>His language vocabulary doesn't have words which contains a B with down syndrom
lol get out of here you basic bitches.
>His language vocabulary doesn't have words which contains a B with down syndrom
lol get out of here you basic bitches.
this letter in a sentence always looks weird
it's like it comes from another alphabet
scheiß Franzose
esset is becoming less common in germ language I hear
Kinda looks like a race track if you look at it closely enough.
german suβhuman
You are listening to retards then.
fuck off I know what this means
this
I was just kidding
>His language vocabulary doesn't have words which contain a C with a bented dick
Ç
I don't speak Pißscheiß
romanian have tons of those, even below t iirc
>vowels
lmao
We also use it, so that may not be the best indicator.
the letter games use to make unique names
gamers*
>not having the curvy thing on your vowel
lmãõ ãre yõu fãggõts even trying
Why would I want something with Down syndrome though???
>his language has diacritics
shitskin tier
It is the Beta character. It only proofs Germans are betas
Trema can be used in English
the New Yorker does this all the time
example: the word «Cooperate» can be written Coöperate, also reenter - reënter
this
Long, long ago we didn't have them
how is this a good thing ?
It's cool and your language unironically lost something when you dropped it for no reason.
>His language vocabulary doesn't the poverty symbol
Ñ
use NH instead like we do
the Italian GN has more phonetical sense in Spanish
>example: the word «Cooperate» can be written Coöperate, also reenter - reënter
nowadays the English would use trema only in naïve and even that's a stretch. nobody uses these dots
His language vocabulary doesn't have words which contains a Ç , Ş , Ğ Ö , Ü ı . fucking subhumans.We are superior.
No,that would be NY, like in catalán, GN sounds,just like gn.
>Ç
portuguese
>Ü
spanish
mmh try again sweetie
imaginá la palabra gnocchi , en español decimos ñoqui porque asi se pronuncia
Ş is also romanian.
Then tell me what are those?
ĞĞĞĞĞĞĞĞ ÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖÖ
ııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııııı
I understand it's a niche thing but there are some who use it - the New Yorker as an example
newyorker.com
Turk dick = ı
White dick =I
ıI
Porque es italiano gilún, el español tiene un monton de palabras con GN y no se pronuncia como Ñ, por eso si quisieras reemplazar la Ñ, GN no serviria, pero si NY.
ЯЬP(r)ЁЛЩЙЮ
but it does have a melting P
Þis is a really nice to shorted Þings when you feel like it
...
It would be a pretty useful letter for English though, since th sometimes sounds like a D.
>Ğ
>ı
t*rk origin
>Ö
your people stole it back when they were circa Vienna
el catalANO
>since th sometimes sounds like a D.
Only for shitskins it does
that's why you used to have both eð and Þorn
Yeah, but it's never made sense that we didn't keep ar least one of them. It's the most unique phoneme in English and doesn't correspond to any of the other letters
At*, sorry, typing with an on-screen keyboard
was it autism?
I thought it died because of the printing press
>2012 article
and even they admit they wanted to change it
Also, "Most of the English-speaking world finds the diaeresis inessential. Even Fowler, of Fowler’s “Modern English Usage,” says that the diaeresis “is in English an obsolescent symbol.""
þou art a nigger
Question:
When do you think grammarians will recognise the construction "would/could of"
Fuck you
>th sometimes sounds like a D
Are you retarded
never
It's "would have/could have", dummy, shortened to "would've/could've"
reminds me of the ask/axe joke from Futurama
captcha: 6848 cunt
It comes from this. The letters got written more so it got combined to become ß
Αυ αμ ε γkρυk
It definitely will become part of descriptive grammars, sooner or later. Too many people use it (sadly).
Don't linguisticsplain it to me. I know what it is.
I don't know the joke. Something about methathesis? ME had "ax/axe" for "ask" which is in AAVE /æks/ again.
>not having the curvy thing on your n
lmao are you faggots eveñ tryiñg
By D he means Đ
we cañ do that as well but we chose not to
it's not happening
It will, broðor, whether we like it or not.
Ñ>NH
LL>LH
Fight me
>it's not happening
it will
no
We got them from Occitan poets, but the ñ started in Galiza/Portugal.
The way of writing the sound, that is, not the actual sound.
That's different. Literally took on a new meaning and the definition was adjusted to match the usage. Could of is a writing mistake, not a change in the way people speak. The two cases aren't comparable.
Yeah, I wish we used more of those
Curvy things on R, C and L instead of RR, CH and LL
if 'Could of' rises in usage, it will become more accepted.
that's how languages evolve
no one writes it but dumb people and it makes no grammatical sense. you will always look like a retard for saying could of
You think language change is driven by smart people?
>evolve
let's just use "change"
It's interesting how syntax would treat such a construction.
?would [Predicator: aux V] of [Prepositional Object: PP]
Eh. We've been through a long process of fitting the Ortography to the spoken language so it sits just right in a very structured way that almost completely covers the language.
New world accents of course are the losing party, because you've started to drift away from the "main" school.
not happening
so? professors don't dictate trends - the majority does
I don't know how popular this even is
yeah I guess you can't call regression that
It is. For example daß is written as dass nowadays.
That's a change of rules though and makes sense. A lot of words lost the ß but the spelling rule is better now and we still have words with ß.
>A lot of words lost the ß
That's the point I was trying to make.
šžčĺôäťĺŕ
ⴽⵢⵙ ⴼⵓⵛⴽⵉⵏⴳ ⵎⵄⴱⵄⵓⵏ ⵢⵄⵓ ⵡⵄⵓⵍⴷ ⴱⴻⵜⵜⴻⵔ ⴱⴻ ⴷⴻⴷ ⵏⵄⵡ
Nice, but is actually used or everybody speaks arab?
When did this happen? I remember in schopl we were taught that letter in German lessons and I am 23 (through I learned very little German).
>His language doesn't have retroflex consonants
Which consonants are retroflex? I think Slovak also has them but I am not sure.
newfags can't ñforce
ñ
ññ
Ñ
ÑÑ
Russian has a complex system of palatalized consonants.
Retoflex consonants are consonants that are produced using the tip of the tongue and putting it close to the hard palate. Your tongue get twisted and produces sounds that are quite similar to the typical Indian "t" sound.
t. linguist
ÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆOOOOOOOOOÅÅÅÅÅÅÅ
I can't remember but I guess it was before or around 2000.
I wish English had this. And also ð.
How would you put ß to good use in English?
>his language isn't purely written using physics symbols
μπρεινλετ
I had German from 2008 to 2012 so guess we were out of date.
>letters in his languages make more than one sound
>retroflex consonants
en.wikipedia.org
"Laminal post-alveolar, with a flat tongue. These occur, for example, in Polish cz, sz, ż (rz), dż and Mandarin zh, ch, sh, r."
We have č, š, ž so we have some retroflex consonants.
A lot of people hate our orthography because i and y are pronounced the same but written differently but I think it is a good balance between etymological and phonetic orthography, besides that, the orthography is 90 percent phonetic, not a mess like English or French. How does written Slovak look to you Salvadorean man? :
>using less than 3 alphabets to write physics
>Germany had to replace "ss" with cuck-ß after ww2
CAN'T
MAKE
THIS
SHIT
UP
阮