Clbuttic mistake
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@Zecc said:
EDIT 2: and speaking of avatar, have you seen this "Avatar 2 trailer" yet?
OMG that's just awesome! That's so much more awesome than the first one, I don't even know where to begin. Definitely bought.
But to be honest, I think the word Pandora might have been around before. I'm not saying it's been stolen though, most likely just a coincidence.
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@derula said:
I think the word Pandora
I know it was the name of the world in Borderlands. The planet in Borderlands was the opposite of the planet in Avatar, though.
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@belgariontheking said:
@derula said:
As opposed to the name Polgara, which - for some obscure reason - I initially read it as... I haven't (re)read the books for over 3 yearsI think the word Pandora
I know it was the name of the world in Borderlands. The planet in Borderlands was the opposite of the planet in Avatar, though.
Oh, never mind.
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@PJH said:
@belgariontheking said:
@derula said:
As opposed to the name Polgara, which - for some obscure reason - I initially read it as... I haven't (re)read the books for over 3 yearsI think the word Pandora
I know it was the name of the world in Borderlands. The planet in Borderlands was the opposite of the planet in Avatar, though.
Oh, never mind.I was just rereading them last week.
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Since we're posting videos, here's one that promotes the use of "z" as a word.
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@Zecc said:
But now that you mentioned the word "portal" you gave me an idea.
It's still a bit rough, but I'll make it better some other time:Aww nah, keep the turtle. Turtles are awesome when they're pissed off.
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@Zecc said:
But now that you mentioned the word "portal" you gave me an idea.
It's still a bit rough, but I'll make it better some other time
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@dhromed said:
Since we're posting videos, here's one that promotes the use of "z" as a word.
How much worse is that than having "I" or "a" as words?
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@Nyquist said:
@Zecc said:
But now that you mentioned the word "portal" you gave me an idea.
It's still a bit rough, but I'll make it better some other time:Aww nah, keep the turtle. Turtles are awesome when they're pissed off.
The result count for "bad-ass turtle" has fell down to 91400 after I took the screenshot. WTF?
@dhromed said:Nice, but I still prefer by own drawing, even in its rough state (I'll probably leave it like that when I get fed up with turtle).
lol @ your video, btw
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@dhromed said:
Changing languages .. the "y" in Spanish is a word and a consonant@derula said:
How much worse is that than having "I" or "a" as words?
It's a CONSONANT.
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@dhromed said:
@derula said:
How much worse is that than having "I" or "a" as words?
It's a CONSONANT.
Yes, but unlike certain other consonants it can be pronounced on its own. K, t, p would make much worse words IMHO.
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@OzPeter said:
the "y" in Spanish is a word and a consonant
Y is an ambiguous character. On its own, it's a vowel.
@derula said:
K, t, p would make much worse words IMHO.
This means nothing!
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@dhromed said:
Y is an ambiguous character. On its own, it's a vowel.
According to http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Y, it's the 23rd consonant, altough they also mention it can be used as a vowel (namely as a semivowel i).Also, there's a Y in Alaska, apparently.
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@dhromed said:
I can only conclude that you must live in some strange parallel universe where a Spanish "y" is not a consonant.@OzPeter said:
the "y" in Spanish is a word and a
consonantY is an ambiguous character. On its own, it's a
vowel.
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@Zecc said:
Given that the land was bought from the Russians and the Russian spelling is Аляска I can understand where that comes from, as 'я' is treated in english as 'ya'. On further investigation the Russian seems to be derived from Aleut, for which there is the name 'Alyeska'.Also, there's a Y in Alaska, apparently.
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@OzPeter said:
I can only conclude that you must live in some strange parallel universe where a Spanish "y" is not a consonant.
I really don't care.
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@OzPeter said:
I can only conclude that you must live in some strange parallel universe where a Spanish "y" is not a consonant.
Well, Portugal is glued to Spain and Y is a vowel to us.
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@Zecc said:
there's a Y in Alaska
It's fun to stay there. I can get myself clean, I can have a good meal.
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@Zecc said:
Thats weird, because "y" is not really a Portuguese letter. It is a strange letter that is only there to assist with foreign words.@OzPeter said:
I can only conclude that you must live in some strange parallel universe where a Spanish "y" is not a consonant.
Well, Portugal is glued to Spain and Y is a vowel to us.
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@OzPeter said:
Thats weird, because "y" is not really a Portuguese letter. It is a strange letter that is only there to assist with foreign words.
Weirder than that, it used to be a very common letter in Portuguese.It was abolished back in 1911. Every word substituted it with "i".
Along with K and W, it was removed from the official alphabet and could only be used in the odd foreign word that came along now and then.
It was allowed to return from its exhile in 1990, when it was reintegrated into the official alphabet.
But its use is still near zero, because "i" is still being used instead of the now-ancient orthography. (and because it's easier to spell this way, because there's less ambiguity)
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@belgariontheking said:
@Zecc said:
there's a Y in Alaska
It's fun to stay there. I can get myself clean, I can have a good meal.I get it.