Ε½Ε‘ΔΕΔΕ₯ΕΔ, ÑéΓΓ³ΓΊΓ½, then Ε― and ch. All actually easily pronounceable after a few years of daily training, all legit czech letters.ππ
Just saying. #czechstr
Ε½Ε‘ΔΕΔΕ₯ΕΔ, ÑéΓΓ³ΓΊΓ½, then Ε― and ch. All actually easily pronounceable after a few years of daily training, all legit czech letters.ππ
Just saying. #czechstr
I don't mind pronouncing legit Czech letters, I just don't know when the fuck when to use them. π€
I mean, even the words without special characters.
If `se` and `si` are both reflexive,... In essence they have the same meaning. As a foreigner not remembering the difference between `vydelat se` and `vydelat si` can lead into quite the awkward conversation π€
Bahahaha, that's one very solid something really depending on it.π€£ 'Si' means something for yourself by yourself I think, like sing or earn money or go for a walk, buy a t-shirt..it turns the narration inside the person. 'Se' is for everything else, but it's used very widely and changes the verb, that one is really nasty for a foreigner.π€ Just like past tense with 'jsem', especially russians I knew were bleeding on that one.