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WMAF couple / family # 34 - Belarusian 🇧🇾 and Japanese 🇯🇵
Sasha and Zoey are an international couple living between Japan and Belarus. Their son was born in 2022
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kutyozh · 2 years
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interesting parallel between japanese and slavic languages (probably coincidental?):
japanese 女 (on'na) - woman
czech ona ('ona) - she serbian; croatian; bosnian; polish ona ('ona) - she, it russian она (o'na) - she belarusian яна (yana) - she
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thedemonofcat · 4 months
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I am interested in a comprehensive list of all the different names Jaskier is given in various translations. It would be fascinating to explore the meanings behind each name and any symbolism they might carry. I plan to group together languages that use the same name for him.
Jaskier: His name resonates universally, transcending languages and cultures. In Polish, French, Portuguese, Romanian, Bulgarian, Russian, and Spanish, Jaskier translates to Buttercup. These small yellow flowers symbolize joy and happiness, evoking images of carefree days and childlike wonder. They also represent youth and innocence, which aligns with theories about Jaskier's non-human origins. Another significant symbolism of buttercups is their friendship connection, fitting perfectly with Jaskier's close bond with Geralt. Historically, buttercups were used in folk medicine, symbolizing healing and protection, despite their toxicity and the need for careful handling.
Dandelion: Known from the English, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Belarusian, and Turkish translations. Perhaps the most familiar name, Dandelion, typically appears in two forms: small white, fluffy flowers that can be blown away by the wind and bright yellow blooms. Dandelions symbolize resilience, thriving in challenging conditions and growing almost anywhere, symbolizing perseverance, strength, and the ability to overcome obstacles. Historically used in medicine, dandelions are associated with healing and survival. They also symbolize a connection to nature and freedom, perfectly reflecting the bard’s character. Some Native American tribes view the dandelion as a sun symbol, representing warmth, growth, and the sustaining force of life. This connection to nature and resilience mirrors Jaskier’s character, who, despite facing many challenges, remains resilient and deeply connected to the natural world.
Marigold: Used in Czech and Serbian translations, this name is perhaps the most unusual since there is already a character named Marigold in the series. Nonetheless, marigolds symbolize brightness and positivity. With their vibrant yellow and orange hues, marigolds represent warmth, cheerfulness, and the light of life. This fits well with a bard’s role, as marigolds also symbolize creativity. In Mexican culture, marigolds are central to Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) celebrations, symbolizing the connection between the living and the dead. In Indian culture, marigolds are used in religious rituals and weddings, symbolizing love, devotion, and the divine. They are often offered to gods and goddesses as a sign of reverence and respect.
Ranonkel: From Dutch, though translated to Ranunculus, which are buttercups. I'd like to discuss the story from Greek mythology that relates to Ranunculus, as it aligns with Jaskier's character. Ranunculus was a handsome and talented young man known for his beautiful singing voice, captivating everyone who heard him. However, he was also vain and self-centred, revelling in the admiration he received. One day, while performing in a meadow, Ranunculus encountered a group of wood nymphs (dryads). Enchanted by his voice and appearance, the nymphs stopped to listen. Despite their admiration, Ranunculus ignored them, focusing solely on his performance and delighting in his own voice. Pan, the god associated with rustic wilderness and nymphs, observed Ranunculus's vanity. To teach him a lesson, Pan intervened. He transformed Ranunculus into a delicate, beautiful flower that would forever bloom in meadows and fields—the Ranunculus flower. This mythological tale is an intriguing parallel to Jaskier's character and could potentially inspire a fanfiction story in the future.
Valvatti from Finnish. Valvatti, which, from what I can tell, translates to Sow Thistle, can symbolize resilience but can also symbolize unseen beauty. Despite being considered a weed, sow thistle produces small, yellow flowers that symbolize hidden beauty or overlooked potential. This can remind you to look beyond outward appearances and appreciate hidden qualities.
Rittersporn German. Otherwise known as Larkspurs, they can symbolize openness and lightness with their vibrant colours. They can also be used as symbols for thickness and are connected to strong bonds of love. Some cultures believe that larkspurs offer protection against negative energies or bad luck. Placing them in a garden or a bouquet is thought to bring positivity and ward off evil spirits.
Vėdrynas is From Lithuanian. Breaking from the flowers, Vedryans translates to Lark, which can be seen as the bringers of dawn and the start of a new day. Larks are symbols of songs and music, which goes great with a Bard. Larks are agile birds that soar high in the sky, symbolizing freedom, independence, and the ability to rise above challenges or limitations.
Blyskáč is from Czech. It translates to "sparkler" or "firecracker" in English. Once again, breaking from the typical flower names, blyskac can symbolize celebration. The firecrackers' brightness and sparkle evoke joy, optimism, and positivity. They are often associated with bringing good luck and warding off evil spirits in various cultural traditions. Firecrackers and sparklers burn brightly but quickly fade away. They symbolize the fleeting nature of moments and encourage living in the present and appreciating life's transient beauty.
These are all the names I could find. If I missed any or made any translation errors, please feel free to let me know.
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dracothelizard · 10 months
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So Our Flag Means Death is an international fandom, but let's look at how many non-English fics there are!
(Turns out it's not just Anglos in this fandom??? Sounds fake :p)
Russian 422
Spanish 115
Ukrainian 71
French 69
Chinese 62
Italian 22
Japanese 22
Brazilian Portuguese 12
Polish 10
Czech 9
Finnish 5
Vietnamese 5
Dutch 3
Belarusian 2
German 2
Farsi 2
Catalan 1
Welsh 1
Estonian 1 - Art, but the notes are in English, so presumably mistagged
Filipino 1
Swedish 1
AO3 allows you to tag a lot of different languages, so there are still plenty of languages that have NO FIC. So, if you know a non-English language, go for it! You never know if someone else in fandom knows that language.
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ukagakadreamteam · 1 year
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Ghost Jam 2023 Results!
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Hey folks! Ghost Jam 2023 has concluded, and now it’s time to share the results! We have, once again, had a rather large turnout, so buckle up for a long post!
This year we had 25 submissions by 31 different developers. That’s 2 more submissions than last year!
Of those submissions, 6 of them were made in the first 72 hours of the jam, qualifying for our 72 hour challenge. 3 of those were even done within the first 24 hours!? That’s a first!
13 of the ghosts were made from scratch/just a single template, with no other pre-made assets, qualifying for our New Assets Only challenge!
Additionally, this year we saw a little more variety in the languages, both spoken language and coding language, used to make the ghosts! One ghost was submitted in Japanese, and another in Russian and Belarusian!
As far as coding languages go, most English ghosts use a language called YAYA (or sometimes the older version, AYA), but we had one entry in Satori, and one in Kawari!
Of the participants in the event, 20 of them were participating in a ghost jam for the first time, and 15 of them released their first ghost as a part of the jam!
Harder to quantify with stats, but still very interesting to note, was the great variety in ghosts that we saw this year! There are a lot of really creative entries that deviate from the standard ghost style. Some are desktop buds, some are focused on a single concept, some pull you into the character’s world, and some are entire games! Give them all a try, there’s a lot of cool stuff here!
With all of that out of the way, let’s see the ghosts! As mentioned, it’s a long post, so check under the cut for the listing!
ButtonToy, by OdieDogXP:
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[Download]
Enjoy pressing buttons to activate different activities!
Listen to randomized stories, or play various minigames!
Don’t miss the functional power button in the corner!
Camp Camp, by CaptainKiwi and KFC:
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[Ghost download] [Balloon download]
Meet your camp guides for the day, counselor David and camper Max!
Learn about the inhabitants of the camp, the good and the bad...
Give them treats!
Comes with a unique balloon!
Captain (DEMO), by Percival / Azazel:
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[Download]
Keep the captain company during his breaks!
Overhear the ship logs and strange jobs the crew have encountered!
Chat about cats!
Made with new assets only!
Faeia & Tahir, by WhatAPhantasia:
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[Download]
Find yourself in a rich and expansive world to learn all about!
Get to know Faeia and Tahir, denizens of two lands at war that have become friends!
Comes with a unique balloon!
Gallery 512, by Galla, Kat, and Zichqec:
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[Download]
Decorate your desktop with 1 of 4 canvas styles, each with their own animated painting and a selection of frames!
Have up to 100 lil guys wobwobwob around your screen!
Comes with a unique balloon!
Made in just 72 hours, with new assets only!
Kafe Kareopsis Hutarkam, by Smoky and sacrificedbuns:
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[Download]
Sit down for a nice chat, and order some food!
Throw the food on the floor and/or eat it!
Written in Russian and Belarusian!
Made in just 72 hours, with new assets only!
Macaque, by Venelona (Tumblr / Twitter):
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[Download]
Mind his moods if you want to stay on his good side!
Comes with two different shells, to change the look of his ears!
Comes with a unique balloon!
Made with new assets only!
Maxumus the Cat, by Bitzen:
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[Download]
Very animated shell, including a satisfying pickup animation!
High quality recommendations... from a cat!
Comes with a unique balloon!
Nanika Atsume, by Okuajub:
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[Download]
Set out food and wait for cats to come visit!
Enjoy surreal idle dialogue while you wait!
Comes with a unique modification of the Star Cloud balloon!
The first jam ghost to be made with the SHIORI Kawari!
Please arrive 15 minutes before your scheduled interview time, by Galla, Naryu, and Zichqec:
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[Download]
Prepare your résumé and steel yourself for an important interview!
Answer questions, and ask questions of your own! Learn about your workplace-to-be!
Comes with a unique balloon!
Made with new assets only!
Presentable Can, by KFC:
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[Download]
Stare at the can! Tap the can! Pet the can!
Comes with a unique balloon!
Made in 72 hours, with new assets only! (Actually, made in less than 24 hours!)
Rock Blue and Peach, by JopsyJop and Waffles:
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[Download]
Get to know a couple of besties and learn about the inhabitants of their town!
Discuss various types of media!
Comes with a unique balloon!
Shigure, by TechNekoKit:
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[Download]
Bring a rainstorm right to your desktop
Enjoy the company of a mysterious spirit
Beautiful mixed media shell
Made with new assets only!
Skrunkly, by StrangelyKai:
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[Download] (Mind the content warnings in the readme!)
Enjoy a wide variety of skrunkle quotes!
Use dressups to modify the outline of Skrunkly, or invert the colors!
Made with new assets only!
Slime Fighter 2000, by Smoky:
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[Download]
Fight terrifying household objects!
Play as multiple different classes!
Made with new assets only!
Slugcat, by Percival:
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[Download]
It’s a slug! It’s a cat! It’s a slugcat!
Watch it loaf!
Made in 72 hours, with new assets only! (Actually, made in less than 24 hours!)
sNO - STORMBRINGER!!, by WhatAPhantasia:
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[Download]
Deal with a demigod villain existing on what you thought was your balcony!
Get predictions about the weather, using actual weather data!
Comes with a unique balloon!
Made in just 72 hours!
Styrmir, by Galehaut and Ecclysium:
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[Download]
Assist a god with their pet project - an island of humans!
Manipulate their mood to provide different weather variants to the humans
Help the island survive, and with a little work, thrive!
Comes with a unique balloon!
Team Snakemouth, by Adante:
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[Download]
Pay for the assistance of the reliable team snakemouth!
They'll assist you with keeping your computer tidy and give peptalks whenever you need!
Help them collect items and berries along the way!
The Poke!Partner Program [BETA], by Rosenheim, Okuajub, Harmony, Blackfyre, @ohnoitsme / PEANUT, and ChatGPT (by OpenAI):
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[Download]
Multiple shells, one for Professor Azalea and one for Porygon!
Nuzlocke tracker system with custom rules!
Send your pokemon on adventures and let it collect berries!
The Rain Station, by Digi_056:
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[Download]
Dictate the weather and temperature!
Watch as the environment outside changes based on the time of day and weather conditions!
Images for the ghost made with clean 3D models!
Toad, by Galehaut, Secret Pie, and Ecclysium:
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[Download]
Comes with a unique balloon!
Made in 72 hours, with new assets only! (Actually, made in just 2½ hours!?)
Kick the toad!
Wally Darling / Welcome Home, by idk and  thebubble-mancer:
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[Download]
Friendly dialogue
A toggle for horror elements, so you can play safely
Rare events made to spook you in the darkest hours of the night
Made with new assets only!
Witching Hour, by Zdzisiu:
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[Download]
Take up the mantle of elder witch to guide and reform a delinquent apprentice!
Gather and study magical ingredients to fill your grimoire!
Brew your inventory into potions and test them on your pupil!
ヒカリキツネ@hikarikitsune, by  ななっち:
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[Download]
Spend calming days with hikari, a kitsune that relies on you to interact with the world!
Chat about your plans for the day and places you'd like to go to support her hobby as a photographer!
Made by our first ghost jam participant from the Japanese community! for jam regulars, that means an interesting structure and style not yet seen among English devs!
The first jam ghost to be made with the SHIORI Satori!
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vahvah · 10 months
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Bros, the ideas that circulate in canon and fanon around eastslavic siblings really seem strange to me.
It is strange to expect a japanese man to be well versed in the intricacies of eastern european history of the early and high Middle Ages, but to expect this from an english-speaking fandom (mostly northamerican, let's face it) is also, it seems to me, pointless.
Let me explain. "Kievan Rus" is an artificial construct adopted from russian imperial/soviet historians. Moreover, it’s not just a matter of the name, as, you know, the late Rhomean Republic is called the “Byzantine Empire”, it’s just that there was LITERALLY no such state as “Kievan Rus”. In the space approximately from the Baltic and White to the Black Seas, there were numerous proto-urban and urban settlements of slavic, finno-ugric and baltic (as well as other) tribes, which entered into alliances with each other, sometimes quite strong, but still remained isolated. Of course, it would be disingenuous to say that since the beginning of time the urban educated population did not develop some kind of common identity… for some time.
But if we talk about actually existing cultural regions, determined by geography and economics, then, in fact, it is worth highlighting Northern (Novgorod) Rus' and Southern (Kievan Rus' itself), in a very simplified scheme. One of them was tied to the countries around the Baltic Sea, like the scandinavians, the baltic tribes and northgerman cities, as well as the slavs of modern East Germany. The other constantly encountered nomads, “Byzantine Empire" and, to a lesser extent, the western and southern Slavs (and magyars!). They were never able to truly become a unified state.
Of course, this is a simplification, because in addition to the Rurikids in the North, who subjugated the South and over time moved there (while the south over time began to separate itself, in particular, into the Novgorod Republic), there was a separate center in Polotsk and some others, but it approximately reflects the essence and, if I were asked about personifications, then I would make two separate MAIN personifications for Rus', Novgorod in the North (male) and Kiev in the South (female), which would be the parents of the future Ukraine, Russia and Belarus.
But if you asked me in even more detail, then Belarus should stand a little aside. You know, in fact, historically it is more archaic and “stagnant” than Ukraine in the south and Russia in the northeast. Did you know that lithuanians called belarusians an ethnonym derived from the name goths lol? Plus, genetically and partly culturally, belarusians, like some poles, are closer to the baltic peoples, and not to the rest of the slavs. Taking into account the independent center of statehood in Polotsk, independent of the Rurikids, I would say that Belarus DEFINITELY must be older than Russia (which in the strict sense could only have been born as the Vladimir-Suzdal Principality/North-Eastern Rus' with more ancient names, let’s not clutter the text ) and POSSIBLY older than Ukraine. Perhaps she is an adopted child.
Of course, in reality we have many problems in studying the region for objective reasons, such as a lack of written sources, but… I still love Eastern Europe, these are my roots, after all. And it's really interesting.
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Round 1 Results!
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Percentages below!
English fell from 47.3% to 44.5%
German rose from 7% to 10.9%
Polish stagnated at 5.5%
French rose from 3.5% to 3.9%
Mandarin rose from 3.1% to 3.9%
Italian rose from 2.3% to 3.1%
Hungarian rose from 2.0% to 2.3%
toki pona rose from 2.0% to 2.3%
Catalan rose from 0.8% to 1.6%
Dutch stagnated at 1.6%
Finnish rose from 1.2% to 1.6%
Greek rose from 1.2% to 1.6%
Japanese stagnated at 1.6%
Latin fell from 2.0% to 1.6%
Malay rose from 0.8% to 1.6%
Māori rose from 0.8% to 1.6%
Spanish rose from 1.2% to 1.6%
Hebrew fell from 2.7% to 0.8%
Faliscan fell from 1.6% to 0.8%
Vietnamese fell from 1.2% to 0.8%
Indonesian, Irish, and Norwegian stagnated at 0.8%
Arabic, ASL, Czech, Galician, Inuktitut, and Portuguese rose from 0.4% to 0.8%
Russian fell from 1.6% to 0%
Belarusian, C, Cantonese, Danish, Kay(f)Bop(t), Korean, Luganda, Luxembourgish, Sanskrit, Welsh, and Western Frisian all fell from 0.4% to 0%.
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simply-windy · 22 days
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hey… hey… if any phighter had a second language what would it be (in your opinion)?
HMMMMM. GOOD QUESTION. I like to think those in Thieves' Den are born learning/knowing an Eastern Asian language. Like Japanese/Chinese/Korean/etc etc [Anything from that region basically] Illumina SPECIFICALLY knows Old English and French [Follower Sword as well] I've made reference to a "Blackrockian accent" before as well. Which I like to think MAY be somethin' similar to Russian/Belarusian. My Eggbox specifically has a Ukrainian accent/speaks Ukrainian. All forms of Medkit are British. I do not care what anyone says.
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salvadorbonaparte · 6 months
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Of these languages often spoken on Postcrossing (conditions apply) which one should I learn (not immediately but in the near future):
Bonus Points if you add reasons in the reply/reblog
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council-of-beetroot · 5 months
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Do you have any headcanons about languages/how the nation-people learn language?
I believe there is a universal nation language however, it's only understood by nations, it's rarely used and it's pretty rudimentary. Nations can refuse to speak it, say Ivan wants to enforce Russian in his household, he can by not speaking the standard and through other methods of "reinforcement."
I've watched videos about leaders and speaking different languages and often the more nationalistic, the less likely a leader will speak in a different language other than the primary one used in the country. French politicians are notorious for this. For example, Vladimir P.utin and Angela M.erkle speak eachother's native language however in clips of them interacting it's usually through translators as being leaders neither wants to stumble on a language they may not know as well. I see that with nations as well because language is power.
I prefer a common language among all as it doesn't prioritize one language over another. I said this in another post but not having a common language would make it so English or French or the like would be the main language among these characters which puts characters such as Feliks for example at a disadvantage compared to native speakers.
I think it can take varying periods for a nation to learn a language. I think if they have a stronger connection with a linguistic group they will have an easier time.
Nations can forget their own native language if they don't speak it frequently.
Languages I think Feliks understands
Native tongue: Polish
Knows: French, Yiddish, (Russian and German but he usually avoids speaking in it) Latin, English he learned in the 20th century and is not fully proficient.
Probably knows Silesian, Kashubian, Ukrainian, Belarusian, Czech/Slovak (Might not know it fully but he can understand it due to similarities)
Languages I think it would be cool if he knew: Turkish, Italian, Japanese, Vietnamese (I headcanon he was in Vietnam for a period of time) Haitian Creole (If he was sent to Haiti)
Lithuanian: He originally didn't put much effort into learning it, so he didn't, however over time to show Liet he cares he has learned some. However it's a difficult language and Feliks doesn't get it one bit. He doesn't understand insults and swearing perfectly curteousy of Tolys thinking no one understands what he is muttering under his breath
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gwendolynlerman · 2 years
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Languages with the most sounds
Languages have different phonetic inventories. Some languages use more sounds than others. Two sounds are different if they are perceived to constitute two distinct phonemes by native speakers. 
Here is a ranking of the most common languages by the number of sounds (phonemes) they use. Diphthongs are not considered because they are merely a combination of vowels that already exist in a language.
Lithuanian: 12 vowels and 47 consonants = 59 sounds
Danish: 32 vowels and 20 consonants = 52 sounds
Hindustani: 11 vowels and 37 consonants = 48 sounds
Welsh: 14 vowels and 31 consonants = 45 sounds
German: 20 vowels and 25 consonants = 45 sounds
Belarusian: 6 vowels and 39 consonants = 45 sounds
Norwegian: 19 vowels and 25 consonants = 44 sounds
Irish: 11 vowels and 33 consonants = 44 sounds
Bulgarian: 8 vowels and 36 consonants = 44 sounds
Hungarian: 14 vowels and 27 consonants = 41 sounds
Ukrainian: 6 vowels and 34 consonants = 40 sounds
Russian: 6 vowels and 34 consonants = 40 sounds
Slovak: 10 vowels and 29 consonants = 39 sounds
Latvian: 12 vowels and 27 consonants = 39 sounds
French: 17 vowels and 22 consonants = 39 sounds
Estonian: 9 vowels and 30 consonants = 39 sounds
Dutch: 16 vowels and 23 consonants = 39 sounds
Icelandic: 16 vowels and 22 consonants = 38 sounds
Portuguese: 14 vowels and 23 consonants = 37 sounds
Polish: 6 vowels and 31 consonants = 37 sounds
Czech: 10 vowels and 27 consonants = 37 sounds
Albanian: 7 vowels and 30 consonants = 37 sounds
English: 12 vowels and 24 consonants = 36 sounds
Catalan: 8 vowels and 28 consonants = 36 sounds
Swedish: 17 vowels and 18 consonants = 35 sounds
Mandarin: 9 vowels and 26 consonants = 35 sounds
Finnish: 16 vowels and 18 consonants = 34 sounds
Arabic: 6 vowels and 28 consonants = 34 sounds
Hausa: 10 vowels and 24 consonants = 34 sounds
Esperanto: 5 vowels and 27 consonants = 32 sounds
Persian: 6 vowels and 26 consonants = 32 sounds
Turkish: 8 vowels and 23 consonants = 31 sounds
Serbo-Croatian: 5 vowels and 25 consonants = 30 sounds
Italian: 7 vowels and 23 consonants = 30 sounds
Basque: 6 vowels and consonants = 30 sounds
Romanian: 7 vowels and 22 consonants = 29 sounds
Galician: 7 vowels and 19 consonants = 26 sounds
Spanish: 5 vowels and 20 consonants = 25 sounds
Greek: 5 vowels and 18 consonants = 23 sounds
Japanese: 5 vowels and 17 consonants = 22 sounds
This is by no means a complete list and is also very Eurocentric, but the source only had information for these languages.
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googletranslatesyou · 7 months
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*clocks into my 9 to 5 of English ➡️ Chinese ➡️ Hebrew ➡️ Japanese ➡️ German ➡️ Korean ➡️ Latin ➡️ Odia (Oriya) ➡️ Yiddish ➡️ Estonian ➡️ Maori ➡️ Welsh ➡️ Igbo ➡️ Greek ➡️ Belarusian ➡️ German ➡️ Chinese ➡️ English*
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Non-English Fanworks Count on AO3
Since Ecclesiastical Latin Fest is starting tomorrow - FULL DETAILS HERE - I figured I'd update the Non-English Fanworks Count on AO3.
I say 'fanworks' because as I went through it, I also saw some fanart and fanvids!
Results from the 28th of December.
Russian 542
Spanish 119
French 87
Ukrainian 77
Chinese 67
Italian 26
Japanese 23
Brasilian Portuguese 12
Czech 10
Polish 10
German 6
Dutch 5
Finnish 5
Vietnamese 5
Belarusian 2
Farsi 2
Catalan 1
Welsh 1
Filipino 1
Swedish 1
Turkish 1
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Results of the preliminary sorting!
I have gone through the submission form and chosen which words will compete based on the principles in the original post so I thought I'd present you with some data as a teaser:
There are words from 35 languages!
21 of the languages have only one word submitted and five languages have four words each.
These are the languages for anyone interested: ASL, Bavarian/Austrian dialects of German, Belarusian, Bislama, Brazilian Portugese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Haitian creole, Hebrew, Irish Gaelic, Japanese, Kaqchikel Mayan, Korean, LIBRAS (brazilian sign language), Lithuanian, Luxembourgish, Mandarin Chinese, Mbabaram, Old Church Slavonic, Polish, Russian, Sanskrit, siSwati, Spanish, Swedish, Swiss German, Tagalog, Tok Pisin, Urdu, Walloon French and Yiddish
So as expected many european languages, but still lots of variation. Good luck to all words!
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leftsidebonfire · 4 days
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🇺🇲 kill yourself 🇮🇹 ammazzati 🇫🇷 tuez-toi 🇷🇴 omoară-te 🇪🇸 mátate 🇵🇹 se mata 🇻🇦 tibi occide 🇩🇪 töte dich selbst 🇵🇱 zabij się 🇨🇿 zabij se 🇭🇷 ubijte se 🇳🇱 pleeg zelfmoord 🇹🇷 kendini öldür 🇸🇴 is dilo 🇵🇭 magpakamatay ka 🇲🇾 bunuh dirimu 🇻🇳 giết bạn 🇷🇺 Убей себя 🇺🇦 вбий себе 🇬🇷 σκότωσε τον εαυτό σου 🇮🇳 अपने आप को मार डालो 🇨🇳 杀死你自己 🇯🇵 自殺する 🇬🇪 მოიკლა თავი 🇦🇲 uպանել քեզ ինքներդ ձեզ 🇸🇦 قتل نفسك 🇮🇱 תתאבד
Wow I've learned so much thanks anon
You didn't do the second part of my request though which was...
SHOW YOUR FACE YOU FUCKING COWARD
LMAO.
Big and tough hiding behind your screen. Uno reverse, bitch.
Afrikaans: Geen Arabic: لا Azerbaijani: Yox Belarusian: няма Bulgarian: Не Bengali: না Bosnian: ne Catalan: No Cebuano: Dili Czech: Ne Welsh: Nac oes Danish: Ingen German: Nein Greek: Όχι English: No Esperanto: No Spanish: No Estonian: ei Basque: Ez Persian: خیرFinnish: Ei French: NonIrish: Níl Galician: non Gujarati: કોઈ Hausa: No Hindi: नहीं Hmong: No Croatian: Ne Haitian Creole: Pa gen Hungarian: Nem Armenian: Ոչ Indonesian: Tidak Igbo: No Icelandic: engin Italian: No Hebrew: לא Japanese: No Javanese: Ora Georgian: არარის Kazakh: жоқ Khmer: គ្មាន Kannada: ಯಾವುದೇ Korean: 아니 Latin: No Lao: ບໍ່ມີ Lithuanian: ne Latvian: Nē
Malagasy: No Maori: No Macedonian: Не Malayalam: ഇല്ല Mongolian: ямар ч Marathi: नाही Malay: Tiada Maltese: Nru Myanmar (Burmese): အဘယ်သူမျှမ Nepali: कुनै Dutch: NeeNorwegian: NeiChichewa: NoPunjabi: ਕੋਈ Polish: Nie Portuguese: No Romanian: Nu Russian: Нет Sinhala: නැත Slovak: nie Slovenian: no Somali: No Albanian: jo Serbian: Не Sesotho: No Sundanese: teu Swedish: Nej Swahili: hakuna Tamil: இல்லை Telugu: తోబుట్టువుల Tajik: нест Thai: ไม่ Filipino: Hindi Turkish: Yok hayır Ukrainian: Немає Urdu: نہیں Vietnamese: Không Yiddish: קיין Yoruba: ko si Chinese: 没有 Chinese (Simplified): 没有 Chinese (Traditional): 沒 Zulu: Azikho
Now stop being a little bitch in my inbox 💅💅
6 notes · View notes
luna-3-clips · 1 year
Text
How to say "I love you" in every language
Ek het jou lief (Afrikaans)
medɔ wo (Akan)
Unë të dua (Albanian)
አፈቅርሃለሁ (āfek’irihalehu) (Amharic)
 أحبك  ('uhibuk) (Arabic)
Ես սիրում եմ քեզ (Yes sirum yem k’ez) (Armenian)
মই আপোনাক ভাল পাওঁ (Assamese)
munsmawa (Aymara)
Mən səni sevirəm (Azerbaijani)
n b'i fɛ (Bambara)
আমি তোমাকে ভালোবাসি (Āmi tōmākē bhālōbāsi) (Bangla)
maite zaitut (Basque)
я цябе кахаю (ja ciabie kachaju) (Belarusian)
हम तोहसे प्यार करेलीं (Bhojpuri)
volim te (Bosnian)
Обичам те (Obicham te) (Bulgarian)
မင်းကိုချစ်တယ် (Burmese)
T'estimo (Catalan)
gihigugma tika (Cebuano)
تۆم خۆش دەوێت (Central Kurdish)
我爱你 (Wǒ ài nǐ) (Chinese (Simplified))
我愛你 (Wǒ ài nǐ) (Chinese (Traditional))
Ti tengu caru (Corsican)
Volim te (Croatian)
Miluji tě (Czech)
Jeg elsker dig (Danish)
އަހަރެން ތިބާ ދެކެ ލޯބިވަން (aharen thibaa dheke loabivan) (Divehi)
में तुगी हिरख करना (Dogri)
Ik houd van jou (Dutch)
I love you (English)
mi amas vin (Esperanto)
Ma armastan sind (Estonian)
Melɔ̃ wò (Ewe)
Mahal kita (Filipino)
Minä rakastan sinua (Finnish)
Je t'aime (French)
Quérote (Galician)
Nkwagala (Ganda)
მიყვარხარ (miq’varkhar) (Georgian)
Ich liebe dich (German)
हांव तुजेर मोग करता (Goan Konkani)
Σ'αγαπώ (S'agapó) (Greek)
Rohayhu (Guarani)
હું તને પ્રેમ કરું છુ (Huṁ tanē prēma karuṁ chu) (Gujarati)
Mwen renmen ou (Haitian Creole)
Ina son ka (Hausa)
Aloha wau iā ʻoe (Hawaiian)
אני אוהב אותך (Hebrew)
मुझे तुमसे प्यार है (mujhe tumase pyaar hai) (Hindi)
kuv hlub koj (Hmong)
Szeretlek (Hungarian)
ég elska þig (Icelandic)
a hụrụ m gị n'anya (Igbo)
Ay-ayaten ka (Iloko)
Aku mencintaimu (Indonesian)
Is breá liom tú (Irish)
Ti amo (Italian)
愛してます (Aishitemasu) (Japanese)
Aku tresna sampeyan (Javanese)
ನಾನು ನಿನ್ನನ್ನು ಪ್ರೀತಿಸುತ್ತೇನೆ (Nānu ninnannu prītisuttēne) (Kannada)
Мен сені жақсы көремін (Men seni jaqsı köremin) (Kazakh)
ខ្ញុំ​ស្រលាញ់​អ្នក (khnhom​ sralanh​ anak) (Khmer)
Ndagukunda (Kinyarwanda)
사랑해요 (salanghaeyo) (Korean)
A lɛk yu (Krio)
Ez hej te dikim (Kurgish)
Мен сени сүйөм (Men seni süyöm) (Kyrgyz)
ຂ້ອຍ​ຮັກ​ເຈົ້າ (khony hak chao) (Lao)
Te amo (Latin)
Es mīlu Tevi (Latvian)
Nalingaka yo (Lingala)
Aš tave myliu (Lithuanian)
Ech hunn dech gär (Luxembourgish)
Те сакам (Te sakam) (Macedonian)
हम अहां सँ प्रेम करैत छी (Maithili)
tiako ianao (Malagasy)
saya sayang awak (Malay)
ഞാൻ നിന്നെ സ്നേഹിക്കുന്നു (njaan ninne snehikkunnu) (Malayalam)
inħobbok (Maltese)
ꯑꯩꯅ ꯅꯪꯕꯨ ꯅꯨꯡꯁꯤ (Manipuri (Meitei Mayek))
Aroha ana ahau ki a koe (Maori)
मी तुझ्यावर प्रेम करतो (Mī tujhyāvara prēma karatō) (Marathi)
Ka hmangaih che (Mizo)
Би чамд хайртай (Bi chamd khairtai) (Mongolian)
म तिमीलाई माया गर्छु (Ma timīlā'ī māyā garchu) (Nepali)
Ke a go rata (Northern Sotho)
Jeg elsker deg (Norwegian)
ndimakukondani (Nyanja)
ମୁଁ ତୁମକୁ ଭଲପାଏ (Odia)
sin jaalladha (Oromo)
زه تا سره مینه لرم (Pashto)
دوستت دارم (Persian)
Kocham cię (Polish)
Eu te amo (Portugese)
ਮੈਂ ਤੁਹਾਨੂੰ ਪਿਆਰ ਕਰਦਾ ਹਾਂ (Maiṁ tuhānū pi'āra karadā hāṁ) (Punjabi)
Kuyaykim (Quechua)
Te iubesc (Romanian)
Я тебя люблю (YA tebya lyublyu) (Russian)
Oute alofa ia oe (Samoan)
त्वां कामयामि (Sanskrit)
Tha gaol agam ort (Scottish Gaelic)
Волим те (Volim te) (Serbian)
Ndinokuda (Shona)
مان توهان سان پيار ٿو ڪيان (Sindhi)
මම ඔයාට ආදරෙයි (mama oyāṭa ādareyi) (Sinhala)
Ľúbim ťa (Slovak)
Ljubim te (Slovenian)
waan ku jeclahay (Somali)
kea u rata (Southern Sotho)
Te amo (Spanish)
abdi bogoh ka anjeun (Sundanese)
nakupenda (Swahili)
jag älskar dig (Swedish)
Ман туро дӯст медорам (Man turo dūst medoram) (Tajik)
நான் உன்னை காதலிக்கிறேன் (Nāṉ uṉṉai kātalikkiṟēṉ) (Tamil)
мин сине яратам (Tatar)
నేను నిన్ను ప్రేమిస్తున్నాను (Nēnu ninnu prēmistunnānu) (Telugu)
ฉันรักคุณ (C̄hạn rạk khuṇ) (Thai)
የፍቅረኪ እየ (Tigrinya)
Ndza ku rhandza (Tsonga)
Seni seviyorum (Turkish)
men seni söýýärin (Turkmen)
я тебе люблю (ya tebe lyublyu) (Ukrainian)
میں تم سے پیار کرتا ہوں (Urdu)
مەن سىزنى ياخشى كۆرىمەن (Uyghur)
Men sizni sevaman (Uzbek)
Anh Yêu Em (Viatnamese)
Rwy'n dy garu di (Welsh)
Ik hâld fan dy (Western Frisian)
Ndiyakuthanda (Xhosa)
איך האב דיר ליב (ikh hab dir lib) (Yiddish)
mo nifẹ rẹ (Yoruba)
Ngiyakuthanda (Zulu)
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That's 133 different languages to say 'I love you' in. All translations were by Google Translate
That's all, have a good day/night!
18 notes · View notes