Principia Mathematica |
[Feb. 3rd, 2023|09:22 am] |
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We don't use the indefinite article before plural nouns. We'd just say 'doors are, for example, expensive'. We can't put 'a/an' or 'one' before plural nouns.
Of course, if you say 'the doors', then the door turns into a band.
Also a door is not a door, when it is ajar
hah hah
| From: | hedera |
Date: | February 3rd, 2023 - 11:40 am |
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The plural indefinite article in English is "some". ;)
girls are bigger than others
True. But you could say 'some breakfast' or 'some breakfasts', right?
What would be the equivalent in Latvian?
kaadas brokastis?
| From: | hedera |
Date: | February 3rd, 2023 - 11:53 am |
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Latviešu valodā nav artikulu, tādēļ tiešu ekvivalentu ne vienmēr var atrast. Var skatīties, kuri vārdi latviski izpilda to pašu gramatisko uzdevumu, kuru angliski pilda artikuli. 'some breakfasts' - dažas brokastis. Taču latviski parasti neteiks: "dažas brokastis es izlaižu" vai "dažas brokastis es ieturu verandā" - tas ir gramatiski pareizi, bet nav labskanīgi. Tā vietā izmantos "dažreiz".
You have determiners, though. So a determiner would be a, an, the, this, that, each, any, my, your, and so on.
I was - I think - using the plural of these determiners 'dažas' (for more than one) vai 'kadas' (more than one) vai 'šīs brokastis' (for one - though I know it is 'these') in my English Latvian, as that is what we say.
I had said 'viens brokasts', and someone pulled me up on it - that's when this 'plural one' hit me. I had been avoiding it without thinking about it.
| From: | hedera |
Date: | February 3rd, 2023 - 11:42 am |
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"Also a door is not a door, when it is ajar"
Oh, took a minute, but I figured it out. Nice! | |