what is the difference?
yuliakots 2019-10-10 16:59 | what is the difference? what's the difference beyween "lat" and "lata"? |
derekschinke 2019-10-10 20:12 | 1 rok 2 lata 3 lata 4 lata 5 lat 6 lat ... 21 lat 22 lata 23 lata 24 lata 25 lat ... |
Hingston 2019-10-26 18:34 | Derek, This seems random. Can you articulate a "rule" for when to use rok, lat, lata? |
derekschinke 2019-10-27 04:17 | Basics of Polish plurals for the purposes of this question: The numeral jeden (1) behaves as an ordinary adjective, and no special rules apply. "rok" is the nominative singular (basically default) form of "year". After the numerals dwa, trzy, cztery (2, 3, 4), and compound numbers ending with them (22, 23, 24, etc. but not 12, 13, or 14, which take -naście as a suffix and are thus not compound numbers at all), the noun is plural and takes the same case as the numeral. The resulting noun phrase is plural. In this case, the nominative plural of "rok" is "lata". With other numbers (5, 6, etc., 20, 21, 25, etc.), if the numeral is nominative or accusative, the noun takes the genitive plural form, and the resulting noun phrase is neuter singular. In this case, the genitive plural form of "rok" is "lat". There are more rules for masculine personal plural forms of numbers, and numerals in the genitive, dative, instrumental or locative forms, but those are the basics here. |
Hingston 2019-10-27 12:17 | Thank you. I appreciate your clarity. For me, this is still way over my head (and far into the future). I am still learning to say "Dzien Dobry." Complex language, this Polish. |
Hingston 2019-10-27 12:17 | Thank you. I appreciate your clarity. For me, this is still way over my head (and far into the future). I am still learning to say "Dzien Dobry." Complex language, this Polish. |
iftikhar.tarar 2019-11-15 21:45 | thanks for explaining rules of polish |