return to tranceaddict TranceAddict Forums Archive > Main Forums > Chill Out Room

Pages: 1 [2] 3 4 5 
Is there anything you want to know about language? Anything at all? You're in luck! (pg. 2)
View this Thread in Original format
Lira
Thanks, everyone, I'll see what I can do. And, Watts, you want to learn, like more than one language in the same family? (e.g. Italian & French at the same time?)
quote:
Originally posted by Swamper
Search for tranceaddict in 'Morphosyntactic Change: Functional and Formal Perspectives (Oxford Surveys in Syntax and Morphology)
Morphosyntactic Change: Functional and Formal Perspectives (Oxford Surveys in Syntax and Morphology) '

http://www.amazon.com/phrase/tranceaddict

:D

lolwut! It's funny because I've got this book and the words "trance" and "addict" are nowhere to be found :D

And, Stu, you'd be delighted to know that I'm going to talk about birds in order to answer your question.

And, no, Nou it isn't, and I'm actually going to take the trouble to give you all the reasons why it isn't :p
Sushipunk
quote:
Originally posted by Lira
And, Stu, you'd be delighted to know that I'm going to talk about birds in order to answer your question.


Nice :D I'll be very interested to know your stance on the topic, since it's a rather heated one for both linguists and psychologists.
Lilith
quote:
Originally posted by Sushipunk
since it's a rather heated one for both linguists and psychologists.

So if we put both of them in a pit with a knife each to fight to the death, who will win?
Sushipunk
quote:
Originally posted by Lilith
So if we put both of them in a pit with a knife each to fight to the death, who will win?


One will ponder the need for aggression, and what the knife symbolises in the conflict - the other will ponder the various aspects of the word "knife" used throughout human history.

Not exactly prime time television.
Lilith
Fill in the pit with them still in it, heated debate over. Humanity spends time doing something useful.
Ash Parajuli
i'd like to learn some Spanish as i did it in school but that was a long time ago and have never used it since.
Sushipunk
quote:
Originally posted by Lilith
Fill in the pit with them still in it, heated debate over. Humanity spends time doing something useful.


That's your answer for everything!
Lilith
quote:
Originally posted by Sushipunk
That's your answer for everything!

No it isn't, its just a logical progression on the socio-economic index on rather splendorous chart of "who's going to stab someone as the preferred problem solver in a debate".

Economic Status___________________Relative Stabbage Factor

1. Crackheads______________________Stabbing as a way of life
2. Poor Bastards____________________Stabbing is a preferred problem solver
3. Hipster Intellectuals_______________Eye stabbing fashion
4. People with Jobs__________________Not very stabby unless its an industrial accident
5. Parents of a hipster at uni__________Stab themselves trying to die
6. Rich Bastards____________________Get Poor bastards to stab other people for fun and profit

Hipster Intellectuals are only one step below those that do it frequently, all it takes is a heated reason, belly full of double chocolate latte with skim milk and before you know it- BAM! iPod down the throat and strangling someone with white ear bud thingies.
Capitalizt
quote:
Originally posted by jonSun
Is it true the first bibles were written in Greek rather than Latin or Hebrew?


thats the only one I know...yes. They were written by smart folks in greek many decades (or centuries) after the purported events.
Capitalizt
I have a question lira...What's up with spanish? I noticed when I tried learning some a few years ago that the sentences are all ass backwards..so that you don't understand what is being said until the sentence is complete. For example, they don't use conjuctions like "didn't or wouldn't" as we do in English..instead you say a sentence in positive terms and then add a "no" at the end of it to signify you did not do something.

english example "We didn't go to the mall on saturday"

spanish: "We went to the mall on saturday, no."

Also, the subject of many statements (like a place)..rather than being in the beginning or middle so you can comprehend what is being discussed is instead used as the final word in a sentence.

WTF is up with that?

WhooCares
quote:
Originally posted by Capitalizt


:conf:
im a native spanish speaker...and i never end a sentence with ".....,no"?

whats wrong with
"no fuimos all mall el sabado"
Capitalizt
quote:
Originally posted by WhooCares
:conf:
im a native spanish speaker...and i never end a sentence with ".....,no"?

whats wrong with
"no fuimos all mall el sabado"


"no fuimos all mall el sabado"

This literally seems to translate to "No, we were at the mall on saturday"

so the "no" is at the beginning instead of the end..but I think my question stands. ;) Do you have any way of saying "We weren't there" or "We didn't do it".. Or are you instead forced to say the entire sentence in positive terms while simply adding a no at the beginning or end to reverse the meaning?
CLICK TO RETURN TO TOP OF PAGE
Pages: 1 [2] 3 4 5 
Privacy Statement