Si son di Merate(Lecco) e lavoro a Cinisello Balsamo
Ha, this is boring! Norwegian, Italian, German, English …
indo-germanic languages are all the same
well almost…
who can post something really alien?
ßêùî òè òàê áàæàºø, ó ìåíå ³ç öèì íåìຠàáñîëþòíî í³ÿêèõ ïðîáëåì…
Sory, the coding… forum cannot see cyrillic…
Should I paste excerpt from a SETI packet for you?
AFAIK russian is an indogermanic language… Anyone here who speaks hungarian or finnish?
Btw: AE5,Ex26Yw¾Yz³ (Sorry for the coding, the forum can’t display tengwar :-p)
[This message has been edited by Overmind (edited 11-03-2003).]
Originally posted by Overmind:
[b]AFAIK russian is an indogermanic language… Anyone here who speaks hungarian or finnish?
Btw: AE5,Ex26Yw¾Yz³ (Sorry for the coding, the forum can’t display tengwar :-p)
[This message has been edited by Overmind (edited 11-03-2003).][/b]
Én magyar vagyok.
Én nem beszélem a fenti nyelveket, viszont mektek sincs fogalmatok arról, hogy én mit írok.
Üdv:
Csiki
It was hungarian.
AFAIK russian is an indogermanic language…
Russian is a slavic language. I don’t know if that’s the same thing or not though. “I don’t know languages.”
-SirKnight
Originally posted by cschueler:
[b]
Ha, this is boring! Norwegian, Italian, German, English …
indo-germanic languages are all the same
well almost…
who can post something really alien?[/b]
nuqneH,
Hab SoSlI’ Quch! bIjatlh ‘e’ yImev! naDevvo’ yIghoS.
tlhIngan maH!
-SirKnight
He This forum is odd.
Try to guess that -
Ja myslalem, ze znajde tutaj cos ciekawego na tym forum, a znalazlem tylko jakas polewke. Ja nie moge! Spoko.
BTW : I haven’t included language-specific characters.
You are my western neighbour.
I’m from Lviv(Lvov/Lemberg), Galizien.
Let’s see:
Äåí ìïõ’ñ÷åôáé ôéðïôá åîõðíï íá ãñáøù áëëá óéãá ìçí ôï êáôáëáâåé êáíåíáò åôóé êáé áëëéùò.
Is this alien enough?
Nah, this is lame, it’s even latin characters
> If anyone is trying to decrypt mine
> and humus’ messages, they’re just
> random letters put together in groups
> to depict words and thus bearing no
> actual meaning whatsoever…
riiiiiight.
gör = girl?
exjobb?
tell me more!
Jag kommer och fra tyskland … LOL
Originally posted by SirKnight:
Russian is a slavic language. I don’t know if that’s the same thing or not though. “I don’t know languages.”
-SirKnight
read and learn.
"Indo-Germanic Philology is concerned with the linguistic relationships between Indo-Germanic (Indo-European) languages. The origins of the academic discipline lie in the 18th Century when scholars discovered that languages change over time and can thus develop independently. They established that many European, and a number of Asian, languages are related to one another with a common origin many thousands of years in the past. These languages include the following groups:
* Latin, and the Romanic languages,
* Celtic,
* Germanic,
* Baltic,
* Slavic,
* Greek,
* Albanian,
* Armenien
* Indo-Iranian
Also related are long extinct language groups which were only rediscovered this century:
* Tocharic,
* Old Anatolian
Finally, a number of fragmentary language remnants, primarily from the Mediterranean area, can also be included."
source: http://www.slm.uni-hamburg.de/Stuplan/Indogermanistik_eng.html
Ah I see, now I know. Thanks.
-SirKnight
Originally posted by Orzech:
[b]He This forum is odd.
Try to guess that -
Ja myslalem, ze znajde tutaj cos ciekawego na tym forum, a znalazlem tylko jakas polewke. Ja nie moge! Spoko.
BTW : I haven’t included language-specific characters. [/b]
Spoko…that’s a cool sounding word. I’m using it from now on. I don’t know what it means but i’ll make my own definition.
Also I think my other post is still the most alien. <whisper> it’s klingon. </whisper>
-SirKnight
Originally posted by cschueler:
gör = girl?
exjobb?
gör = do
exjobb ~= thesis, short form of “examensjobb”, which means examination or graduation work.
Øv jeg kan ikke finde på gode sætninger med særligt mange æ, ø og å’er:
Lån Børge din høvlebænk Jørgen.
Originally posted by SirKnight:
Spoko…that’s a cool sounding word. I’m using it from now on. I don’t know what it means but i’ll make my own definition.
surprise: it may be actually translatable to the “cool”, depending on context
Yeah, we’ve all seen The fish called Wanda, but perhaps someone should try an altarnative strategy just in case she’s not like that after all.
Pitäkää huolta.
(That’s finnish and means have a nice day.)
-Ilkka