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Beat Writer Posts: 178 Joined: 8 Feb 2008 | |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1292 Joined: 12 Sep 2007 |
Dang, I hate it when I fall for those. I should have known Coca-Cola was too smart to do that. But it's even stranger than an actual Chinese shopkeeper would advertise "Bite the wax tadpole" on his own. (I blame government schools.) |
Copy Clerk Posts: 112 Joined: 29 Mar 2008 | It never seeems to amaze me the word "Engrish" being said by various languages. I know it's not their fault, but it just really makes me giggle. Favorite word? : Kayak-Paddle |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1552 Joined: 7 Mar 2008 |
well actually spanish has latin, romanian, italian and french to borrow from, they are all romanitic languages and share the same base, french/italian/spanish are almost the same language, one or two letters different in a lot of word english also has something like 500K words, the next closest isn't even half that english has strong roots in saxon/tuetonic (german), gaelic/celtic, latin, arabic, hebrew. it has no family it fully belongs to, so there's no language for it to borrow on if you are learning it for the first time english also has a LOT of grammatical rules to it and a lot subtle ones as well that change the meaning of the sentence. frankly most of the people who say it is easy to learn are the native speakers and frankly most of them don't know how to speak the language themselves all that good. and german is actually pretty easy to learn, teaching myself it right now, mostly cause the course i'm doing shows the similarities between english and german. it's language bases that are foreign to us, such as hebrew, arabic, japanese, cantonese/mandorin that have different pronunciations and sound structures that make it difficult. like arabic and pretty sure hebrew as well have a couple syllables that are throat sounds and kinda sound like you are clearing your throat or have something stuck in it. also i call into question that list because there is no chinese language, china has several different languages, the 2 main being mandorin (northern what Jet Li speaks) and catonese (southern and what Jackie Chane and Bruce Lee speak) |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1552 Joined: 7 Mar 2008 |
Russel Peters has a sketch about that word when he was in china, from what he was saying it's the chinese version of "ummm" and "like" well at least how the teenage girls use the word "like" it's a darn funny sketch, well Russel himself is pretty funny |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 3728 Joined: 13 Feb 2008 |
Irony or Deliberate? Only you can decide. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1552 Joined: 7 Mar 2008 |
a bit of both and a lack of coffee, only on my second timmies of the day, don't drink tea here cause the barbarians here can't brew a good cup of earl grey also i think i have the bad habit of doing a few things at once too |
Copy Clerk Posts: 118 Joined: 22 Apr 2008 | Potassium permanganate and manganese to name a couple. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1552 Joined: 7 Mar 2008 |
a'a it's also a bike by my favorite bike company kona or used to be at least, and yes it is a type of lava, i think the word is hawaiian then we could also add Hummu Hummu Nuku Nuku Apua'a, which is also one of their old bikes, the name sticker took up the whole top cross bar, it was kinda funny |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1816 Joined: 14 Nov 2007 | English is a bugger of a language, but personally I reckon German is a bloody nightmare to try and learn. All the verbs and whatnot change depending on whether the noun is masculine, feminine or neutral. And there's all those -chs everywhere, meaning whenever I try and speak it I sound like I have a sponge lodged in the back of my throat. |
Copy Clerk Posts: 111 Joined: 7 Feb 2008 | I love procrastinate, pretentious and definitely (which half of the English-speaking internet population cannot spell, a fact that never ceases to be amusing).
I agree. I'm Italian and I've studied both French and, obviously, English. I found English to be quite easy to pick up, especially when compared to French; Italian and French may have the same roots, but the sheer amount of verb forms and all those accents make everything harder (Italian has the same "problems", but it's more forgiving on the accents). |
BANNED Posts: 141 Joined: 20 Mar 2008 | I go into spasms of higher english and noone really understands. so i dumb it down and people ask me why i didnt say that in the first place. Better if they just understood me first time round. trying to explain what "bollocks" and "Dogs bollocks" is to a frenchman. the worst is when you know a word but cant explain it. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1552 Joined: 7 Mar 2008 |
actually i've been able to pick up german pretty easily, been doing some "learn the lang on cd" type stuff but the lessons show the stuff that english and german share, cause english does have a strong teutonic root to it but yes there's some oddities to it and not even counting the slang, like to say "will you come have a drink with me?" you say "will you drink with me come?" at least i think that's how it literally translates but english is way more complex and subtle with its rules, not even starting in on the homonyms and contractions or the fact that this is a sentence in english Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo. and you can even increase the amount of times you use the word up to 9 times i think http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buffalo_buffalo_Buffalo_buffalo_buffalo_buffalo_Buffalo_buffalo |
Pulitzer Laureate Posts: 847 Joined: 6 Mar 2008 | They don't have pretzel sticks in sweden? O_o |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1292 Joined: 12 Sep 2007 |
Of course English is easy; we Americans wouldn't speak it if it weren't. |
Muckraker Posts: 322 Joined: 18 Jan 2008 |
Hey, now, I only speak two languages: English and Bad English! |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 2600 Joined: 21 Jan 2008 | Me, my favourite word would have to be procrastinate: Why? 'Cos that one word could pretty much sum me up, as a person. I'm lazy to a fault, but give me work, and I'll eventually do it. Consider procrastination (hell, it even sounds funny) my sin (actually, wouldn't be considered sloth?). - A procrastinator |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 3344 Joined: 24 Apr 2008 | being the loyal escapist (escaper? escapee?) i am trying to track down the song 'Kempt' by the australian comedy band Tripod as i think it is right on topic with this particular thread but i cant... Because they have never made a music video or played it live so poot feel free to look it up yourself, i really do recommend it if you'd like an intelligent play on words. now that i've gone and written this now i really cant leave without a link http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FHIu2ErqgbQ&feature=related there, its tripod, watch it well, this was a waste of time. |
Press Junketeer Posts: 398 Joined: 8 Oct 2007 |
That's funny I never really realized we did that to be honest. Just always accepted that it was tuna fish..oddly enough when we go tuna fishing we just say tuna. hehe ^_^ Also I think the word 'shuck' is highly amusing and fun to say. It means to peel off or to strip off. In America we most commonly use it when saying, "gotta go shuck the corn before dinner." or something along those lines. Amusing...No I'm not a redneck. hehe ^_^ |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 3344 Joined: 24 Apr 2008 | James while John had had had had had had had had had had had a better effect on the teacher thats a sentence in english thats right, common sense once again falters in the cold light of logic ooh, thats a good quote, i'm writing that one down |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 2449 Joined: 18 Dec 2007 | I believe their are 22 single letter words in the english language. Whatever they are, they are my favourite words. |
Copy Clerk Posts: 71 Joined: 17 Apr 2008 | I have a Korean friend and I always end up explaining all the sexual terms. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1021 Joined: 16 Jan 2008 | I once had to explain to a guy why his refusal to spell "come" properly was resulting in profanity filtering. That was interesting. I also had a lovely Scottish mate on EvE called Lacktale from whom I would adopt many phrases and repeat loudly while giggling, much to his chargrin. "och, weeshed!" |
Pulitzer Laureate Posts: 873 Joined: 25 Jan 2008 | I had to try and explain what a sieve was to my french flatmate who's usually got a fantastic vocabulary. It felt like a little bit of a Fawlty Towers moment when she handed me a bottle of Cif instead. Speaking of Cif, why'd they have to change the name? Jif was a much better one, in my opinion. Just sounds better. Jif. Jif jif jif jif jif. Jif off. To jif. To be jiffed. Jif and the beanstalk. The meaning of jif.... Shutting up now. EDIT: Apologies for this, I've been up most the night trying to get an essay done and my brain's starting to turn into something resembling jelly. |
Pulitzer Laureate Posts: 873 Joined: 25 Jan 2008 |
Haud your wheesht you afore I gie you a boot in the bahookie, baw-bag! Scottish slang is awesome. :D |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1292 Joined: 12 Sep 2007 |
I can speak a bit of Spanish, enough to say "Donde esta el cuarto de bano?" (Although I prefer the Steve Martin version, "Donde esta el cuarto de pee pee?") Unfortunately I can't understand a word of the reply. I really need to learn to say "Please point me toward the bathroom" instead. On a related note, our offices were at one point cleaned by a Korean immigrant who spoke something way below Engrish - I could never understand a word he spoke, and he probably had some fascinating stories. He did the thing Americans are always accused of - speaking louder in an attempt to be understood. When he went beyond "Hello" he'd soon be screeching at the top of his lungs. He even at one point trying writing out words on my thigh - real uncomfortable. Dude, I can't even understand English when some strange dude is touching my thigh! |
Press Junketeer Posts: 398 Joined: 8 Oct 2007 | ..I've never heard of scottish slang before...That's really interesting. *walks off to kidnap a scottish guy..perhaps irish too* ^_^ |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 2600 Joined: 21 Jan 2008 | No, but the accents are damn awesome... "Oi, Suzy!"... That never gets old.. |
Pulitzer Laureate Posts: 873 Joined: 25 Jan 2008 | If you like Scottish slang, you owe it to yourself to check out Rab C. Nesbitt: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DFPWbh4E6m8 Classic stuff in Scotland, though it's pretty much unknown in the rest of the world (including England). It's about a bunch of waters living in one of the roughest areas of Glasgow, and is far darker than any equivalent sitcoms. Also, check out Chewin' The Fat and Still Game. These show's will tell you more about what life's like in Glasgow than rubbish like Braveheart ever could. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1552 Joined: 7 Mar 2008 |
make sure you wash LOTS after, i might suggest just totally disinfecting yourself after, it's safer that way :) actually scottish slang is pretty close to english slang with some minor difference peculiar to their tribe |
BANNED Posts: 502 Joined: 3 Jan 2008 | Mate 4 British classics User was banned for: Zero Punctuation: Mailbag Showdown. (Permanent) |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 3728 Joined: 13 Feb 2008 |
Which only Americans really use when playing British. :) |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 1552 Joined: 7 Mar 2008 |
yeah mate is used a lot tho for distinctly british slang go no further than these two bloody hell (can also be bloody 'ell) much like "eh" is a canadian thing, tho we don't say it as much as ppl would think. and the whole oot and aboot thing is mostly the newfies accent coming thru yeah the newfies have their own accent and dialect that's sometimes harder to understand than a good glaswegian or irish accent |
Paperboy Posts: 44 Joined: 23 Jan 2008 |
Hmm.. I'm sure I remember Rab C. Nesbitt being popular down in London too... Albeit probably for different reasons. (the disproportionate number of Glaswegian homeless in London might explain it) Doesn't the bloke from that have a new show out? Glaswegian humour is usually pretty good, albeit a bit dark- a good example of this is Frankie Boyle's response to the self-immolating Islamic fundamentalist at Glasgow Airport: "You want to bring religious war here? We've got a 400 year headstart and you don't even have a football team!" It's consistently annoyed me that cleverlymadeup keeps mis-spelling "teutonic", as it somewhat undermined the authority of the otherwise good points he was making. Moreover, he failed to acknowledge Greek as a source of words in the English language. My personal favourite word is "internecine", because it sounds better than a word meaning mutually destructive really should. Also I like "onomatopoeia", because it ironically doesn't sound anything like its meaning. |
Gone Gonzo Posts: 3728 Joined: 13 Feb 2008 ![]() | |
One i like to use:
Disasteriffic - A state of things that are disastrous but not out of ones control providing they don't ignore the problem.
(not a real word to my knowledge)