Oh, this der-die-das thing is just the very beginning of the entire nightmare, trust me. Just when you finally get some clues and feel relief, the real monsters are about to ambush you.
English is already comparatively complicated compared with Chinese (we don't have 'tenses' nor 'grammatical cases' / 'singular/plural' won't affect anything in a sentence / of course, we don't have genders for any nouns.) Grammatically, Chinese is very simple and straightforward, but it has its own trickiness, sure.
And then German - the grammatical cases: Nominative / Accusative / Dative / Genitive all need to be changed according to the gender of the noun.
Let's see a quick example: As a jacket is a feminine word and a book is a neutral word, the gender will affect both the 'Pronouns(indefinite or definite)' and the 'Adjective'
My uncle gives me a very thick jacket. -- Mein Onkel gibt mir
eine sehr dick
e Jacke.
My uncle gives me a very thick book. -- Mein Onkel gibt mir
ein sehr dick
es Buch.
The three genders resulted in a lot of headaches along the way. Well, I don't want to go back to that nightmare.
