Unusual feature of the German language
Thursday, December 23rd, 2010 12:45 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I finally acquiesced to
aviva_m's demands, and skipped ahead in my German book so I can learn other tenses, as she's fed up of only being able to talk with me in the present. I've made a start now on the perfect tenseāso now, as my boss put it, I can talk perfect German.
Meanwhile, I've learned about unusual feature of German: there are a number of prepositions which take a noun in the accusative when there's a motion involved, but in the dative instead when there isn't. That's interesting; I can't think of another language that does something like that (though of course I only know four in enough detail that I'd know of something like this). Anyone know of any further examples of anything similar?
Speaking of German,
rysmiel's correspondence with me over the years has been peppered with the occasional "und so weit". From context I'd guessed it meant "and so on", but now I know it literally means "and so far", which doesn't mean the same thing at all. So can my germanophone readers confirm whether it has the former meaning at all? (Or, alternatively, can
rysmiel let me know the intended meaning?)
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Meanwhile, I've learned about unusual feature of German: there are a number of prepositions which take a noun in the accusative when there's a motion involved, but in the dative instead when there isn't. That's interesting; I can't think of another language that does something like that (though of course I only know four in enough detail that I'd know of something like this). Anyone know of any further examples of anything similar?
Speaking of German,
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no subject
Date: 2010-12-23 05:24 pm (UTC)usw.
Date: 2010-12-23 05:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-23 06:30 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2010-12-30 11:09 am (UTC)I also only know 'und so weiter' for etc.