Sveiki!
Following the posting of this article on Delfi Blog, I’ve gotten a few thousand visitors to my smulkus blogas! In fact I’ve gotten so many that my current mokytoja is envious that I will be hounded by hordes of nuostabus moktoju, but alas I remain faithful.
So to the many labai puiku[s?] people who commented on and visited my blog
Labai Aciu Puiku (1.tauta; 2.liaudis [I have no idea which one to use!])
I’ll keep on my kelionė! I’m still deciphering the complexities of people’s comments, but keep them coming!
Peace.
1. taika; 2. (ramumas) tyla, ramybė
hehe, Nėra už ką
D
You are welcome
Yes, it should be “labai puikus people”

And that one about teachers. You should say either “nuostabus mokytojai” or “nuostabiu mokytoju”. I have no idea which one fits better because in Lithuanian we don’t normally use that kind of prepositions (I mean “of”, “in” etc). We express the idea by taking the right declensional (?) form
By the way, “Labai aciu, puiki tauta” will do
So, you are making a progress. Keep going
)
I see, you already know loads of useful words by now
I get a feeling, you will have some trouble with gender and all this endings’ changing thing, but we appreciate your efforts to learn our language. Good luck!
P.S. Correct form is ‘hordes of nuostabiu mokytoju’ or even better ‘daugybe nuostabiu mokytoju’
Should be “labai ačiū, puiki tauta”. It could also be “labai ačiū, puiki liaudie”, but liaudis means “people” rather than “nation” (tauta). Liaudis is now an old word earlier used to indicate the masses of people/nation without contributing them to a specific nation. For example, you can say “Europos liaudis”, meaning the people of Europe, without indicating all the nations of Europe.
Commonly, people is “žmonės”. One person – “žmogus”.
Taika – peace (after a war)
Tyla – silence
Ramybė – peacefulness/quietness
Taika!
Žmonės, bent čia rašykit lietuviškom raidėm, nes žmogelis pasimes
.
Ale jo, atsirado mat lietuviai – mokytojai. Patys net nemoka rašyti lietuviškomis raidėmis ir dar kažką mokina. Gėdos turėtumėt.
Mokinys: good luck, dude
Sėkmės moksle!
You’re the ”BESTESTESTEST” mokinys in the world!!!!