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English natives
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kalypso wrote:
Snusmumrikken wrote:
ouch wrote:
Female?.
Swedes and Danes only operate with neuter and common gender
yes but what's the third one in norwegian 
Its male/neutral (en) and et is like uhh, no gender, n ei is female but ppl tend to ignore it and use en instead in bokmål which is very ugh no offence bokmål ppl
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ouch wrote:
Snusmumrikken wrote:
ouch wrote:
Female?.
Swedes and Danes only operate with neuter and common gender
Yes but u r norwegian , not swedish or danish yes
am I truly tho
Kalypso
International Star



Snusmumrikken wrote:
kalypso wrote:
Snusmumrikken wrote:
deep sigh to this comment
just wondering if you couldn't ask urself that question 
Because it's not even remotely relevant to what I'm thinking about
yeah i actually thought about it afterwards, to use the different a/an and en/en(/ei??) is not based on the same reason lmao ops
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ouch wrote:
kalypso wrote:
Snusmumrikken wrote:
Swedes and Danes only operate with neuter and common gender
yes but what's the third one in norwegian 
Its male/neutral (en) and et is like uhh, no gender, n ei is female but ppl tend to ignore it and use en instead in bokmål which is very ugh no offence bokmål ppl
I don't use ei tbh I try to reactivate it in my head but no, nope. I do the other things according the feminine pattern but nO to ei 
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Snusmumrikken wrote:
ouch wrote:
Snusmumrikken wrote:
Swedes and Danes only operate with neuter and common gender
Yes but u r norwegian , not swedish or danish yes
am I truly tho
Finnish 
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International Star



kalypso wrote:
Snusmumrikken wrote:
kalypso wrote:
just wondering if you couldn't ask urself that question 
Because it's not even remotely relevant to what I'm thinking about
yeah i actually thought about it afterwards, to use the different a/an and en/en(/ei??) is not the same based on the same reason lmao ops
yes.
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World Famous



Snusmumrikken wrote:
ouch wrote:
Snusmumrikken wrote:
I'm just thinking whether English has a no hiatus constraint when two vowels are adjacent in a sequence 
I don't know but its hard pronouncing two vowels after another w a break inbetween
Yeah that's the constraint lmao

So.. hmmmmmm 
I wouldn't say so. If I say "a apple", the two a's will not be pronounced the same way.
Private
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ouch wrote:
Snusmumrikken wrote:
ouch wrote:
Yes but u r norwegian , not swedish or danish yes
am I truly tho
Finnish 
am just me 
Private
International Star



BloomCissi wrote:
Snusmumrikken wrote:
ouch wrote:
I don't know but its hard pronouncing two vowels after another w a break inbetween
Yeah that's the constraint lmao

So.. hmmmmmm 
I wouldn't say so. If I say "a apple", the two a's will not be pronounced the same way.
vowel is vowel honestly 
Parasite
Princess of Pop



Snusmumrikken wrote:
Focalin wrote:
Snusmumrikken wrote:
An car, an table, an lamp, an plant, an wall, an window, an floor, an ceiling, an fridge, a oven, an bottle

Idk what's worse
putting "a" in place of "an" or putting "an" in place of "a".
Both make me cringe a little. . . 
My guess is that you struggle more with a oven and a apple than an car. 
Yes, but "an car" feels so wrong so saying it would make me cringe.
I'm willing to do it for the sake of making everyone else cringe though ngl.
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World Famous



fiona apple
Kalypso
International Star



Snusmumrikken wrote:
kalypso wrote:
Snusmumrikken wrote:
Because it's not even remotely relevant to what I'm thinking about
yeah i actually thought about it afterwards, to use the different a/an and en/en(/ei??) is not the same based on the same reason lmao ops
yes.
whops, but now i not u have ei 
Private
International Star



Focalin wrote:
Snusmumrikken wrote:
Focalin wrote:

Idk what's worse
putting "a" in place of "an" or putting "an" in place of "a".
Both make me cringe a little. . . 
My guess is that you struggle more with a oven and a apple than an car. 
Yes, but "an car" feels so wrong so saying it would make me cringe.
I'm willing to do it for the sake of making everyone else cringe though ngl.
But it feels weird for a different reason, a apple probably feels worse. 
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International Star



Claire wrote:
fiona apple
yeah but names are generally like.... : ) and also it's possible there's a glottal stop in there 
Private
Popstar



Snusmumrikken wrote:
ouch wrote:
kalypso wrote:
yes but what's the third one in norwegian 
Its male/neutral (en) and et is like uhh, no gender, n ei is female but ppl tend to ignore it and use en instead in bokmål which is very ugh no offence bokmål ppl
I don't use ei tbh I try to reactivate it in my head but no, nope. I do the other things according the feminine pattern but nO to ei 
Yeah me too so I cancel muslef honestly, its very common where im from to use it tho but idk, I just don't. But also I use hella whack stuff sometimes like en eple instead of et n I just hhhhh,,, cringe but its hardwired into my brain 
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