Red guy should’ve waited three years to respond to that
Red guy should’ve waited three years to respond to that
I loved looking at the illustrations in those and coming up with stories about them in my head
Fun fact: the s was added to island in the 16th century as a mistake because grammarians added an s to isle to make it look more like the Latin insula, even though there was no s sound in either island or isle.
So in Slavonic linguistics, there’s a sound change known as the Slavic liquid metathesis, which is what gives us South Slavic forms like grad (town) as in Belgrad, as opposed to East Slavic forms, like gorod, as in Belgorod.
The reconstructed ancestor of gorod and grad is *gord (in historical linguistics, an asterisk indicates a reconstructed form). Due to changes in syllable boundary rules in the Slavic language of the day (roughly 8th/9th century AD), you could no longer have two consonants at the end of a syllable, so *gord had to change. In East Slavic, this was solved by adding an extra vowel to break up the consonant cluster, giving us gorod. In South and West Slavic, this was done by moving the /r/ sound to the onset (start) of the syllable (and the vowel was also changed), giving us grad. The “liquid” part of the name refers to “liquid” sounds, /r/ and /l/, since this particular process applied to them.
It almost looks like this is what’s going on here, although not quite. It would have to be gulgulg > gluglug to count as liquid metathesis, but the l and u switched around, which is good enough for me. Plus there’s the pun with liquid and water.
Hopefully that at least somewhat explains the joke. I don’t know if it’s very clear.
Slavic liquid metathesis moment
This is one of the best things about it. There’s no feeling like passing on a +8 to someone.
I miss the good old days of surreal memes. Meme man and orang fighting against each other across an arbitrary and unpredictable universe, questioning the fabric of reality, surreality and irreality, all while striving to avoid eternal yamnation.
I’m English and I don’t either. It’s a pretty obvious hangover of British imperial pretensions.
The term British Isles is, of course, disputed by the Irish.
6 months up front
“I was just following orders”
Typical Jerry, just trying to get Tom in trouble
AfDler in Germany
And making the game less enjoyable for everyone else at the same time :(
In IPA, [mɛːɹɪj], [mɛɹɪj], [maɹɪj] is what I say. Basically Mary has a long “eh” sound, merry has a short “eh” sound and marry has a short “ah” sound (you can check the IPA vowel chart for the specific sounds here) In General American I think speakers without the merger say them something like [mɛɚ.ɪj], [mɛɹɪj], [mæɹɪj], although over half of Americans are supposed to have the merger now.
If you’re interested, you can read more here
It’s also (hopefully) fake
I think they think scary rhymes with Mary… That said, there are dialects where Mary rhymes with berry - it’s known as the Mary-merry-marry merger!
They won’t be if Putin keeps sending them to die in Ukraine
I didn’t know that was a thing, and now I want to unknow it