There is no ham in hamburger, egg in eggplant nor is there pine or apple in pineapple.
....ä
From The History of English: "English is a West Germanic language that originated from Anglo-Frisian dialects brought to Britain in the mid 5th to 7th centuries AD by Germanic invaders and settlers from what is now northwest Germany, west Denmark and the Netherlands."
Now you're getting into onomatopoeia.All I know is who ever put the "P" in the word lisp had a sick sense of humor.
The co-conspirators in the Lincoln assassination were hanged. They were not hung.
Since I only speak English, I have no idea if other languages are easier or harder to learn. Is our language alone in having all these variances?
I was all set to blame your people for this mess, but it seems your victims as well.
From The History of English: "English is a West Germanic language that originated from Anglo-Frisian dialects brought to Britain in the mid 5th to 7th centuries AD by Germanic invaders and settlers from what is now northwest Germany, west Denmark and the Netherlands."
Yeah, but that's just the start. When they came to Britain, the Germanic dialects overlaid and blended with pre-Roman Celtic language that itself had been influenced by a few hundred years of Latin during the Roman occupation.
Then later of course came 1066 and the new French-speaking Norman upper class that arrived with William the Conquerer. That's why, for example, the live animal tended by the peasants is a cow from German "Kuh", but the prepared meat that the Lord got to eat is beef, from French "boeuf".
In fact, many medieval kings of England, including Richard the Lionheart, didn't even speak English.
Is the opposite of "Fat Chance", "Slim Chance"?
Not a chance!![]()
Since I only speak English, I have no idea if other languages are easier or harder to learn. Is our language alone in having all these variances?
Simple example of such a pair:
Sow ... as in "the boar's girl friend"
Sow ... as in "as ye sow, so shall ye reap"
Now you're getting into onomatopoeia.
Please, this is a family friendly forumNow you're getting into onomatopoeia.
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I grew up bilingual spanish/English. In spite of double Ls sounding like Ys....
.....and Ns with strange squiggles over them and rolled Rs, spanish is a much easier language to learn to pronounce than English. All spanish vowels; have ONLY one sound and are NEVER silent. .....
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But honor is onor everywhere.
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Don't forget "peeked". A peek at the peak may pique your interest in mountain climbing.How about when folks use "peaked" instead of "piqued"? That bothers me more than it should.