For lovers of Langley:
Russian is not an ordinary language. And Azzky is complex, with absolutely puzzling illogical grammar with a bunch of incomprehensible exceptions. Prices, suffixes, endings, slopes and slopes are designed to distort the word so that its meaning becomes dark and incomprehensible.
Oh, batenka... I try now Russian-language I study Georgian, so against the backdrop of their afterlogs instead of excuses, growing into a word and eliminating falling endings, plugs that stick to each verb in several pieces - the verbs of movement, for example, depend on the direction to the speaker/from him, up or down and a bunch of factors, subjective and objective indicators ("I love you" and "I love him" - different verbs), versions, contact, some temporary forms and other things, which in the Russian language and near there is no, and also the fact that when squeezed from the roots will remain in the best case there are a couple of letters, which still try to dig in this accumulation (in the worst - the root of the verb in the past and
And the Georgians do nothing, smile and say that the Cartwell language is very simple and in many ways similar to Russian. Yes is.