/sag/

South Asia General
Invited: Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Nepal, Bhutan, Sri Lanka
Not invited: militant muslims/hindus

>these guys heard you talking shit about india and cows, what do you do

Other urls found in this thread:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nepali_grammar
humansarefree.com/2015/05/prophet-mohammed-used-red-henna-to-dye.html
m.youtube.com/watch?v=sfJSL7SR9t8
twitter.com/NSFWRedditGif

why is india GOAT tier only when under occupation of a foreign nobility? Mughals, Brits etc.

the natives to india (central belt hindus) can't rule it for shit, that's why everything good about india in the past came from the north by way of invaders, and why everything amazing from india now comes from the south

>why everything amazing from india now comes from the south
wew please explain, i was to assume that southern india is more meh tier all around

ah yes the country of canada

Nuke canada

very far southern indians are based, it's the central and northern ones that are poo in loo tier

Far north are alright. It's the north-east and middle-ish north that are shit.

How many grammatical cases are there in Hindi and Nepali? Is there weird sound that hard to pronounce?

India was actually at it's very worst under the British. The share of world GDP of India declined severely under British rule. The policies of the British Empire severely crippled the Indian economy. For instance, they set up a sharecropping system in order to cultivate indigo and opium for their own benefit but these crops left the soil infertile for production of crops like rice and wheat. India suffered one of the worst famines during WW2 and the Brits did nothing about it and decided to invest in killing Germans instead. Of course Sup Forums will say that colonialism was the best thing ever and stuff and shitskins are subhuman animals incapable of self-rule, but it really isn't that simple.

Idk about Nepali, but in Hindi they don't exactly have cases the way Slavic languages do. Of course what I'm saying might be complete BS because Hindi is not my mother tongue and I'm only trying to recall what I learned in school. The equivalent of cases in Hindi is called "kārak". But kārak is more like the state of the noun rather than case. Unlike in Slavic languages, the form of the noun doesn't change. I think there are eight kāraks. Kartā kārak is when the noun is the subject. Karma kārak is when the noun is the object. Karan kārak is when the action is done through or with reference to the noun. I can't really explain it properly in English. Apādān kārak is similar to karan but here the noun under which the kārak is applied is being separated from reference to another noun. Look at these two sentences:
Me aap se baat kar raha hu. (I am speaking to you)
Me apne ghar se baat kar raha hu. (I am speaking from my home)
In the first sentence "se" is translated to "to". This is karan kārak. In the second sentence "se" is translated to "from". This is apādān kārak.
Then there's sampradān kārak which is when the action is being done for the sake of the noun. Sambandh kārak is when you're talking about something that belongs to the noun. Like in "John's cat" the kārak on John is sambandh kārak. Adhikaran kārak is like a positional preposition. "The man is in the bus." Here "man" is under kartā kārak and bus is under adhikaran kārak. Lastly there is sambodhan kārak which is the kārak on an interjection like "yes" or "oh". Note than sambodhan kārak is not a type of case because it is not working on a noun.

Cool!

What's your native language?

>hoped to finish some important work this weekend
>ended up just saying inside and playing video games
>mfw

Bengali. But I never studied it because I grew up in Karnataka. I only know it from speaking to my family.

Young Osama bin Laden looking for his pants

>Of course Sup Forums will say that colonialism was the best thing ever
Sup Forums wants to push an agenda just like everyone else. Of course they will take advantage of half-truths.

...

Are those even subcontinental men? They look Arab to me. At least the one on the right.

Northeast Indians are cool

I want to take back my statement. The more I think about it, the more I realize shit like that harms the unity of India.

...

The middle really is shit, huh. What happens there?

Iranians are white, some not all but that leaf one is not.

Protip:If you're forcing the"I am/my country is white" meme than you're probably not white

Isn't that like common sense?

...

Why does he have red hair?

i dno about Pakistan but a big portion of afghans have red hair

...

because

What's the matter with that, many Paki women look like that.

...

Namaskar friends

Cringe

namaste dost

Honestly why are lungi so godamn insecure? I been to all parts of the country and it always lungi who push the holier than Thu attitude.

Hindus are my superiors.

Yeah, it's cringe. You shouldn't behave like that abdool. Stop you delusions of mard-e-momin martial race.

Nepali is very hard if we speak of grammatically in writing and theoretically.You've to use proper greetings for different people with polite speaking.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nepali_grammar

Facebook tier memes

Started no fap on 1 July

Next time I bust a nut, itll be in a womans vagina Inshallah

How hairy are tajiks? Post body hairy

I'm less hairy than the average dutchie subhanallah

My maternal grandfather couldnt grow one hair on his face and my dad has zero hairs on his legs (but a hairy chest and good beard) So I inherited a not so hairy body. I have bad facial hair genetics, an average amount of leg hair, very little arm hair, absolutely zero chest hair.

Feels bad actually, I want to be hairy.

>no fap
It's a meme but not gonna lie, there are certain benefits. More T, for example.

I'm only stopping it because it's degenerate and I want to make the next nut feel bettter.

The more T part is irrelevant, you max out after one week of no-fap and the change is insignificant

Wew lad
>tfw really hairy legs
>tfw no chest hair

in persian we call a lad with no facial hair "kosa". It's an insult.

Feels bad bro. I could grow a mediocre moustache when I was like 10 but since then I have had no improvement, it's still pedo-tier. Fuck this gay earth.

Nothing degenerate about fapping. Unless you're clearly overdoing it.

Oh, I did not know about that. Makes sense though because I never did the pledge for more than seven days.

it's good for PMO addicts desu
as useful as any willpower exercise for everyone else

What's PMO?

Yeah I agree, it's great to do it every once in a while.

You dont think its degenerate to trick your cock into thinking youre having a sex by replicating a vagina with your own hand, and subsequently busting a load to someone else fucking a woman?

That's a moralistic strawman. If there is any scientific reasoning for no-fap, let's hear it.

But to answer your question, no, there is nothing wrong about it. Not universally wrong, at the very least. Masturbation is very natural.

The entire word "degenerate" is moralistic, you utter fucking retard. Yoi're the same guy who doesn't understand what egalitarian means. Open a dictionary for fucks sake.

Not that guy.

Why does he have red hair?
humansarefree.com/2015/05/prophet-mohammed-used-red-henna-to-dye.html

>Open a dictionary
(((dictionary)))
Yeah why not, let me get my education from what goyim is and isn't supposed to know

>Is there weird sound that hard to pronounce
What I've noticed is that most foreigners can't distinguish between alveolar, dental, and murmur features (and so can't pronounce them). For example most of them won't be able to distinguish between the four consonants ध (dha), ढ (ḍha), ड (ḍa), and द (da) and will pronounce them with the same "d" sound.

Feel like shit. Feel irritable.

I am filled with anger, always.

These sounds are pain in the ads whenever I try to read South Asian languages. I can do Welsh ll and other meme sounds so I think I should know how to pronounce these.

I'm sorry my friend. I hope you feel better soon

Isn't the difference between d and đ the same as that between ड and द? Or am I at the wrong end of the stick?
Aren't you the Afghan in Amstelveen? Sorry, I am new here.

I think the hardest one to pronounce for you would be ण

If it wasn't the british, it'd be the portuguese or the fucking dutch. india, despite its historic wealth, was absolutely vulnerable to the very worst of colonialism at the time. at least it didn't have to suffer spain or belgium

Thanks friend.
Yeah. Thanks friend.

Why it's there in English. Like the 'n' in 'dental'. Does Vietnamese have the hard D and hard T at all (I think it's called retroflex)?

>Why it's there in English.
Can you give an example.

> Like the 'n' in 'dental'.
Nope. In ण the back of toung is touched at the middle of the mouth's ( Buccal cavity) roof.

>Like the 'n' in 'dental'
Nope, which state are you from?

dental was a bad example but i think 'pond' or 'round' etc. in burger accent is closest to the devanagari retroflex n

Am I the only one who sees what's going on here?

He looked so beta holding on to Trump. It looked like a desparate cry for help.

>but i think 'pond' or 'round' etc
do you even devanagari bruh?

Actually d is /z/ (/ð/ in Middle Vietnamese, it's changed), đ is /ɗ/ (an implosive, very rare, although it basically sounds like /d/, but the air is inhaled).

It should be pronounced like.

vocaroo.com/i/s0xAhj58phUb

Uh, yes? Its not a hard sound to make, just rare in english but he's right that it does exist and it does in those words

We don't have them, but we have aspirated /tʰ/ (plus /pʰ/ and /kʰ/ even speak fast, otherwise they are just /f/ and /x/). I think Hindi has all these aspirated consonants.

Can Anglos pronounce ड़

>and it does in those words
nope again, see

All around me are familiar faces

Worn out places

Worn out faces

What are you guys talking about?
In अंटार्टिका, doesn't the dot over अ represent ण? That's what it's for right? The T and D in English are retroflex and ण is the retroflex nasal???

you are obviously not familiar with the continental american accent. we use the retroflex n in pronoucing the examples i gave
flaps are easier than trills for us. 'butter' is the usual way to introduce anglos to the sound. in england there's more gaelic heritage in scots/irish so people there are more likely to be able to trill than in america

It's there in Albanian. I think it's written as double r.
You okay, man? What's the matter?

This reminds me of this scene from film Ek Tha Tiger.

m.youtube.com/watch?v=sfJSL7SR9t8

>In अंटार्टिका, doesn't the dot over अ represent ण?
not imo also you don't pronounce अंटार्टिका in hindi with a ण. It's more of a na(न) sound

yes that seems appropriate

Indane gas (the name of the corporation, not the compound) when written in Hindi would be written with aadha ण I remember.

Then the corporation Indane gas ( इंडेन गैस ) should consider correcting their name's spelling.

>we use the retroflex n in pronoucing the examples i gave
I have never once heard a native speaker of American English use the retroflex n in pronouncing "dental".

i'm not that guy and i disagreed with giving dental as an example

I guess I can see it in "pond" though it seems like it's a lot more subtle than it is in most South Asian languages (if it's even possible to say that)

I know I'm overdoing it and it's getting silly but I still can't convince myself otherwise. I'll admit I'm not north Indian, but even so how can the nasal that precedes the retroflex not be retroflex and be the dental nasal? Try this experiment. Say the English word "in" then give a pause and say "Dane". At the end of "in" the n you will pronounce is dental, but then as you say "Dane" you will automatically readjust your tongue to the retroflex position, hence even the n will become the retroflex nasal. Note how the Nepali spelling of Kanchenjunga is कञ्चनजङ्घा. Going by that argument, the dot before ड must represent ण if the dot before च represents ञ and not न. I believe that in English, at least how Indians speak it, the letter n represents dental nasal all the time except if it precedes d or t (but not th like in anthem) when it represents the retroflex nasal. See how the official Sanskrit to Latin transliteration of कंठ is kaṇṭh where the ṇ represents ण and not न.

न is n dental. अं is ṇ but ण is even more retroflex than अं . So in कंठ (kaṇṭh) ṇ represents अं and not ण .

Sab log so gaye kya?

posting cu2hus.

Why doesn't India annex Bangladesh?

So you're an employee of EU?

Why doesn't the UK annex Ireland?

It sounds like you're describing assimliation desu. When speaking English, most South Asians using the alveolar consonants instead of the dental ones (such as ड instead of द), so in some cases the preceding sound becomes retroflex. I swear Indian accents (at least North Indian ones) would sound a thousand times better if people started using dental consonants instead.
Also, the Nepali spelling of kaṇṭh is कण्ठ, which imo is less ambiguous. One thing I've always found confusing about reading Hindi is that the dot above letters can represent many different sounds.

Highly overpopulated country which would completely alter Indian demographics in favour of the Muslims and at the expense of every other group, but mostly Hindus, who don't want to lose their monopoly of oppression.

Dumb brit.

t. Bhatya Kumar Narayam

We Bangladeshis are a proud people faggot