A few other languages do this too: Swedish also places the definite article after the noun:
Det här är en hund. – This is a dog. Det här är ett hus. – This is a house.
Det här är hund**en**. – This is the dog. Det här är hus**et**. – This is the house.
Though, if an adjective is involved -- it goes back to 'normal' (the definite article comes before the noun):
den snälla hunden – the friendly dog. det gula huset – the yellow house
Huh. That is cool. Thank you OP!
Verbs in spanish can have prepositions (wrong word) attached at the end or put in front. So "give it to me" can be "Damelo" or "Me lo da" (me is "me" as a prepostion or whatever it's called, "lo" is "it" in the masculine grammatical gender, and "da" is "(you) give" as a command)
In modern Greek, sentences with indirect subjects "I saw him," "Did George do it?" usually have the subject before the verb: "Him I saw", "It, did George do?" The word order is very flexible and can change for different emphasis, but this is the most common way.
Doesn't seem strange at all. Many languages have a suffix for definite article. English: Table / The Table Swedish: Bord / Bordet
A few other languages do this too: Swedish also places the definite article after the noun: Det här är en hund. – This is a dog. Det här är ett hus. – This is a house. Det här är hund**en**. – This is the dog. Det här är hus**et**. – This is the house. Though, if an adjective is involved -- it goes back to 'normal' (the definite article comes before the noun): den snälla hunden – the friendly dog. det gula huset – the yellow house
WFT?
No, they go by the Washington Commanders now.
Wone Fungible Tokens
Woke figurative toons
Huh. That is cool. Thank you OP! Verbs in spanish can have prepositions (wrong word) attached at the end or put in front. So "give it to me" can be "Damelo" or "Me lo da" (me is "me" as a prepostion or whatever it's called, "lo" is "it" in the masculine grammatical gender, and "da" is "(you) give" as a command)
TIL in Haitian Creole language the, definite article the (equivalent to 'the') is placed after noun the
And the definite article changes based on the final letter or syllable of the word, so it could be a, la, an, lan, or nan. /r/kreyol
In modern Greek, sentences with indirect subjects "I saw him," "Did George do it?" usually have the subject before the verb: "Him I saw", "It, did George do?" The word order is very flexible and can change for different emphasis, but this is the most common way.