HorseloverFat
Squarepants with Conkers
“potted plaything” - Penzhi
(just to delude and “skew”)
(just to delude and “skew”)
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Maths is not HOW i say it... but I COMPLETELY understand WHY some one would say it like that.Ohhh I finally understand the french word for cash, never really made the connection before. Only they do the opposite: Espèces refers to money and is always plural. Species can be Espèce or Espèces for singular or plural.
Also Maths is the abbreviation of Mathematics, at least where I grew up. One of the few differences to american english that still makes me cringe . Still uncountable.
My favorite book series. Had a big fight in highschool as I was not allowed to put it on my reading list, as it was not considered English Literature.J.R.R. Tolkien "Lord of the Rings"
My device will auto correct repotting to reporting unless I manually catch it and fix it. Could be the same for many others.That would be bonsais then?
Maybe in line with this discussion, good to keep in mind: Not all are native speakers and/or use English in their day-to-day lives. As such I try to read with understanding, instead of getting annoyed with frequent errors (Do I need to mention repotting / reporting?)
I am so happy I tend to not spot spelling mistakes. So I do not get annoyed by them, as I just do not notice untill people point it out to me!My device will auto correct repotting to reporting unless I manually catch it and fix it. Could be the same for many others.
Yes, and cookie can be traced to the Dutch koek. Yankee used to be Jan Kees.I know species is from a Latin root, but I was referring to the word bonsai which is a Japanese word that can be traced back to a loose translation of the Chinese word penzai which has the same meaning as penjing.
lol, guess what it feels like if you were in charge of getting 5 MSc and 3 BSc programmes switched from NL to UK taughtWhen you work in a Dutch university that made the commitment to go fully English within a year time, it gets tiring real fast.
I've seen the professor I worked for cry in the corner of our lab. He had to tell some 55+ year old technicians who struggled with advanced Dutch that they would lose their jobs if they wouldn't learn English within 6 months. Most of them had a background in chemistry because they sucked at languages. They're at Louis van Gaal level nowadays. Which is pretty hilarious. Unless they're conversing with Chinese students who learned English from fellow Chinese students who themselves learned English from Chinese people in China who never went to English speaking countries. Then it's just.. Hard to not intervene.lol, guess what it feels like if you were in charge of getting 5 MSc and 3 BSc programmes switched from NL to UK taught
Sinterklaas - Santa Claus ring a bell?
Harlem - Haarlem
Brooklyn - Breukelen
Less favorite, but .. Apartheid ..
Who was first, often language is fluid.
My ottoman just humped my leg!I've seen the professor I worked for cry in the corner of our lab. He had to tell some 55+ year old technicians who struggled with advanced Dutch that they would lose their jobs if they wouldn't learn English within 6 months. Most of them had a background in chemistry because they sucked at languages. They're at Louis van Gaal level nowadays. Which is pretty hilarious. Unless they're conversing with Chinese students who learned English from fellow Chinese students who themselves learned English from Chinese people in China who never went to English speaking countries. Then it's just.. Hard to not intervene.
@HorseloverFat Try the French bleu. The "eu" is the same. Now say Temperature without the 'emperature' (hard T) and add the "eu" and "n". As long as you're not making a D or a TH sound, you're good. But I'll allow John too. Since you already know a large part of my last name from that juniper thread, you can practice both. And yes, I'm fully aware it sounds very similar to what sound a metal spring would make when you throw it down a staircase. Don't contact me if your furniture starts hovering in the air. It's not an occult speech or anything. I think..
Because this is an international forum, I have usually been able to ignore grammar errors.
*devolving...English grammar seems to be evolving. The dropping the us of "an" in favor of "a" even when words begin with a vowel. Even in newspapers the use of "too" seems to be fading in favor of "to".
Agreed, from someone who has a rather useless B.A. degree in English.*devolving...
We increased language courses with a focus on job-specific terms, during worktime of course, created a refernce manual dutch/english en reverse, and gave the technicians the option to spend some time in the UK at a partner university. Several did. At no time did we consider the idea of staff not staying. Many of them have been with us for decades. There is no way they will be fired over language skills. Different for new hires, of course!He had to tell some 55+ year old technicians who struggled with advanced Dutch that they would lose their jobs if they wouldn't learn English within 6 months.
Wow.. You have a whole explanation. When people cannot figure out Jelle, at some point I just start using Jay!@HorseloverFat Try the French bleu. The "eu" is the same. Now say Temperature without the 'emperature' (hard T) and add the "eu" and "n". As long as you're not making a D or a TH sound, you're good. But I'll allow John too. Since you already know a large part of my last name from that juniper thread, you can practice both. And yes, I'm fully aware it sounds very similar to what sound a metal spring would make when you throw it down a staircase. Don't contact me if your furniture starts hovering in the air. It's not an occult speech or anything. I think..
The search says five results since 2014.
*devolving...