Well of course it does if you're learning that language but that's only one exception which you will need to take care of
Like French only has two forms of articles, feminin and masculin (la, le | un/une)
in German we have three. Masculin, Feminin and undefined (der/die/das | ein/eine/ein)
Which is something that's really annoying when you try to learn German
I could tell you countless of exception and weird rules you need to follow when speaking/writing German. It's one of the hardest languages to learn (on a international level) because of all that stuff
The one I'm familiar with is the cases, since we use 3 of them in Greek.
We no longer use Dative but it used to be part of Ancient Greek.
I don't remember which university researched it but they came to the conclusion that Mandarin, German, Finnish and Arabic are the hardest languages to learn if you're not a native
@AndreofHazel we still use Dative in German

I know, I used to study it when I was trying to learn German although I remember almost nothing by now. Ancient Greek used to have 5 cases, modern only have 4 since Dative is no longer included.
Yeah I knew about that. What I also heard is that the Spanish language has like 12 different forms of the tenses
which is mindblowing for me. You could be very precise when talking about a past /upcoming event

If I could learn German and Italian at some point in my life , I'd be a happy man.
I have the same struggle with Italian that you do with German
I learned it but I hardly use it
and by hardly I mean once every 3 years or something 😄
It's a really bad idea to learn it though, they only speak it in Italy and Switzerland
Well, I never properly learned German, I hardly ever got a certificate 😛
that's it, not even in other colonies