I suppose the final days of Humble's
learn a new language bundle is as good enough a reason to start a thread of this nature...
Languages are like assholes; everyone has one, and some of them make some pretty weird noises. Whether you're looking to get some lingo advice, expand your mind with the amazing history and influence of language, or just want to point fingers and laugh at how incredibly cockamamie our various tongues can get; this is the thread to forget exists for such a purpose.
To start off, I'd like to point out some intricacies of the most beloved Scandinavian language: Norwegian.
Now, for the most part, Norwegian behaves reasonably well. A fair amount of the grammar is similar to English, and the words are actually pronounced the way they're spelled a good half of the time (there are, of course, completely illogical exceptions). It is a gendered language however, and as with many gendered languages the gendering of words often makes no goddamn sense and you basically just have to memorize it all so that you don't sound like an idiot all the time. This gets harder when certain dialects have their own,
different rules for the gendering of words.
Ah yes, the dialects... You see, not wanting to be boring, Norwegians decided that they would garble and mangle the language with dozens of distinct, regional dialects. They then spent generations refining and distilling these dialects to the point that nobody outside of their immediate families could possibly understand the nonsense they were vibrating.
For example, to say "I", as in "I don't understand this silly language", you would use the Bokmål word "Jeg" (say "yeah" but change your mind halfway through and finish with "I" instead of "-ah"). Or you would, at least, if you lived in the capital... Go outside those safe boundaries, and you'll end up encountering
peasants. Peasants who will instead substitute any of "Eg", "Æ", "Æg", or even "I" (pronounced "EE") to demonstrate their barbarism.
But let's leave them to their potatoes and their working-class words, and focus on the enlightened vocabulary of bog-standard
proper Norwegian.Words in Norwegian (Bokmål):TreBoth a noun meaning "tree" or "wood", and an adjective meaning "wooden". It is also the number three
much like in Irish.
TrenSpecifically a military supply convoy. One of the more ridiculous words, it's probably only still used by the military because it's cheaper than the alternatives.
TreneThe act of training or working out, this is the preferred hobby of vacuous sporty types across the country.
TrenerThe verb "working out", and the noun "personal trainer". So far so good, right?
TrenereThe nonspecific plural of personal trainers. Also the verb "(to) abbreviate".
Trenerer"Abbreviating", or the adjective "in the act of abbreviating something".
TrenererendeAdjective. "This thing which abbreviates".
TrenertAdjective. At last, we have successfully
abbreviated something.
Other classic examples of Norwegian supremacy include:
GiftNoun. "Poison"
Adjective. "Married"
HellNoun. "Luck"; "fortune"
AssConversational. Used at the end of a sentence to denote emphasis, ass.
Orddelingsfeil"Mistakes made in relation to the separation of compound words"
In summary, I am upset with Duolingo after accidentally losing my month-long Spanish streak. This happened several months ago.