Greetings from Inner Mongolia, China! I am a 14-year-old middle-schooler living in Beijing(China's capital), my parents are both from Inner Mongolia. My dad can speak fluent Mongol, so I'm pretty curious about it, and I'm trying to learn it. Thank you for your great videos.😊
Great video, explanation of linguistic terminology, and description of both the Genitive and Nominative cases for non-linguistic savvy students. How you pulled it back to English and then gave examples of it in Mongolian was superb. Well done! )))
Great content of this video. Thank you a lot. But for my own experiences, the really tricky one has to be the case "-aаc". Because sometimes it goes as -наас, sometimes -гаас, for which I have to memorize it with every new noun I meet with at the same time
Thank you very much! The Genitive case is quite easy. Just more practice is needed to get used to it and apply it without mistakes. So far so good, but I'm afraid what's gonna be next 🧐
Cases in general are something difficult to grasp when learning a language. My native tongue, Romanian, has 5 cases (Nominative, Accusative, Genitive, Dative, and Vocative). I also study German (Nominative, Genitive, Dative, and Accusative), Latin (Nominative, Genitive, Dative, Accusative, Vocative, and Ablative) and Greek (Nominative, Genitive, Accusative, and Vocative). But even so, different language treat the same cases differently. Things like далайн хоол would be fructe de mare in Romanian, de mare being an adverb in the accusative case. Also, not every language uses the cases for the same grammatical functions. For example, objects expressing time (now, then, today etc) are in the accusative in Romanian, in the dative in German and in the ablative in Latin. But at least the Mongolia suffixes are pretty intuitive. Latin, for instance, uses different suffixes depending on the number and gender of the noun, sometimes the same suffix for two different cases and numbers. Not to mention the third declention.
I have a question about the sentence: Bi bagshaas hicheeliin tsag asuusan. The genitive is being used as about in this case? if so why? if not how is about being indicated in the sentence.
I read that the Mongol language don't have gender distinction like in Russian or in German. Explains to me this distinction between feminine and masculine words in the Mongol language.
Greetings from Inner Mongolia, China! I am a 14-year-old middle-schooler living in Beijing(China's capital), my parents are both from Inner Mongolia. My dad can speak fluent Mongol, so I'm pretty curious about it, and I'm trying to learn it. Thank you for your great videos.😊
I love this channel❤🧡💛
Great video, explanation of linguistic terminology, and description of both the Genitive and Nominative cases for non-linguistic savvy students. How you pulled it back to English and then gave examples of it in Mongolian was superb. Well done! )))
Fantastic, can't wait for follow-up videos! Маш их баярлалаа!
Thanks for this content. I'm studying Mongolian language and having this opportunity to review our lessons here it's been very good!
I can't wait to see all the different modifications of verbs. Verbs pretty much rule Mongolian (Halkha).
Great content of this video. Thank you a lot.
But for my own experiences, the really tricky one has to be the case "-aаc". Because sometimes it goes as -наас, sometimes -гаас, for which I have to memorize it with every new noun I meet with at the same time
That is the Ablative case Jacob. We will be covering that in an upcoming video!
Thank you for a great video about the Genetive case, it really helped to understand it better.
Very clear lesson nom and gen cases. Thank you, I look forward to the next noun case video!
Thank you very much! The Genitive case is quite easy. Just more practice is needed to get used to it and apply it without mistakes. So far so good, but I'm afraid what's gonna be next 🧐
Don't be afraid! Nomiin Ger is with you!
Cases in general are something difficult to grasp when learning a language. My native tongue, Romanian, has 5 cases (Nominative, Accusative, Genitive, Dative, and Vocative). I also study German (Nominative, Genitive, Dative, and Accusative), Latin (Nominative, Genitive, Dative, Accusative, Vocative, and Ablative) and Greek (Nominative, Genitive, Accusative, and Vocative). But even so, different language treat the same cases differently. Things like далайн хоол would be fructe de mare in Romanian, de mare being an adverb in the accusative case. Also, not every language uses the cases for the same grammatical functions. For example, objects expressing time (now, then, today etc) are in the accusative in Romanian, in the dative in German and in the ablative in Latin.
But at least the Mongolia suffixes are pretty intuitive. Latin, for instance, uses different suffixes depending on the number and gender of the noun, sometimes the same suffix for two different cases and numbers. Not to mention the third declention.
I have a question about the sentence: Bi bagshaas hicheeliin tsag asuusan. The genitive is being used as about in this case? if so why? if not how is about being indicated in the sentence.
Are you going to cover suffix чгаар, ээл, энд?
Can you do a video on how to pronounce the "л" sound? Thanks!
There something called agglutination and it adds prepositions and more to a word.
Good
I'm watching from Turkey as two people who're originating in Central-Asia, hope I'll fing at least a few things similar to Turkish.
I read that the Mongol language don't have gender distinction like in Russian or in German. Explains to me this distinction between feminine and masculine words in the Mongol language.
german and russian have grammatical gender, this has to do with vowel harmony and vowel quality
Za za
Bravo
Hoër video haana baïna?
Bayarlalaa
Сделайте пожалуйста субтитры на русском
I thought the word has to end with specific letter, to use the right form but these letters are so randomly located xd whyyyy
сайн
Orshoogueerey (desculpas) I am Sorry. Batsh (professora) teacher.
Surakh (aprender) learn this Khel (língua) language is difficult.
Thank god I’m Greek and cases make sense to me🥲