This grammar lesson covers the Esperanto words that permanently end in -n: ajn, en, jen, kvin, kun, nun, sen, and tamen. Here's a link to join the official Esperanto-USA Telegram group where you can connect with other American Esperanto speakers: https://t.me/AmikojdeEUSA Thank you to all my patrons on Patreon! If these videos help you, become a patron! Or you could send a one-time gift through Venmo or PayPal. Every little bit helps! Thank you! https://patreon.com/ExploringEsperanto https://account.venmo.com/u/AlexMiller1887 https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/AlexMillerPaypal Patrons / Patronoj www.Ana.so, Anthony Bulinski, Benson Smith, Cam, Dajlan Dajlan Dajlan, Dalton Reed, Derek, Elis, Enzo Augustine, France Gamble, hohoEMI, Interkultura Novelo-Konkurso, Irizanjo, James Smith, James Ward, Jeremiah Stoddard, John Underwood, Jozefo S, Katherine Lister, Lee Behrens, Lulu Testudo, Mako Allen, Marco Ciampa, Marcus Griep, Marimbondo, Martin Aumont, Michael Rasmussen, Myrtis Smith, Paul Lee, Philip David Morgan, Rachel Helps, Rafa, Rob Mackie, Rod Wood, Savanni D’Gerinel, Scott Robert Dawson, Scott Starkey Magic, Stefan, Texas Mac, Tim Morley, Tinusa Salato, Vance Gao, Yevgeniya Amis
Comments 3
Sign in to join the conversation
Sign in
I used ĉi tiam a couple of times when I was referring to the moment I have reached in a story, to say like "it was at this moment that I realized" or something. But tbf it's very rare that "tiam" wouldn't work for that
Not sure if I've said this before but I really appreciate that you've started doing shorts cause my attention span is so shot 😂 Plus I get to send these to my friend that I'm trying to convince to learn it with me cause otherwise I'm never gonna really practice
Esperanto is a failure ngl