maanantaina tiistaina keskiviikkona torstaina perjantaina lauantaina sunnuntaina You don't use hän here; only the verb. ;) slovene = slovenia She speaks slovene. = Hän puhuu sloveniaa. Nina speaks slovene. = Nina puhuu sloveniaa. Cool, thanks for that! :D Kiitos! Yeah, but the stem for juoda is juo and for syöda is syö, so the forms are: minä juon - syön sinä juot - syöt hän juo - syö me juomme - syömme te juotte - syötte he jouvät - syövät Keitää, pitää and täytyä are in first group of verbs, I think. anyways: Don't know.... Crests, do you know it? surely is that, must be like a set phrase. :) :blush: so i speak finnish already? yet there's a lot to learn. ah kiitos, i was not sure if i would be right. oh i didn't knew well which was the stem. btw there's a way i can know to which verb type a verb belongs? (that is correct in english (?) :huh: ) and so how to know the stem? kiitos ruova nina. :nice:
August 10, 200916 yr I can't figure out in a cup of or glass of. I could ask someone.I really hope Ella will reply to my FB status :D surely is that, must be like a set phrase. :) :blush: so i speak finnish already? yet there's a lot to learn. ah kiitos, i was not sure if i would be right. oh i didn't knew well which was the stem. btw there's a way i can know to which verb type a verb belongs? (that is correct in english (?) :huh: ) and so how to know the stem? kiitos ruova nina. :nice:You do! :cheesy: I know there's tons of stuff to learn, I can't grasp these cases for nouns. Like... I don't know which case each verb requires.... :huh: I'm not sure how to know which verb type a very belongs to, but I'll check, ok?
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