This baffles and enrages the Slav

This baffles and enrages the Slav.

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bulgaro.io/learn-bulgarian/definite-articles
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Me too
A bafels me more though

I speak Slavic+Uralic languages so yes, it truly enrages me.

How could you possibly get filtered by A? It's such a simple basic concept

It is unintuitive very often

so you are a filtered finn, it seems

Ze kat

I dont know what that means and the a does not help :^I

Lmao dont care and just saying ZE

It does and I'm tired of pretending it doesn't. I can even pronounce it properly but the whole idea of an article is so retarded imhom

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Ukrainian niggas be like " I put half full soda bottle in garbage can, but bag was ripped so it spilled on bottom of garbage can"

>poor slav bro's brain cant tell the difference between a general and a specific reference
its over

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Look at bulgarian, they call ten/ta/to definite article, it's basically the same except you have to use it all the time.
Dal sem z půly práznou láhev od sodovky do koše, ale byl v něm roztrhlej pytel a tak se vylyla na dno onoho koše.

>Dal sem z půly práznou láhev od sodovky do koše, ale byl v něm roztrhlej pytel a tak se vylyla na dno onoho koše.

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Ya kynuv napivporozhniu banku sodovoyi vody v smitnyk, ale mishok porvavsia i vono prolylosia na dno smitnyka.
Works perfectly.
It's a preposition though, isn't it? Like saying this/that but with genders. We have that too. Te/Toy/Ta

>It's a preposition though, isn't it?
Except in bulgaria it's definite article.
bulgaro.io/learn-bulgarian/definite-articles

the south Slavic forms of personal pronouns are ta/ta/to, and in Bulgaromacedonians they are postpositive (Bulgarta = the Bulgarian). Spoken Slovenian sorta makes use of an article, being ta for all three genders, but it's only used before adjectives (ta prav' dec = a real man, ta mala = a young female).

Neither do the Japanese.
It doesn't exist in Japanese.

>Bulgaromacedonians they are postpositive
Can't they be postpositive in any slavic language, they certainly can be in Czech. (Čech ten)

write some english sentence the closest way it would look like in japanse grammar

Is it that hard to put the tip of your tongue between your teeth and blow air?

Articles really are useless