Does your language have weird shit like this?

Does your language have weird shit like this?

Yes sometimes like brazil nut

"Vyenskiye" is "Viennese" not venna's lmao

>traditionally we do not distinguish green from blue

blue: ao
green: ao (or midori)
green signal: ao shingou

Oh okay didn't know that lol

Rån
Våfflor
Pannkakor
Amerikanska pannkakor

We call sunflower ayçiçeği, the "moon flower"

Wafers
Belgian waffles if squared. waffles if not
crepe
pancakes

we call it tournesol, "turn soil"

christ I could go a pile of crepes

Cent Wafers
Waffles
Crêpes
Pancakes

I ate a pile of them this morning

What with? Butter? Lemon and sugar? Berries and cream?

wafer cookies
waffles
crepes
pancakes

Raspberry varenye (war-an-yea).
>It is made by cooking berries, other fruits, or more rarely nuts, vegetables, or flowers, in sugar syrup.
It's like jam except it's less of a puree and more of a "mashed berries" consistency wise. Taste wise it's more sweet than jam + it has real berries in it.

I think those would be called "preserves" in English

>is this gaslighting?

When I went to China I had the most amazing crepes. Buckwheat/mung bean batter, with an egg and chili paste, stuffed with fluffy fried dough.

Κοφρέτα, Βάφλα, Κρέπα, Τηγανίτα
kofreta, vafla, krepa , tiganita

våffelkex
våfflor
plättar
pannkakor

Wafelki/Wafle
Gofry
Naleśniki
Amerykańskie naleśniki

Wafels
Wafels
Pannekoeken
Pannekoeken

In the UK those are pancakes, the things on the right are American pancakes

Most everyday words and phrases in castillian are somehow related to god of the church or catholicism.

The more you know...

Oh I've heard Gofry as well, I think it would be the alternative name for those here. Гoфpы.

Dank

Pretty confident the Midwest has some stupid alternative names for these.

examples?
I know that Spaniards say "Jesus!" when someone sneezes

Pic related is called "viineri in Finland", the English call it "Danish pastry". I've read, that if you try to order "viineri" in Estonia, you might get and wiener instead.

*pic*

from top left to right
wafle (singular - wafel)
gofry (singular - gofr)
naleśniki (singular - naleśnik)
amerykańskie nalesniki (american pancakes)

...

last one is 'flensjes'

i call the bottom right American pancakes too. Proper pancakes are wide and flat and are eaten on shrove Tuesday.

how about "лeпёшки"?

Your picture is literally pita bread, we call it either pita or as you said лeпeшки, although the latter is very rare when referring to pita bread.
What we call лeпeшки is actually a baked piece of dough. More like pizza except without toppings. There are many types of them and I doubt they have english names, but overall лeпeшкa is usually a baked thing.
Picrelated is a Taджикcкиe Лeпeшки (лeпeшки from Tajikistan) and it's what we most commonly call "лeпeшки" here. It's dope as fuck though especially when fresh.

No