Do you have a dumb question that you're kind of embarrassed to ask in the main thread? Is there something you're just not sure about?
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Notes -
I know the Germans like to complain that no one uses genitive case anymore.
However I can't think of adult Russian native speakers that continue to make mistakes with the cases. Well, with one huge exception: cardinal numerals. "I wanted to buy a phone with 64 gigabytes of storage (instrumentative), 128 gigabytes tops, but the sales assistant told me that 128 won't be enough ("не хватит" genitive) and I should l look only buy those with 256 gigabytes" is impossible for the majority of Russians to get right and most people will switch to "a phone on 64" (accusative), "128 is too little" (nominative) and "those that have 256" (accusative again) to avoid complex cases.
Do Russian children make other mistakes with the cases? Yes, but in the language acquisition phase. I can't think of any typical mistakes schoolchildren make.
I mean American toddlers say things like ‘I singed you a song tomorrow’, but double negatives and case are the big mistakes a school age child would be expected to make. It sounds like Russian children don’t make errors with case past the level of saying things like that.
Cardinal numbers make sense; I’m actually mildly surprised they’re declinable(in Latin they mostly aren’t and in Spanish only the number one is- because it’s identical to the indefinite article).
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