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devicenull wrote:um, exactly what need do they have for english?
devicenull wrote:it is the lingua franca for international trade, but other than that, there is no need.
devicenull wrote:english is a horrible and fucked up language.
english is a horrible and fucked up language.
Carnal Porridge wrote:english is a horrible and fucked up language.
Well, yours is anyway.
kamome wrote:devicenull wrote:english is a horrible and fucked up language.
WTF??
tonikoro wrote:Actually, I'd figure that next to Arabic and the Chinese language as a whole, English is one of the most complex languages of the world. It also is quite wide spread in world/international use. lingua franca? -I think not.
I'd say then it might be followed closely by french and spanish, two other forces from the old world that got a good grip on colonization.
*On a side note. Booger, Funny Sig-Quote!
English is one of the most complex languages of the world
AssKissinger wrote:What's an interdental fricative?
AssKissinger wrote:What's an interdental fricative?
Caustic Saint wrote:My favorite linguistics term? "voiced bilabial fricative" It sounds almost obscene....
Caustic Saint wrote:AssKissinger wrote:What's an interdental fricative?
Interdental - Pronounced with the tip of the tongue between the teeth, as (th) in that or (th) in thumb.
Fricative - A consonant, such as f or s in English, produced by the forcing of breath through a constricted passage. Also called spirant.
My favorite linguistics term? "voiced bilabial fricative" It sounds almost obscene....
Frost wrote:"Ask yourself the same question, but replace "english" with "japanese", and I bet you can't even come up with a good excuse for learning it."
To score with asian chicks...duh!!!
Alcazar wrote:8O They actually have serious names for all those funny sounds?![]()
You learn something everyday......![]()
devicenull wrote:Caustic Saint wrote:AssKissinger wrote:What's an interdental fricative?
Interdental - Pronounced with the tip of the tongue between the teeth, as (th) in that or (th) in thumb.
Fricative - A consonant, such as f or s in English, produced by the forcing of breath through a constricted passage. Also called spirant.
My favorite linguistics term? "voiced bilabial fricative" It sounds almost obscene....
and to top it off, english has 2 interdental fricatives. a voiced "th" and an unvoiced "th" this is due to the latinization of the language. from Runic we lost 2 letters
"Thorn"
andis voiced... and remains in use in the IPA
is what we use in IPA for unvoiced.
Taro Toporific wrote:Using the IPA (The International Phonetic Alphabet) the standard student joke was describe-out automobile noises for your motorhead linguistics professor.
I think someone's been drinking the kool-aid. Easy? Let's here your "tsu" and "su", and see if we can hear the difference. How about getting that small "tsu" in there, like "yappari"?devicenull wrote:japanese has 6 vowels, one of which is high, back, devoiced, unrounded... this is the only odd one. grammar has few exceptions, and apart from mora timing, it is incredibly easy for even a beginner.
I think the Japanese government is looking at the goal from a practical standpoint: beyond the shores of these fair islands, Japanese is as useful as pig-latin.devicenull wrote:i enjoy it, and my current plans require me to learn it, and learn it well. im also planning on adding some mandarin this summer in mainland.
devicenull wrote:the charts are by no means comprehensive and only reflect standard speech. the japanese vowel chart is missing it's devoiced, back unrounded
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