1.Your native language
1.Does your language distinguish throat and cucumber?
finland
no
1.Your native language
1.Does your language distinguish throat and cucumber?
finland
no
Other urls found in this thread:
vocaroo.com
vocaroo.com
youtube.com
twitter.com
Kurkkuni on kipeä (My throat is sore)
Kurkkuni on kipeä (my cucumber is ill)
>English
>is your second question implying that "throat" and "cucumber" are the same in Finnish? That's weird. They are two distinct words in English
cucumber goes into throat :^)
hmm i cant tell if you are making fun of my discussion about finland threads, but thanks for replying to my thread. No one never does that.........
1.Your native language
1.Does your language distinguish every word
france
yes
Would you like to read the red book about reeds that I read?
I wasn't making fun of your thread. I was just taken aback by your second question
>"ayayay"
Heh
thansk=)
Belarus
Yes
spanish
yes
Pepino
Garganta
youtube.com
explain the vid pls
2.Your native language
1.Does your language distinguish wives and handcuffs?
spain
no
presenter was telling the times for a F1 race and when he was talking about wich one was the fastest she described his speed as "como un pepino" (like a cucumber) when she was supposed to say "como un cohete" (like a rocket)
oh. it looked like she tried to fart
Sorry but French has a fuckton of homophones.
ai - first person singular present indicative conjugation of avoir (to have)
J'ai une idée - I have an idea
aie - first person singular subjunctive of avoir
aient - third person plural subjunctive of avoir
aies - second person singular subjunctive of avoir
ait - third person singular subjunctive of avoir
es - second person singular present indicative of être (to be)
est - third person singular present indicative of être
et - (conjunction) and
Il est grand et beau - He is tall and handsome
Homophones, not homoglyphs
Then he should have said "does your writing system distinguish every word"
t. autismus
Hullám (wave)
Hullám (my corpse)
The thread is about homonyms