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Genders in the Dutch language: common and neuter
16 0 ReplyThose are grammatical genders, which are a different thing.
11 2 ReplyRight
4 0 ReplyThey really should be called genres or noun class as outside of Europe they really aren't tied to gender and can have way more different cases than just two or three.
1 0 ReplyPermanently Deleted
1 0 Reply
We've actually got 3 genders, but outside Flanders, people don't seem to know the distinction anymore. The darn Dutch ruined Dutch!
5 0 ReplyStupid sexy Flanders
3 0 ReplyI had no idea this was another thing Flanders did differently than the Netherlands (and pretty much every other "Netherlandophone" area)
2 0 ReplyIt's really handy when you're learning German as their gender tends to be the same (het/een huis -> das Haus; de/nen hond -> der Hund; de/een kat(te) -> die Katze).
1 0 ReplyCool.
1 0 Reply
"You Dutch sure are a contentious people"
1 0 ReplyAaaahh, I'm not Dutch, I live more than 10 km south of them!
1 0 Reply
Genders in the Russian language: "actually, we are families"
1 0 ReplyIn Russia; you don't gender yourself, Russian genders you.
4 0 ReplyThe gender is there but I said it so fast you can't tell the difference anyway so let's just call it a short form
-russian
2 0 Reply"We don't need articles, but we have a fuck ton of grammatical genders"
Says the same country that also fears non-binary gender identities, that's actually kinda ironic
2 1 Reply