this post was submitted on 23 Jul 2025
977 points (99.3% liked)
AntiTrumpAlliance
994 readers
2 users here now
About
An alliance among all who oppose Donald Trump's actions, positions, cabinet, supporters, policies, or motives. This alliance includes anyone from the left or the right; anyone from any religion or lack thereof; anyone from any country or state; any man, woman or child.
Rules
-No pro-Trump posts or comments
-No off topic posts
-Be civil
-No trolling
-Follow Lemmy terms of service
Social Media
Other Communities
!desantisthreatensusa@lemmy.world
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Grammar case (wikipedia)
Cases are a thing in languages with inflections such as Latin, Greek, German, slavic ones, and quite a few others. English used to have them in the middle ages, but they faded away in favour of prepositions, and the only place they still exist is who/whom.
Apparently he/him/his and she/her/hers are also inflections, but they seem different enough to not "feel" like inflections of the same root (especially she/her). Since inflections are not a common thing in English, one conceptually doesn't even know they aren't seperate words but deeply connected on a morphological level was opposed to particles (by, for, of, with). Especially someone without the context of knowing how they work in languages that utilize them on a more fundamental level.
However, looking at these words as if they're particles and not inflecions is a simple enough way to know how to use them (that's why you probably haven't heard of them).