General > General Technical Chat
[rant]why do english/chinese companies don't give a damn about other languages..
Cerebus:
--- Quote from: tooki on March 29, 2020, 10:28:16 pm ---Also:
;D
--- End quote ---
After watching that I can say that the English and German are completely comprehensible, the lass from Zurich marginally comprehensible, the lad from Valais completely incomprehensible except when he basically spoke French. Oh, well at least the Valais have the best sheep in the world:
tooki:
--- Quote from: Cerebus on March 29, 2020, 11:57:18 pm ---
--- Quote from: tooki on March 29, 2020, 10:17:25 pm ---
I'm not even sure which message that is at this point! :P
--- End quote ---
The fellow who thought the whole world ought to be made to speak English for the benefit of lazy Americans.
--- End quote ---
Oh, that. That post was so dumb I didn't deign to respond.
With that said, it must be acknowledged that Americans and Brits are equally, um, "revered" around the world for being the boorish tourists who authoritatively expect everyone in every country to speak English.
--- Quote from: Cerebus on March 29, 2020, 11:57:18 pm ---So wot's wrong wiv dat? Dat's aah ya say 'bowkay' and 'flahers', only aah reckon ere's anuver aay in flaahrs. I fort you was a Linguist, but it saands like ya ain't got a clue wot proper English saands like, and by 'at nacherly aah means Lunun English a caus. Aah naa 'at ere's em oo'll claim that air's uvver sorts ov English, but they ayn't propa if ya gets me drift. U av naa idea ow 'ard it is to write like wot aah talks like.
--- End quote ---
Oh, believe me, I do!!!
Wanna see something impressive? Read Stephen King's book "Dolores Claiborne". Yes, the movie is great, because Kathy Bates makes anything great. (And the movie is extremely faithful to the book.) If you've seen the film, you might recall that it's actually Dolores recounting the story. No biggie as such. What's insane is that the book also follows that format, and the entire book is written in the Maine accent!! :o I remember that when I first read it, it took me about 30 pages to actually figure out the accent, upon which I started the book from the beginning again to make sure I picked up all the details I missed the first time around.
So yeah. An entire book written like that. And it's a King book, so not exactly a low page count.
Almost as impressive as the dude who wrote a book (in English) that doesn't use a single letter "e".
--- Quote from: Cerebus on March 29, 2020, 11:57:18 pm ---Bloody 'ell, I'm naa officially exausted! Sod is fa a game ov soljers.
Or "Sod this for a game of soldiers". It's struck me more than once that if you could pull just the layer of generic American accent off the top of a Baltimore accent you'd get something very like the London accent. A lot of the words whose pronunciation appears to seem atypical to an American would seem normal to a gor-blimey Londoner like me, like flaahrs, pretty flaahrs.
--- End quote ---
:P
FYI, though, I don't think "flahers" is pronounced the same in London and Baltimore, the latter pronunciation actually steps on the toes of the word "flares"!
Cerebus:
--- Quote from: tooki on March 30, 2020, 10:47:25 pm ---Wanna see something impressive? Read Stephen King's book "Dolores Claiborne". Yes, the movie is great, because Kathy Bates makes anything great. (And the movie is extremely faithful to the book.) If you've seen the film, you might recall that it's actually Dolores recounting the story. No biggie as such. What's insane is that the book also follows that format, and the entire book is written in the Maine accent!! :o I remember that when I first read it, it took me about 30 pages to actually figure out the accent, upon which I started the book from the beginning again to make sure I picked up all the details I missed the first time around.
--- End quote ---
I'll pass. Reading stuff written like that gives me as much of a headache as trying to write it. The only exception was the Nadsat in Clockwork Orange, which was so well done that I could just pick up the language as I went along. For all the other writers I've encountered trying to do it I'd rather have a tolchock in the yarbles that have to get through a whole 200+ pages of the stuff.
tooki:
--- Quote from: Cerebus on March 31, 2020, 12:11:07 am ---
--- Quote from: tooki on March 30, 2020, 10:47:25 pm ---Wanna see something impressive? Read Stephen King's book "Dolores Claiborne". Yes, the movie is great, because Kathy Bates makes anything great. (And the movie is extremely faithful to the book.) If you've seen the film, you might recall that it's actually Dolores recounting the story. No biggie as such. What's insane is that the book also follows that format, and the entire book is written in the Maine accent!! :o I remember that when I first read it, it took me about 30 pages to actually figure out the accent, upon which I started the book from the beginning again to make sure I picked up all the details I missed the first time around.
--- End quote ---
I'll pass. Reading stuff written like that gives me as much of a headache as trying to write it. The only exception was the Nadsat in Clockwork Orange, which was so well done that I could just pick up the language as I went along. For all the other writers I've encountered trying to do it I'd rather have a tolchock in the yarbles that have to get through a whole 200+ pages of the stuff.
--- End quote ---
200pp? Come on. The current paperback edition is 336 pages, so it's just a short story, really! ;D
(As a teen, I read most of King's novels to that point, most of which were 600-1000 page paperbacks!)
bsfeechannel:
--- Quote from: blueskull on March 30, 2020, 04:13:44 am ---Be glad. Chinese, Japanese and Korean don't have white spaces at all. You have to delimit words after knowing their meanings.
--- End quote ---
TheearlyRomanscriptdidnthavespacesoranykindofpunctuation. Later·they·developed·these·dots·to·separate·the·words, then finally dropped them altogether leaving the spaces we know today.
Navigation
[0] Message Index
[#] Next page
[*] Previous page
Go to full version