@@CzechWithKaterina yes i am, though i haven't been consistent 😭 so far the only real sentence I've learned is "Velmi hezké, bud'te v bezpečí a bavte se" and "nesnáším život" lol
I´m learning czech in school(i´m from eastern germany) and it´s harder than i thought at first. The grammar is so hard. I mean, for every pad (don´t know the eng word) a new ending. I thought its easy but yeah.
Born in Oklahoma to two adopted Czech grandparents. My family in West Texas(large Czech community) LOVE me because I know our family’s language fluently. Very rare where I’m from. I may not be Czech by blood, but my soul is calling me a západní kurva 😅
Me learning Czech and cannot for the life of me pronounce ANYTHING right 😂 ř just sounds like a j or more like the G in giraffe, so I'm constantly getting stuff wrong. I also can't seem to get the regular r down either. But I've only been learning for about 3 months now, so theres still time
As a Czech, I feel in such advantage, that I'm learning 6 other languages at once now, including Finnish, that should have 15 cases (pádů). Polish is very simillar, but Oh boy! The letters work like random hell sometimes..
@@chrisb3189 Arabic has only two tenses, two genders and three cases. In Czech, we have three tenses, three genders (in addition, the masculine is divided into animate and inanimate) and 7 cases, which also contain catchwords. Czech also has adjective divisions, listed words, verb divisions, etc.
You mean Ř? Because R is R as anywhere else apart from English perhaps. And no, how to explain it: they are very similar and yet completely different. Like the "rž" sound is the "ř" counterpart from the Star Trek Mirror universe, if that makes any sense to you.
When a Russian-speaking person starts to learn Czech. - How do you say teacher? -Učitel nebo učitelka. -Wow, just like we do! It's so easy. -How do you say plane then? -Letadlo... -Sounds logical, cause a plain can fly. I guess, Czech is just a strange dialect of Russian -Tak jako mluvíme "ladder"? -... -That's it
My father’s family is from the Czech Republic and I’ve been trying to learn it, but it’s so difficult. I’m usually pretty good at picking up on languages easily (Spanish, Chinese, Korean), but Czech is somehow more difficult than even Chinese to me haha
Hahahah Yes, like řepà or chléba! People have a hard time pronouncing certain syllables, it's funny to hear 😂 even more fun to try and teach them how to pronounce them!
I’m actually from Czech and i’m fluent it might be hard for some people cuz they have those letters that are like this ž and it might be hard to pronounce
It may be something next level.. The funny thing is, if u learn it. Then u come to Prague and don't understand anyone cause no one told u that u are learnin' formal language and everyone speaks informally. Words starting with "o-" are said "vo-" in 90% cases, random "vole", "Fakt jo/jako?" that sounds to English's like "F.Y." in every 3rd sentence and so much more struggle including Czech don't want or are unable to speak english to help you :)
@@DaweSlayer Hello, I can't stop laughing, sorry, it's not nice of me to laugh at your troubles. But the way you tell it, it sounds like a funny story, LOL!!!
I have mastered Czech (maybe because it’s my first language) But it took me a long time to learn how to make the Ř sound- And the grammar is hard as hell, so no, it’s not easy
Ok.. those ignorant ppl that think just cs some words are commonly inteligible from language to language (+ we are indoeuropean after all) doesn't mean the lang is easy, what the? 😅 & how would you think the word for ladder must be also qt similar 😅... ok, it was just for the sake of introducing the word i suppose N also: you don't learn a language: a. If u don't want to; if u don't need to; if you're not passionate w languages & w it in particular; if there s a better lang to learn in its stead... & _n_ or a few/ all the above+
V Česku jsou pro cizince těžké háčky podstatná jména atd. In the Czech Republic, it is difficult for foreigners to catch nouns, nouns, etc. Čeština je těžká Czech is hard
Meanwhile me, a native American who speaks Czech like a native language and understands the rules almost perfectly, then also was taught Slovenkian and is currently learning German and Japanese.
@@CzechWithKaterina learning Czech and Slovenkian isn't that hard, they have almost the same alphabeth, so the person must only learn the accent for native people to understand better :) Edit: When they try to speak with them ofcourse.
How do you say Hi, I'm from the Czech Republic and I have a big house and a big window, and in that window is my cat chichi (name)? Its: ahoj já jsem z české republiky a mám velký dům a velké okno, a v tom okně je moje kočka "čiči" xddd. Diakritika a gramatika.... To je v češtině nejhorší. Jo a taky se naučit jako angličan psací písmo.. Ale to nikdo nepotřebuje. Možná pro angličany doslova okrasný písmo??
All these German loanwords... So incredibly different from the "real" Czech language in my opinion as a German myself :) Czech language is the most beautiful and one of the most complicated ones I've ever heard and these loanwords have nothing to do with it in my opinion. ;P