Your son is a very good teacher he takes after you
@shimkonise3572 жыл бұрын
Aciu!
@MarineLG2 жыл бұрын
Gera pamoka, ačiū!
@sanant7953 Жыл бұрын
Linkiu jums geros dienos taip pat 🙏Have a good time
@kenwright3657 Жыл бұрын
I've been to Seattle and lived there for three 4 months on my way to Anchorage Alaska. As Buvau Sietle ir ten gyvenu keturis menesius pakeliui i Ankoridza, Aliaska.
@lhobasroots2 жыл бұрын
Gero pamokas... tavo suo yra geras mokytojas... Great lesson, your son is a good teacher like you
@LithuaniaForYou2 жыл бұрын
Sūnus))
@liudmilaleshchik83282 жыл бұрын
Labai ačiū!
@hildabassi29632 жыл бұрын
A great video! Thanks Ramunas!
@chuckhewett39742 жыл бұрын
Nuostabi pamoka! Ačiū. Jis yra puikus mokytojas.
@EastWestLifeInsider2 жыл бұрын
Informative...thanks for sharing... Soon we going to Vilnius too...lovely city.🙂
@christophbreitenbach4112 Жыл бұрын
Kaip gerai, kad kalbėjote apie Dievą - tai vyksta toks rėtai. Ačiū už pamoką.
@LithuaniaForYou Жыл бұрын
Kviečiame aplankyti mūsų kitą kanalą PRADŽIOJE BUVO ŽODIS
@kenwright36572 жыл бұрын
That was a nice video Thanks for sharing my teacher Man Mokytoyas
@LithuaniaForYou2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@piroskakovacs67342 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video too, really liked it! ^-^
@tomasztruszkowski93422 жыл бұрын
Very good lesson. I watch every new one and this one is particularly useful. Labai ačiū. Su dievu!
@LithuaniaForYou2 жыл бұрын
Glad to hear that!
@kenwright3657 Жыл бұрын
I've been to Vilnius five times, but never had enough time to go sight seeing. Vilniuje lankiausi penkis kartus, bet niekada neturejau pakankamai laiko pamatyti regejima.l
@chuckhewett39742 жыл бұрын
Perhaps a lesson about trunka, buves (esu buvai), mates (esu matei), dares (esu padarei), esu buvusi, etc. I can find very little information about buves, mates, dares, trunka.
@sikoyakoy2376 Жыл бұрын
I just wrote a whole lesson here and then it disappeared :( It took me so long to write. *This is quite long. You don’t need to read everything in one sitting. Just learn what you can, then take some time off and come back to continue again later on. Anyway, those are past active participles. They indicate that someone or something has done something. For example “buvęs”, which is the past active participle of “būti” (to be), can be roughly translated as “which was” and even “former”. For example, “buvęs prezidentas” (former president (person who was a president)). It’s other forms according to gender and number are: buvusi, buvę, buvusios. Some more examples: 1. Strutį matęs klasiokas - classmate who saw an ostrich; classmate who has seen an ostrich 2. Tai darę žmonės - people who did that; people who have done that 3. Šiek tiek Baltijos istorijos pasimokiusi mergina - maiden who studied a bit of Baltic history; maiden who has studied a bit of Baltic history Those past active participles can also be used in expressions to mean that someone or something has done something/happened. For example: 1. Aš esu buvęs Azijoje. - I have been to Asia. 2. Mano draugė yra žiūrėjusi latvišką filmą. - My (female) Latvian friend has watched a Latvian movie. Another thing to note is that reflexive verbs without a verbal prefix (e.g. mokytis) have the same active participle form (this applies to present, future, and past frequentative participles too) as their non-reflexive counterpart (e.g. mokyti). So both “mokytis” (to study) and “mokyti” (to teach) are “mokęs, mokiusi, mokę, mokiusios” in participle form. Verbs with a verbal prefix have different participle forms for reflexive and non-reflexive forms. For example: pamokyti (pa + mokyti (non-reflexive)) -> pamokęs; pasimokyti (pa + mokytis (reflexive)) -> pasimokęs If I’m not mistaken though, the dummy prefix “besi-“ can be attached to the participle form of reflexive verbs without one of those other verbal prefixes like “pa-“ to differentiate them from their non-reflexive participle counterparts. So “mokytis” can also become “besimokęs”. But I think the prefix “be-“ actually has its own nuances, which are ignored when it is used as part the dummy prefix. (“Be-“ is also a verbal prefix, but it is in a different category from others like “pa-“, “už-“ and “pri”; “be-“ just behaves differently.) There is at least one other use of past active participles I can think of, but these are the most common and fundamental. Another use is in indirectly quoted speech, but it is more common to say indirectly quoted speech in other ways. As for “trunka”, that is the present tense form of “trukti”. I’m not a native speaker, but I have reached quite a high level. I am quite sure the examples above are grammatical and although I am confident they are quite natural too, I guess I can’t really be sure about this. But this should be enough to help you understand how these forms are used. If you have any questions, then I might be able to answer based on what I’ve learned.
@sikoyakoy2376 Жыл бұрын
By the way, the phrases “esu buvai”, “esu matei”, esu padarei” are ungrammatical and don’t make sense :) “Buvai”, “matei” and “padarei” are past tense forms in the second person singular.
@beckydaunay2 жыл бұрын
Please more videos like this. :)
@mayamaja-nazaruk89192 жыл бұрын
Isn't it dangerous to make an educational video while driving, in rain?! You are putting yourself on the line, for us! :) :)
@LithuaniaForYou2 жыл бұрын
Viskas gerai, Maja, nesijaudink )))
@baltoslave2 жыл бұрын
Ramūnas, prašau, išmokstu rusijos kalba Tava pamokos puikus Norečiau matyti pamokos rusiškai ir nuo tavęs Tu labai gerai mokytojas