Eurofurence 29 — "Space Expedition"Sep 3 — 6, 2025 CCH — Congress Center Hamburg
Oh wait, closest I've ever been to Quebec is Ottawa and the Rideau Canal, lol
The Brits say the same about American though.
Heh, let me guess. It was winter and you were skating... oops, getting off-topic. But honestly, you just need to cross the river. On the middle of Cartier bridge suddenly people forget they ever knew a word of English. Almost like nort and south of Bruxelles - any Belgian furs here to correct me?
Quote from: Cairyn on 29.04.2007, 16:30:32 ...A more serious problem these days are the many words imported from English, which ruin German pronounciation rules with their spelling and are in dire need of integration: Kompjuter, Sörfbort, Mänädscher, Förri, Ankelkage... Cairyn, you just become one of few furries, who owe me a new keyboard. Mine is currently sprayed with orange juice and therefore good for thrash-bin... I must make a mental note:lesson: No drinking while reading EF forum...
...A more serious problem these days are the many words imported from English, which ruin German pronounciation rules with their spelling and are in dire need of integration: Kompjuter, Sörfbort, Mänädscher, Förri, Ankelkage...
Quote from: vegivamp on 01.05.2007, 22:05:06Wasn't Dutch considered one of the hardest languages to learn from scratch, even harder than Japanese ?Ever tried learning Hungarian (Magyar)? Worse than Japaneese
Wasn't Dutch considered one of the hardest languages to learn from scratch, even harder than Japanese ?
"The inventor of the language seems to have taken pleasure in complicating it in every way he could think of. For instance, if one is casually referring to a house (Haus) or a horse (Pferd) or a dog (Hund) he spells these words as I have indicated; but if he is referring to them in the Dative case, he sticks on a foolish and unnecessary e and spells them Hause, Pferde, Hunde. So, as an added e often signifies the plural, as the s does with us, the new student is likely to go on for a month making twins out of a Dative dog before he discovers his mistake; and on the other hand, many a new student who could ill afford loss, has bought and paid for two dogs and only got one of them, because he ignorantly bought that dog in the Dative singular when he really supposed he was talking plural..."Written by American humorist Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens) in 1880. Full text here is.
You should try learning Dutch, then. It's like German except it got rid of all those cases and different plurals and all that, which it doesn't need anyway. The only downside is that nobody can pronounce it properly, and it sounds like a throat disease.
When I, an Anglophone, say to Nightfox, a DeutschGrammophone, "Nightfox, I have sent you a gift," should he be excited or frightened?
Jij denkt? >:|
I assume you also didn't think we wish every female noun to be dead
Quote from: KryoMouse on 20.09.2007, 10:07:10Jij denkt? >:|Dus ik besta.