Forum Moderators: TheBryster
Bryce F.A.Q (Last Updated: 2024 Nov 26 4:28 pm)
Thanks for the laugh, Ardiva, I needed one. I always wondered why "cleave" means both to stick together, and to separate.
This is not my "second childhood". I'm not finished with the first one yet.
Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana.
"I'd like to die peacefully in my sleep like my grandfather....not screaming in terror like the passengers on his bus." - Jack Handy
We should all be speaking the same language like Galactica PanaGlobal or Earthean. Take the best of all languages and combine them. Throw out the nonsense and make the structure logical the sounds and spelling non contradictory. ***************************************************** Wasn't this the whole idea behind ESPERANTO?
No accent marks to guide pronouncing or meaning. It's all context based. If you don't know what's being said, you might not know how to say it. Also English is quite free in borrowing words from any other language, which is probably quicker than coming up with huge compound words that are used in related germanic languages.
Once you get past the context part, it's not that hard. Since in some regards it seems to have less rules about syntax, nor do you have to worry about words being "masculine/feminine/neuter" and stuff like that.
Message edited on: 08/21/2004 14:57
Your friendly neighborhood Wings3D nut.
Also feel free to browse my freebies at ShareCG.
There might be something worth downloading.
Slightly seriously, English (at least the UK version of it - USA version differs) is difficult because it's a mongrel language. It has influences, words and pronounciations which derive from: Anglo-Saxon, Celtic, Latin (old and new), Germanic, French, Arabic, Chinese (mainly Mandarin, but not exclusively), Australian Aborigine, various Indian languages (including Hindi and Urdu) American Indian, and more (I've lost my definitive list due to disk malfunction. Dammit!) Oh, and Inuit (Eskimo)... I KNOW I've left many out... So English tries to express many different languages which differ phoneticly (or is that phonetically - or fonetikly). Thus we get (approximately) 15 different pronounciations of the syllable "ough", some of which are: cough (coff), though (tho), through (throo), Slough (rhymes with cow), enough (enuff), lough (lock - Irish).. I'm too drunk to remember any more! Dr Samuel Johnson (inventor of the 1st English Language Dictionary) wrote that "ghoti" could be pronounced as "fish". Why? "gh" as in "enough"; "o" as in "women"; "ti" as in "motion".... errmm... I'll say "bye" now (Just recovering from serious disk crash...) Cheers, Diolma
The Americans and English are 2 peoples seperated by a common language
-GB Shaw, often attributed to Churchill here's another..
though the tough cough and hiccough plough him through..;)
Lesse..English is by way of Germanic, Frisian, Angle, Saxon, Norman French, Latin, Danish, Scandanavian, Celtic and Gaelic. What's not to understand?..;) Not to mention our version, with French, Spanish, Yiddish (itself a polyglot language), African, etc..;)
I wish I'd said that.. The Staircase Wit
anahl nathrak uth vas betude doth yel dyenvey..;)
You guys oughta try ARBABIC sometime! Now THERE'S a language that will confuse you. They have about a thousand (literally) different words for camel, depending on gender, age, whether a female is pregnant (for how long she's been pregnant), its color...... etc etc etc. I keep trying to learn it but I always end up blithering.
Worse than that, you can study Yemeni Arabic for several years, go to Egypt, and be totally lost!
Message edited on: 08/22/2004 00:43
Attached Link: http://www.mipmip.dsl.pipex.com/tidbits/pronunciation.shtml
This explains it all quite nicely :-)Answer: because American English is actually comprised of many other languages. So you are not learning just one language. Plus, English (as a whole) is content dependent for it's meaning . Look at the word "scale" in an English dictionary. It has 17 different meanings depending on how it is used. Talk about confusing the folks trying to comprehend this language!
Didn't you know that beauty is in the eye of the beholder. That's why eyedrops and rose-colored glasses are needed.
There's another one in that, MRIguy: 22. I weighed the fish scales on the scales.
This is not my "second childhood". I'm not finished with the first one yet.
Time flies like an arrow; fruit flies like a banana.
"I'd like to die peacefully in my sleep like my grandfather....not screaming in terror like the passengers on his bus." - Jack Handy
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