Why do some languages use gendered nouns? It seems to just add more complexity for no benefit.

  • Lath
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    110 months ago

    It’s a mouthful, but concise. (Telling as a non-german).

    • Ashy
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      10 months ago

      I agree that German is concise. I just don’t see what the gendered nouns are contributing to that quality or any other one.

      • Lath
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        110 months ago

        Who said anything about gendered nouns? The question was about greater complexity making things easier.
        In my eyes, the German language achieves that.

        • Ashy
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          210 months ago

          Who said anything about gendered nouns?

          The title of this post is “Why do some languages use gendered nouns?” …

          • Lath
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            010 months ago

            I was replying to a comment, not the title.

            • Ashy
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              10 months ago

              But that comment is in response to a another comment that is direclty about the title … did you just forgot the context of the entire conversation only 2 replies in?

              • Lath
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                010 months ago

                Why would I care about context? Comment had a question, I had an answer. Problem solved.
                Context is unimportant.

    • @raef@lemmy.world
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      110 months ago

      Sometimes more specific (sometimes. Verbs carry some widely different meaning and depend on propositions to differentiate), but not always more concise. If you’ve done or compared German-English translations, you see the English is always shorter, both in word and—especially in—character counts. My experience has been usually about 20, up to 30, percent.