>>11868740You sound like you're trapped in a place with no native language then. I've heard it happens to some East Asians whose families immigrated to the US.
Anyway, no one who is inside a language complains about beginner-tier things like "I have" being expressed by a different construction. French expresses eighty as "four-twenty". It's only an issue to beginners who sometimes go waawaa about how illogical it all is. When you complain about stuff like this you are fighting the language and refusing to embrace it on its own terms. It's a lose-lose situation. You cannot win against a language. Either you accept how a language works and become water or you fight the language to your detriment and accomplish only frustration. I know it from experience because when I was a beginner learner of languages a long time ago, I foolishly fought what I perceived to be illogical or cumbersome. For example, I recall being pissed about the genitive of the feminine and plural definite article 'die' in German being 'der' while 'der' is also the masculine nominative, and it's not the only source of confusion (see picture).
If you fight how a language works, it's a guaranteed loss. You can stay immature and type long explanations about how Finnish is retarded, illogical, moronic, disgusting, pitiful, maddening, etc. to satisfy and protect your ego, or you can choose otherwise. Up to you. Good luck.