Still, the time has come to face the fact that English is a crazy language - the most mad, the most embarrassing, embarrassing, and the embarrassing language of all languages. In crazy English, chicken of blackbirds is brown, blackboard is green or blue, blackberry is green, then red before ripe. Blackberry is really black, but what is blueberry, blueberry, cranberry, elderberry, cranberry, raspberry, gooseberry? In addition to this insanity there is no buttermilk butter, eggplant egg, grapefruit grape, shortbread bread, insect wood or wood, mushroom mushroom, pineapple. There are no pine and apples, peas, nuts in peanuts, ham burger. (Actually, if someone invented a sandwich made with Ham Pai in bread, it would be difficult to find that name.)
Let's face the reality - English is crazy. There is no ham for hamburgers, eggs for eggplant, and apple and pine for pineapple. French fries are not invented in France, muffins are not invented in the UK. In addition, the flowing sand can work slowly, the boxing ring is square, and the guinea pig is not from the guinea pig, it is also not a pig! Well, before remembering the list of homographs to gain grammar pleasure remember that homologs with the same pronunciation are called "synonyms". Oh, we are here, please do not forget "homonyms". This means that two or more words share the same pronunciation, but they have different meanings and sometimes can not be spelled the same way.
There is strong evidence to support English as a difficult language to learn. There is a crazy spelling system in English, and since English borrows many words from other languages, each word seems to constitute its own pronunciation rule. To know how to pronounce spelling, you need to know what language it came from or whether you've heard the correct pronunciation before. In English, questions are raised by changing the order of words that do not exist in other languages, such as Portuguese. Many Brazilians say that "You are an American?" Instead of the correct "Are you an American?" The order of words is not only when asking questions, but also when explaining nouns Also important. There is a very subtle word order rule that English is correctly "cute little brown dog", and "brown cute puppy" is incorrect.