@[email protected] to [email protected] • 1 month agoDid it though?sub.wetshaving.socialimagemessage-square13fedilinkarrow-up1777
arrow-up1777imageDid it though?sub.wetshaving.social@[email protected] to [email protected] • 1 month agomessage-square13fedilink
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink3•edit-21 month agoIn Portuguese (or Latin languages) if the animal is female, its a she. Even inanimate objects (“You are a fuc### inanimate object!”) have gender. Not all. Why or how, I don’t know. But a I know all chairs are female for example. “Esta cadeira é desconfortável.” - right. “Este cadeiro é desconfortável.” - wrong “This chair is uncomfortable.” “O” at the end of a word is male and “a” is female. And “this” on the female version has an “a” at the end “Esta cadeira”, but male has the “e” “Este cadeiro.”
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink2•1 month agoFun fact chairs are male in German (Der Stuhl)
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink3•edit-21 month agoSo Portuguese and German chairs can procreate. Our dictator(Salazar) was hurt due to falling of a chair. Has any German chair achieve something against fascism? Do them even care?
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink2•1 month agoIn Finnish you’d usually just call everything “it” (se), though you can say “them” (hän) if you want to be formal.
In Portuguese (or Latin languages) if the animal is female, its a she.
Even inanimate objects (“You are a fuc### inanimate object!”) have gender. Not all.
Why or how, I don’t know.
But a I know all chairs are female for example.
“Esta cadeira é desconfortável.” - right.
“Este cadeiro é desconfortável.” - wrong
“This chair is uncomfortable.”
“O” at the end of a word is male and “a” is female.
And “this” on the female version has an “a” at the end “Esta cadeira”,
but male has the “e” “Este cadeiro.”
Fun fact chairs are male in German (Der Stuhl)
So Portuguese and German chairs can procreate.
Our dictator(Salazar) was hurt due to falling of a chair.
Has any German chair achieve something against fascism?
Do them even care?
In Finnish you’d usually just call everything “it” (se), though you can say “them” (hän) if you want to be formal.