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Post by Cluster on May 19, 2006 23:53:36 GMT
Does anyone hear speak another language? Share your knowledge, and teach someone else
(I'll start posting some Welsh things tomorrow...I'm way way to tired now )
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Post by n5kopele on May 21, 2006 8:32:28 GMT
Let's start with the bulgarian and russian alphabet (I hope you guys see it right!)
Àà - Aa Áá - Bb Ââ - Vv Ãã - Gg Ää - Dd Åå - Ee Ææ - Jj Çç - Zz Èè - Ii Éé - short softening Ii Êê - Kk Ëë - Ll Ìì - Mm Íí - Nn Îî - Oo Ïï - Pp Ðp - Rr Ññ - Ss Òò - Tt Óó - Uu / Ww Ôô - Ff Õõ - Hh Öö - Cc ×÷ - Ch, ch Øø - Sh, sh Ùù - Sht, sht Üü - a letter that softens the consonant before it Úú - Ee like in Water, Writer, Reader etc Þþ - Uu ßÿ - Ia, ia
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Post by cesare on May 21, 2006 14:42:46 GMT
Let's start with the bulgarian and russian alphabet (I hope you guys see it right!) Not sure about the others, but I don't see it right. However, I've been through some Russian and Old Slavonic lessons and I still have my notes, so just a few glances should be enough for me to recall those letters I've already forgotten. I just wonder - are there any differences between Russian and Bulgarian versions of Cyryllic alphabet?
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Post by cesare on May 25, 2006 13:54:46 GMT
For anyone who's interested:
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Post by Cluster on May 25, 2006 17:27:26 GMT
The Welsh alphabet:
A, B, C, CH, D, DD, E, F, FF, G, NG, H, I, L, LL, M, N, O, P, PH, R, RH, S, T, TH, U, W, Y
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If your interested, this site tells you how to pronounce the letters in a very simple and correct way
www.ngfl-cymru.org.uk/vtc/ngfl/ngfl-flash/alphabet-welsh/alphabet.htm
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Post by n5kopele on Jun 9, 2006 12:41:49 GMT
We don't have the e with two points over it, the bI, or the weird 3 (which is actually a special kind of e) Otherwise the order is the same and the english transliteration is the same, except for the letter with transliteration shch, we say it as sht.
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Post by Janika on Jun 16, 2006 3:46:53 GMT
I grew up with Platte Deutsch. Can't really speak it, but I love hearing it. Also grew up around Spanish, and I can use a bit of French. Also grew up around 6 Native American tribes, so I've heard fluent Navajo, Soiux, Ute, and whatever the others were in school. Weird, huh? I grew up in a boom town (oil) near a reservation. My fave kinds of movies are Jackie Chan crossovers, Chinese in different cultural settings. He said that the Chinese don't get the humor in the Rush Hour movies, but the second one was classic because they had Chris Tucker yelling ebonics at a Chinese driver, and there is no way you can subtitle how screwed up all the English gets in situations like that. I love it when different languages get smashed together.
In the old country, my last name (maiden) had an umlout (sp?) over the O and a shluss S. No one pronounces it right in the U.S. because we don't have letters for that.
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Post by Black Core on Jun 17, 2006 9:03:13 GMT
Well I speak another language all the time, cuz my native language is Dutch but I mostly communicat in English on Forums. I also speak a bit of Latin, French, German and many Dutch Dialects
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Post by n5kopele on Nov 8, 2007 19:13:42 GMT
If anyone needs help with bulgarian, russian or german, I'm their guy. English is obvious. You can also ask me to understand something in macedonian, serbian and all serbian dialects, they are close to bulgarian.
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