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Thracian
Knight
Joined: 01-Feb-2005
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Topic: Which language do you think sounds the be Posted: 12-Feb-2005 at 04:28 |
The most beutiful lang. is French (as a fact)
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Capt. Lubber
Shogun
Joined: 27-Jan-2005
Location: Norway
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Posted: 13-Feb-2005 at 09:48 |
I like Italian, Swedish (not the skne dialect), Spanish (the castillian, not american) and Japanese
I don't particularly like Danish, french, arab, thai or that clicking-language down in Africa
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Loke, Attila, the grete conqueror,
Deyde in his sleep, with shame and dishonour,
Bleedinge ay at the nose in dronkenesse,
A captayin shoulde live in sobrenesse
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Posted: 13-Feb-2005 at 12:34 |
I like Turkish, because it is a language can be spoken softly and strongly as you wish. For example, in a poem, Turkish can be very soft, but in a command during a war, it will make the soldiers believe and be confident easily... Also to command something in Turkish, you take all the additions from a verb and use its root, usually one or two sharp syllables such as "saldr", "tut", "atl", "yap", "kalk". This is why Turkish is oftenly described as a language conformable for military...
I also like Persian since it is the language of poetry and beauty. I like Roman latin, because it has a harmony of "us" addition after most of its words. It sounds pretty cool.
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Teup
Earl
Joined: 25-Jan-2005
Location: Netherlands
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Posted: 13-Feb-2005 at 12:55 |
Hmm, Oguzohlu, when I saw your name as last poster, I already knew what the answer in this post was going to be, I wonder why that is
Hehe just messing, after all, I also picked my own language as best sounding
Such a shame we can't hear or own native languages the way they truly sound, because we will always listen to the contens of it instead, no matter how hard we try.
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Whatever you do, don't
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Posted: 24-Feb-2005 at 12:23 |
Yeah, you're right, but I dont think I would ever enjoy listening a Semite language sound such as Israeli or Arabic (rarely)...
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azimuth
Caliph
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Posted: 24-Feb-2005 at 20:37 |
well once you understand Arabic you will like it and by Arabic i mean the Formal Arabic not the accents which are used everywhere
also
there is no language called "Israeli" it is Hebrew
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Emile Boutros
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Joined: 24-Feb-2005
Location: Algeria
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Posted: 24-Feb-2005 at 21:28 |
Arabic is a beautiful language. I like Syrian Arabic the best. Then I would say it is Malay. I don't understand what people like aout French. People say my accent sounds French but I don't understand as I don't even know French! It is nasal and goofy. I hope I do not sound this way when I am speaking English or swedish.
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Posted: 28-Feb-2005 at 10:48 |
Originally posted by azimuth
well once you understand Arabic you will like it and by Arabic i mean the Formal Arabic not the accents which are used everywhere
also
there is no language called "Israeli" it is Hebrew
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Yes, I know it.
I just forgot the english word for "Ibrani"...
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Hardel
Janissary
Joined: 23-Mar-2005
Location: Mongolia
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Posted: 29-Mar-2005 at 05:55 |
I like hear western mongolian,japanese,french and russian.And don't like arabic,indian and chinese.
Edited by Hardel
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ramin
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Joined: 16-Feb-2005
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Posted: 29-Mar-2005 at 10:46 |
There are somelanguages that sound strict like German, Turkish (more or less), and Arabic -- these are what I know of.
My favorites are German (just started learning), Italian (Perfect for singing when ure alone!), and Yugoslavian.
I don't like English, French, Spanish, and Arabic (it's only good for music once in a while).
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"I won't laugh if a philosophy halves the moon"
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Posted: 30-Mar-2005 at 11:51 |
In fact, original Turkish is much more strict than current Turkish spoken in the Republic of Turkey. If you listen Kazakh, Uzbek or Uighur languages, you would differ these from Turkmen, Azeri and modern Turkish...
I forgot his name, but a British linguistic master once told that the stanbul Turkish was a version of Azeri which is spelled in European accent...
Edited by Oguzoglu
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Teup
Earl
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Posted: 30-Mar-2005 at 12:13 |
Originally posted by ramin
There are somelanguages that sound strict like German, Turkish (more or less), and Arabic -- these are what I know of.
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That would probably include Dutch... it's funny, when Dutch is imitated from an English perspective it always sounds extremely much like German to me German sounds very distinctive and different from Dutch, but to outsiders (which are of course in the more reliable position of neutrality) they probably sound the same, so I guess it's just me
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Whatever you do, don't
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Jazz
Baron
Joined: 29-Mar-2005
Location: Canada
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Posted: 31-Mar-2005 at 00:58 |
My vote would be for Urdu, the national language for Pakistan and one
of the official ones for India. Hindi would be a close 2nd (they
have similiar grammar and sounds, just that Urdu vocabulary is more
Persio-Arabic based and Hindi is more based on Sanskrit.
And I've had to learn French here in school, and there is no comparison...
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eaglecap
Tsar
Retired AE Moderator
Joined: 15-Feb-2005
Location: ArizonaUSA
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Posted: 31-Mar-2005 at 01:11 |
I would not to nominate Klingon!!! The galaxtic language of warriors or is that laxative language of warrior???
http://www.kli.org/
The Klingon Language Institute
Welcome to the Klingon Language Institute. That's right, Klingon. Those bumpy headed aliens of Star Trek really have their own language, one which has far outgrown mere television and film. That's what we're about. We're here to promote and support this unique and exciting language. So, whether you've just stumbled in here by accident, or lost a bet, or have sought long and hard for people who share your passion for the warriors' tongue, come on in. Our site has information and resources to interest both skeptic and enthusiast alike. Join us in our exploration of the galaxy's fastest growing language.
Real Klingon honeys!!
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Posted: 05-May-2005 at 18:23 |
Telugu and French
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Zagros
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Posted: 05-May-2005 at 18:57 |
Literature Persian. But I am biased.
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Posted: 05-May-2005 at 20:56 |
Originally posted by Zagros Purya
Literature Persian. But I am biased. |
That's an understatement, couldn't help it
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Phallanx
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Joined: 07-Feb-2005
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Posted: 05-May-2005 at 22:10 |
While searching through the web I found this interesting article that
totally covers my view in a much more articulate manner than I would.
William Harris Prof. Em. Middlebury College
"One cannot help feeling proud and pleased with the lovely sound of Classical
Greek. A language with a clear-ringing and transparent set of vowels, backed up
by smoothly sliding di-phthongs, a language which cannot tolerate double
consonants at the word-end, smoothing a raucous Latin -unt to a silky -on, even
whispering down an initial sibilant like s- to the aura of a "rough breathing"
(rough indeed....!)---------this must be one of the loveliest languages of the
world.
Lovely indeed are the "interwoven cadences" of Sappho, as Dionysus put it, the
many-colored phrases which combine musically in every sentence of Plato's
art-prose. And Pindar's world of words flowing in a river of rhythm, pure art
quite separate from his biography, along with Aeschylus' storms of sound, or
Sophocles' restrained artfulness laced with innuendo.
But then I have to ask my Classical colleagues: Why have you insisted all these
years on ruining the sound when you read Greek aloud, hammering the light
sounds inexorably so they come out loud, obliterating the clearly indicated
durations ----- thus depriving yourselves of the true musicality of ancient
Greek?"
The rest at:
http://community.middlebury.edu/~harris/Classics/Greekacce nts.html
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To the gods we mortals are all ignorant.Those old traditions from our ancestors, the ones we've had as long as time itself, no argument will ever overthrow, in spite of subtleties sharp minds invent.
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TheodoreFelix
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Posted: 05-May-2005 at 23:14 |
Latin for me. Easily. It just sounds so powerful. Its like every word
makes a STOP! and forces you to listen to it. Its definately a
wonderful language. Now if only I could speak it . Thats my favorite language. Its also the language of my favorite character of antiquity. Gaius Julius Caesar.
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Spartakus
Tsar
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Joined: 22-Nov-2004
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Posted: 06-May-2005 at 06:09 |
Quenya.
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"There are worse crimes than burning books. One of them is not reading them. "
--- Joseph Alexandrovitch Brodsky, 1991, Russian-American poet, b. St. Petersburg and exiled 1972 (1940-1996)
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