>his language doesnt have any letters exclusive to it
His language doesnt have any letters exclusive to it
Other urls found in this thread:
youtube.com
youtube.com
youtu.be
twitter.com
Yeağ yoü façket them gööd my teaçher
Ъ
>this triggers the ex-yu
große bruste
Ain't exclusive, we have it too.
It's called "the language of the ض" because no other language has the same sound
You never use it though. I didnt even know it made a sound before I heard a bulgarian talking.
Shit, I forgot, you do.
>heidän kielessään ei käytetä vitusti liikaa umlauteja ja sanojen päätteitä
>Öö
>Ǿǿ
>Ulkomaalaiset eivät ole ihmisiä. Koirinennekokaan.
Ä?
"ij"
Suomalaiset ovat ainoita ihmisiä ja muilla ei ole yhteisöllisyyttäkään.
Åå Ää
Swedes have that too
we have 'ñ' in our alphabet, but we only use it for proper nouns
estonians have Öö
It's just a replacement Ǿ, that's at least how.
Swedes use it, but since Estonian is a Finnic language, I wouldnt know how they use it.
ļ
ķ
ņ
t. José Manuel Rizal duterte
Ää
Öö
Üü
ẞß
kek. what's worse is, we have words in our language (both native and from spanish) that use the 'ñ' sound.
क्ष
ङ
ञ
ण
त्र
nice, epic.
IJ is a combination of two letters. In that aspect it's like ui, oe, au. But ij is special because you have to write both letters in capitals when you start a sentence. I can't think of any other language that has a letter combination like that.
so its like a retard snowflake way to write ü
Spanish has ll, which is spelled like a softer y.
Ng
Ll (abolished)
>His language doesn't have a letter that has two letters in it.
We do. It's the least used letter, and soviets wanted to replace it with ' though.
Are you even trying to be a special snowflake language?
í
ú
ű
ő
ó
dz
dzs
ty
gy
ly
sz
zs
castaña
muñeca
retoño
youtube.com
>cumskins can't pronounce "ğ"
But dvyordisnak is so much fun to say!
>ö
>exclusive
Ű and Ő are exclusive, I'm pretty sure
Other than that, letters like dzs are not really used by others I think
>His language doesn't have a letter that has two letters in it, one of which isn't used anywhere else in the language
ЫЫЫЫЫЫЫЫЫЫЫЫ
ś ż ę ą ć ź ń
it's a fairly common letter
"öö" means night
Oi, argentinan fuckboy, we've got "ñ" in galician too
>Ää
>Öö
>Üü
We have all of these
>Ää
this one too
>dz
>dzs
>ty
>gy
>ly
>sz
>zs
those are multiple common letters you stupid
Here's something I've not seen ITT yet: Õõ
100% Estonian
O galego so e portugues con sindrome de down
Gústaríame usar a nh en vez da ñ pero os (((((Casteláns))))) non nos deixan
i can recognize two of those words.
O ñ parece mellor e e mais bonita.
No
Aparte tes que aprender os acentos, meu
>os acentos
Non me importa kek
e un milagre que sei unha palabra de galego
>La ñ está también presente en los alfabetos asturiano, aimara, bretón, bubi, gallego, extremeño, chamorro, mapuche, filipino, quechua, iñupiaq, guaraní, otomí, mixteco, kiliwa, o'odham, papiamento, rohingya, tagalo, tártaro de Crimea, tetun, wólof y zapoteco, y su sonido (AFI: ɲ) también aparece en la mayoría de lenguas nilo-saharianas, el zarma, las lenguas aborígenes australianas, euskera y muchas otras lenguas en todos los continentes.
>Ñ
>exclusiva del español
ã, maybe?
Pasta_castilla.txt
Wijak_Cid.jpg
>Õõ
>100% Estonian
Nah, we've got à and Õ in Portuguese
CHORIZO'D
why not castanya and munyeca?
ure stupud
>In the Portuguese language, the symbol Õ stands for a nasal close-mid back rounded vowel, also written [õ] in IPA. It is not considered an independent letter of the alphabet.
>It is not considered an independent letter of the alphabet.
checkmate
do you seriously not know your own language?
See He said "language", not "alphabet"
Do you seriously not know how to read?
>taking everything as literally as possible
>not understanding that this question pertains to the alphabet, which is a core part of any language anyway
as expected of a monkey
back to your cage now
>alphabet
>core of any language
>literally saying languages didn't exist before alphabets or other scripts were created
>moving the goalposts
>ad hominem
As expected of a Russian rapebaby. Back to your gulag now
>*monkey noises*
haha what a funny thing
ps. in the first sentence, it even says the SYMBOL Õ
OP asked for letters
you do the math
oh wait you're a primate, you can't!
Not an argument
>*autistic monkey screeching*
hehehe
i'll visit you in the zoo sometime
Another non-argument
All letters are symbols btw
only those with a exclusive writing system can laugh tbeh
*an
џњљћшђч
idk which one of these are in other languages (Montenegrin doesnt count)
...
Good post
Å. Beat that
>capital ß
This is honestly the first time that I've seen one
>his language doesnt have every sound
Pity
...
Well yours sure as hell hasn't, you keep breaking your tongues trying to pronounce our Umlaute
can't believe you forgot the most polish letter Ł
-ize
Þat is truly embarrassing
Ğğ
Ich benutze es wo ich kann
Verbreite es
Amatures
>his language needs special letters to make it relevant for discussion in English
That's cute
"Đ" pretty sure its Serbo-Croatian exclusive
Dz ⵥ
Dj ⴵ
Gv/Kv ⴴⵯ/ⴿⵯ
Tsh ⵞ
does anyone else have these : é è ç ê ô î à ù ?
>He can't make a "th" without looking like a 5 year old
Nõn languages desu
Turkish ç sounds like ch
th as in the or in thought or in Thames?
Na we have ð Daði.
We have ll, rr and ch
That sounds different, and we'd use castania/munieca in that case
Like in thistle but not Thomas
We have è ç ê ô à ú
é*
To be fair American English is a special needs version of English which was cobbled together to make it relevant for discussing anything.
What was the letter for that clapping sound you guys make, again? Also, how do you guys pronounce and type pic related? My keyboard doesn't seem to have that letter.
Kokoo koko kokko kokoon. Koko kokkoko kokoon? Koko kokko kokoon.
Put together the whole bonfire.
The whole bonfire together?
The whole bonfire together
That that is is that that is not is not is that it it is
By adding punctuation
That that is, is. That that is not, is not. Is that it? It is.
That that is, is that that is. Not is not. Is that it? It is.
That that is, is that that is not. Is not "is that" it? It is.
đ aint the same tho
So coco was speaking finnish all along
Lots of languages (including English - "coöperation" is an older spelling) have ö.
ǿ is unique to Danish, yes. Not to be confused with the version without an acute accent, which exists in Norwegian.
kogu kogu kogu kokku
"gather the whole entity/body together" (sounds a bit stupid but it is grammatically correct)
lauer mehr auf /deutsch/
Æ
Both of those are used by Norway