Sneymarin
Member
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2019
- Member Type
- Student or Learner
- Native Language
- Moldavian
- Home Country
- Moldova
- Current Location
- Italy
Hello, I was chatting in a Discord server and someone wrote the following sentence: "he's genius"
Another corrected him and said that the correct way to say it is "He's a genius" as it's a noun, but I joined the conversation and said that informally "genius" can also be an adjective and mean "very clever or ingenious". Oh boy was that a bad move. Several people intervened and said I was wrong. When I asked for an explanation I was met with "It's just wrong. Because I have grew up speaking the language all my life I know what I’m talking about" and no matter how hard I tried to get an explanation out of them I still failed in the end. I would be grateful if someone could explain to me why saying "he is genius" is wrong. I understand that it may sound unnatural to some, but I just want to understand wheter it's a valid use of "genius" or not.
Part of the conversation for context:
J: Do my homework
B: Peter will do your homework, John. He's genius. He likes doing homework
P: Debatable. The homework part, of course.
Thank you for your time.
Another corrected him and said that the correct way to say it is "He's a genius" as it's a noun, but I joined the conversation and said that informally "genius" can also be an adjective and mean "very clever or ingenious". Oh boy was that a bad move. Several people intervened and said I was wrong. When I asked for an explanation I was met with "It's just wrong. Because I have grew up speaking the language all my life I know what I’m talking about" and no matter how hard I tried to get an explanation out of them I still failed in the end. I would be grateful if someone could explain to me why saying "he is genius" is wrong. I understand that it may sound unnatural to some, but I just want to understand wheter it's a valid use of "genius" or not.
Part of the conversation for context:
J: Do my homework
B: Peter will do your homework, John. He's genius. He likes doing homework
P: Debatable. The homework part, of course.
Thank you for your time.
Last edited: