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#67 | |
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"Forget I exist"
Jul 2009
Dumbassville
26×131 Posts |
Quote:
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#68 |
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If I May
"Chris Halsall"
Sep 2002
Barbados
9,767 Posts |
My girlfriend is English/Bajan. Her business partner is American/Bajan. I'm Canadian/English/Bajan. Oh, the joys of misinterpretation that can involve!
![]() My girlfriend is in a meeting, and needs some information which she doesn't have on hand, so she calls her partner and says "can you please look in my purse, it's there. Her partner looks through her purse, and doesn't find the information. My girlfriend comes back from the meeting and looks in her wallet, and finds the information needed. TL;DR: To English women, their purse is their wallet. What North Americans' would call a purse is instead their handbag. |
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#69 |
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Aug 2006
175B16 Posts |
As a quick estimate, Wikipedia has:
The total phonemic inventory in languages varies from as few as 11 in Rotokas and Pirahã to as many as 141 in !Xũ. I would argue that phonemes is what you want to measure here; although, for example, the L sound in "pool" is different from the L sound in "leaf", they're close enough to be lumped together, and that lumped-together group is called a phoneme. These vary quite a lot across languages, of course, and are a large part of what give languages their phonetic character. |
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#70 | |
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Aug 2006
3×1,993 Posts |
Quote:
![]() Let me just leave this here; it can't replace a good textbook but it looks like a good overview: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compar...d_(linguistics) |
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#71 | |
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"Rashid Naimi"
Oct 2015
Remote to Here/There
2,063 Posts |
![]() Quote:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comp..._(linguistics)) The board parser had real difficulty with it. ![]() ETA: Noted, thank you. Last fiddled with by a1call on 2018-03-18 at 01:24 |
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#72 |
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"Rashid Naimi"
Oct 2015
Remote to Here/There
206310 Posts |
This is an interesting article about Click-Consonant, with voice recordings. There is a lot more to it than I thought:
![]() https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Click_consonant |
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#73 |
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"Rashid Naimi"
Oct 2015
Remote to Here/There
206310 Posts |
I can't decipher the f like letter in this writing used instead of s along with s and f.
Such as "who loft his life". The only thing I can figure is that it is the typeface of s when used in the middle of a word, but then again there is the word Husband in the same text. I also don't understand the rules for capital letters used. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...k_memorial.jpg Wiktionary is no help: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/lost https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_En...Latin_alphabet Any clues? Thanks in advance. |
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#74 |
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Aug 2006
3·1,993 Posts |
This is called a long s, an alternate form of the letter "s"; the general rule is that the form "s" was used at the ends of words and "ſ" at the beginning and in the middle. It was very common in the 1700s and rare past the early 1800s.
Last fiddled with by CRGreathouse on 2018-03-18 at 06:49 |
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#75 | |
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Aug 2006
10111010110112 Posts |
Quote:
As in German, the nouns were capitalized. |
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#76 |
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Bamboozled!
"𒉺𒌌𒇷𒆷𒀭"
May 2003
Down not across
22×5×72×11 Posts |
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