Why do all German language resources suggest learning nouns with "der, die and das"? Assuming the noun is singular, a noun heard in context with either "die" and "das" can have its gender uniquely inferred. But "der" could be male or female. So why not learn "den, die and das"?
I just feel that when you start learning German you learn these associations: der = masc., die = fem., das = neut. and then you see "der Schule" for the first time, so you'd assume it's masculine. If you learned "den = masculine" instead then you might be confused but not wrong.
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Technically you should just learn word gender, but easiest is pairing with the definite. And then the problem is being in non-nominative case, which _may_ confuse... but in the end there should be no confusion: Der Schüle is just in another case, because Schüle is a f. word
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That's understood, but why make it harder for the student by choosing a case without a one-to-one mapping between articles and genders?
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Also, my experience with German has been that in the long run it’s easier to learn the cases and use that knowledge to derive the gender of unfamiliar words rather than memorize the correct article.
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