MONGOLIAN CASES: Part TWO (Dative, Accusative, Ablative)

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  • Опубліковано 28 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 17

  • @jackmosss5803
    @jackmosss5803 Рік тому +2

    You are a very good teacher. I enjoy your lessons a lot. Bayarlaalaa

  • @linguafiqari
    @linguafiqari Рік тому +6

    1) Би энийг ааваас сурсан.
    2) Чи энэ номыг Жоннд өгч чадах уу?
    3) Чи энэ тухайг тэд нарт битгий хэлээрэй.
    4) Би танаас нэг юм асууж болох уу?
    5) Би ээжд хүлээе

  • @david_oliveira71
    @david_oliveira71 Рік тому +2

    I'd really like to suggest to do more videos where you list the most common phrases and sentences, of course with pronunciating them. I know you did 4 parts already, however, you can always add more vocabulary since we need it and because you pronounce them so clearly, that would help even more. That would be the best and surely help people (like me) a lot! Баяарлалаа
    I'm also writing this because there's only a very few resources on the internet and channels on YT teaching Mongolian, which unfortunately makes it much more difficult to learn the language to begin with.

    • @ghenulo
      @ghenulo Рік тому

      I really dislike the style of throwing up phrases without explaining their formation so that you could make your own sentences.

  • @david_oliveira71
    @david_oliveira71 Рік тому +4

    5:21 - Accusative case
    11:49 - Ablative case

  • @Rombororom
    @Rombororom 6 місяців тому

    We actually learned that dative is dative/locative case.
    But anyway, great lesson I really enjoy learning with you

  • @MegaEnchik
    @MegaEnchik Рік тому

    Anhnii bichlegee bodvol arai tsarailag bolchihson baina

  • @Jacob.D.
    @Jacob.D. Рік тому

    Haha, the homework is easy to me

    • @ghenulo
      @ghenulo Рік тому

      It would probably be easier in text form, but rewatching a 16-minute video until I get the nuances is a bit much.

  • @ghenulo
    @ghenulo Рік тому +1

    Yikes! Mongolian sounds difficult! I understand the concept of cases from other languages I've studied, but they don't have as many rules as those in Mongolian. It is weird though that in German, "folgen" ("to follow") is used with the dative, but the Mongolian equivalent is used with the accusative.

  • @chessecompany2279
    @chessecompany2279 10 місяців тому +1

    Спасибо за ваш труд!

  • @Jacob.D.
    @Jacob.D. Рік тому +1

    Thank you so much for making this session. It is so helpful

  • @markharrington9981
    @markharrington9981 Місяць тому

  • @eddiegreen7317
    @eddiegreen7317 Рік тому

    Thank you so much for the information!! this is really helping me in my acquisition!

  • @kwesibruno
    @kwesibruno Рік тому

    Ciera Crabtree.

  • @maraluciaduclosduclos7496
    @maraluciaduclosduclos7496 Рік тому

    BI khargaltai (eu estou feliz) means I am happy. Zurkh (coração) from mongolia belongs to Brazil.
    BI medekhgeyy (eu não sei) means I don't know. Mongol is difficult.

    • @ghenulo
      @ghenulo Рік тому

      Mongolian seems like a harder version of Turkish. Turkish has cases and vowel harmony, but it's different (and seemingly much easier); like the Turkish for "I am happy" is "Mutluyum" ("mut" ("happiness") + -li ("with") + -(y)im ("I")) and "I don't know" is "bilmiyorum" ("bilmek" ("to know") + -m(a) (negation) + -iyor (continuous) + -(y)im). The Mongolian in this video is harder for me to understand due to the Cyrillic alphabet (I take it that the letter than looks like H is an n sound); I guess she has earlier videos explaining the alphabet, word order (I can't even tell if Mongolian is SOV like Turkish, SVO like English, or something else), and other things I should have searched for before watching this.