Take adjectives. Please! They can be some of the most difficult words in any language!
Consider Greek adjectives. First of all, an adjective is, put simply, a word that describes a noun. In English we have such words as big, small, loud, pushy, etc. English adjectives do not usually change in form, whatever the noun they are describing.
Not so Greek adjectives. They are inflected. This means that you must learn the proper suffixes for each adjective: five cases and three genders (masc., fem., neut.), meaning 15 endings for the first declension and 15 for the second declension. Then there are the two-termination adjectives, meaning masc. and fem. are the same endings, and then there is the neuter.
There are three usages for the Greek adjective: the attributive (attributing a quality to the noun), the predicate (can be translated with an "is"), and the substantival (works like a noun when there is a definite article in front of it and no noun after it).
This can be further complicated by the fact that the adjective may or may not have the same endings as the noun! Had enough yet? Say "Uncle"!
But wait until I tell you about Japanese adjectives!
Consider Greek adjectives. First of all, an adjective is, put simply, a word that describes a noun. In English we have such words as big, small, loud, pushy, etc. English adjectives do not usually change in form, whatever the noun they are describing.
Not so Greek adjectives. They are inflected. This means that you must learn the proper suffixes for each adjective: five cases and three genders (masc., fem., neut.), meaning 15 endings for the first declension and 15 for the second declension. Then there are the two-termination adjectives, meaning masc. and fem. are the same endings, and then there is the neuter.
There are three usages for the Greek adjective: the attributive (attributing a quality to the noun), the predicate (can be translated with an "is"), and the substantival (works like a noun when there is a definite article in front of it and no noun after it).
This can be further complicated by the fact that the adjective may or may not have the same endings as the noun! Had enough yet? Say "Uncle"!
But wait until I tell you about Japanese adjectives!