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 Languages

Ask questions or just talk about different languages. Since BrainKing is an international game site supporting many languages, this board can be kind of useful.

Since we will be dealing with pronunciation of words rather than their spelling, I think it's useful to have a link to The sounds of English and the International Phonetic Alphabet.


To see translations of some frequently used phrases and sentences in other languages see Languages


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7. Aprile 2006, 19:33:13
toedder 
Argomento: Re:
Pedro Martínez: Yes, that's true! Even the almost absent article is inflected - crazy ;) And I made a mistake: for female nouns we don't say "n" but "ne", so only male and neutral are the same. And that just because the original words are both "ein". So I propably have to take back my whole post ;)

7. Aprile 2006, 19:14:52
Pedro Martínez 
Argomento: Re: Trip, Travel, Journey, Voyage, Excursion
Walter Montego: Thanks for your post. Especially for the remark concerning 'outing'. Another piece of knowledge to my puzzle.

I know nothing about Japanese so I can't confirm that, but it may well be true...:)

7. Aprile 2006, 19:11:33
Walter Montego 
Argomento: Re:
Pedro Martínez: I heard the Japanese does not have articles at all.

7. Aprile 2006, 19:07:20
Walter Montego 
Argomento: Re: Trip, Travel, Journey, Voyage, Excursion
رضا: You guys obviously aren't from Southern California and the land of freeways, cars, and traffic! :)
It's a trip to work. There are statistics that call them trips or cartrips.

Going to work can be a journey or a voyage or often times an adventure. It is quite common for people to drive over 50 miles one way to get to work. I used to work in downtown Los Angeles and it is 34 miles one way from here. "Good morning commuters, there's big rig jackknifed on the 405 at Imperial and it's caused a Sigalert, you'd better use an alternate route. Let's talk to Jeff in the 'copter over the six car pile up at the 605 and 91." And when it rains around here, it's a real mess. Good thing it doesn't snow. At least twenty radio stations will broadcast traffic conditions throughout the day. Two of them, KNX 1070 and KFW 980, do it every six to ten minutes. We have a lot of television stations do it too.

Drive is the other word that would be used.

For sentence 1, I'd use "trip" from your list, but it'd be common to hear "drive" or "commute" around here.

For sentence 2, I'd use "trip" from your list. Vacation would be common and if by ship you'd hear cruise. Canadians use the word "holiday" as Americans use the word "vacation."

Because of the word "day" in front of your blank in sentence 3, about the only word I would use is "trip." A day trip is a common expression for a trip that has you returning to the starting point the same day. It's said of hiking too.

For sentence 4 from your list, "excursion" might be used. I wouldn't use outing for part of a paid and organized trip. Outing to me is something spontaneous that a family might do, like jump in the car and just head off until something comes up or maybe just head to the beach to spend the day and walk around. I've seen another word for this in travel brochures, but it escapes me right now. It could also be called a "side trip", but I doubt if they'd word it that way in an advertisement. "Tour" is the word I'm thinking of. A full day tour or guided tour.

Sentence 5. Trip or journey seem OK to me. Journey usually implies having to make extra effort to get to somewhere, and the Himalayas qualify.
_________ _________ __________ _________ _______

Voyage doesn't have to be by ship or even a trip to anywhere. It is sometimes said when one is going through life that you're on a voyage. Or a voyage of time. It can also be used for a land crossing, but it's not a very commonly used word. It is as you say much more common for use with travelling by water, but also some type of conveyance. So a train trip could be a voyage across a continent or said of a covered wagon from the pioneer days to cross the continent.

Excursion is not word too many people use. Now that Ford has made this giant SUV and named it the "Excursion" I only hear it when someone is talking about those. The word has a thrusting connotation to it to me and I think of military terminology when I hear it. I suppose it can used to describe some types of trips or vacations.

7. Aprile 2006, 19:06:37
Pedro Martínez 
Argomento: Re:
Mr. Shumway: But you say something like "mit n'm schönen Hai" for instance...the case is almost always evident.

7. Aprile 2006, 19:02:27
toedder 
Argomento: Re:
Pedro Martínez: when speaking loosely we often just say "n" - and that fits for female, male and neutral :)

7. Aprile 2006, 18:31:01
Pedro Martínez 
Argomento: Re:
Hrqls: Is there only one case in Dutch? I'm not sure now, but I think so. Well, it's easier to swallow het and de than einem, einer, etc...:))

7. Aprile 2006, 18:24:53
Hrqls 
Argomento: Re:
Pedro Martínez: with short notes we always leave out the articles and person-pointers (he/she/..) .. often in speech as well, or the articles are spoken so fast (and almost swallowed) that they are hard to notice

7. Aprile 2006, 18:22:53
Hrqls 
Argomento: Re:
رضا:
1) trip
2) excursion
3) trip
4) excursion
5) excursion (short time), holiday (longer time), journey (longest time, i think)

7. Aprile 2006, 18:07:22
Expired 
My choices are:

1)journey
2)trip
3)trip or maybe even tour?
4)excursion
5)trip

7. Aprile 2006, 18:03:55
Pedro Martínez 
Argomento: Re:
رضا: I'd use:

1) journey
2) trip
3) trip
4) outing
5) journey

7. Aprile 2006, 18:03:33
Expired 
Argomento: Re:
Pedro Martínez: I agree. Just like the English people never think on using He or She but I have to mak eup my mind if it's a He I'm talking baout or a She. In Farsi thre's no gender-related pronoun. So basically be you a man or a woman, you're always تو and He or She are both او .

7. Aprile 2006, 18:00:38
Pedro Martínez 
Argomento: Re:
Walter Montego: The Germans actually don't learn the articles with the nouns. They learn the usage of the correct ones from how their parents and other people around them talk to them and later in life, they don't even think of most of articles and suffixes connected with them since they seem to be obvious.

7. Aprile 2006, 18:00:22
Expired 
What would you fill each of these blanks with?


  • 1) My ... to work took more than 2 hours this morning.
  • 2) For our holidays next year, we're going on a ten-day ... to Australia.

  • 3) We always go on a day ... to France in December to buy Christmas presents.

  • 4) The price of this holiday includes a full-day ... to a place of cultural interest.

  • 5) He's hoping to go on a(n) ... to the Himalayas next year.

7. Aprile 2006, 17:57:06
Expired 
Argomento: Re:
Walter Montego: Farsi has only one article too. And it's a definite article. However, unlike English, it's added to the end of a noun instead of the beginning of it.

Walter, Do you have any explanation regarding Trip, Travel, Journey, Voyage, Excursion?

7. Aprile 2006, 17:49:30
Walter Montego 
Argomento: Re:
Modificato da Walter Montego (7. Aprile 2006, 17:52:20)
Hrqls: There's just two articles in English that I know of. An indefinite one and a definite one.

"a" and "the". I have the hardest time figuring out why so many of the other European languages have all them articles and genders. I suppose when you grow up speaking German you just learn the article with the noun, but in English you just learn the noun. Der, die, das, den, and dem. They all mean "the". English has one thing that is easier to learn, now if we could just figure out how to spell English.

7. Aprile 2006, 16:24:57
Crissie 
Argomento: Re:
Pedro Martínez: Thank you again. Hey at this rate, I'm going to at least learn how to type Czech.

7. Aprile 2006, 16:22:29
Pedro Martínez 
Argomento: Re:
Crissie: You're welcome.
"Taky taky" means "same here" or "the same to you".:)

7. Aprile 2006, 16:20:03
Crissie 
Argomento: Re:
Pedro Martínez: Oh thanks!!

What about TAKY TAKY ???

7. Aprile 2006, 16:08:58
Pedro Martínez 
Argomento: Re:
Crissie: "I'm off to home - have a nice weekend. :)

7. Aprile 2006, 16:07:07
Crissie 
JDU DOMU - PEKNEJ VIKEND PREJU

Could someone please translate this?? It is Czech.

7. Aprile 2006, 13:44:22
Hrqls 
Argomento: Re:
رضا: *nod* i always make the mistake of using ul and il or lu and li .. the names make it easier to remember to use the correct syntax :)

7. Aprile 2006, 13:11:24
Expired 
Argomento: Re:
Hrqls: I was gonna ask you if you knew what they stand for, and you gave it to me yourself!

They are easier to memorize if I know what they stand for.

Thanks.

7. Aprile 2006, 13:03:50
Pedro Martínez 
Argomento: Re:
رضا: Yes, I think it's fascinating.

7. Aprile 2006, 13:02:49
Hrqls 
Argomento: Re:
رضا:
(ul = unordered list)
(li = list item)
(ol = ordered list, but i dont think fencer allows that one)

7. Aprile 2006, 12:59:29
Expired 
Argomento: Re:
Pedro Martínez: It's interesting how languages, especially European ones, have similar words.

7. Aprile 2006, 12:57:48
Expired 
Haha! It worked

7. Aprile 2006, 12:57:18
Pedro Martínez 
Argomento: Re:
رضا: "Mají doma krokodýly" means "They've got crocodiles at home". :)

7. Aprile 2006, 12:57:11
Expired 
Argomento: Re:
Hrqls: Thanks for the dot explanation :-)


  • I
  • you
  • he

7. Aprile 2006, 12:55:00
Pedro Martínez 
Argomento: Re:
رضا: This kind of question can be most easily answered by the native speakers. I would say that:
Trip is interchangeable with journey, voyage is a journey to some very distant place taking lots of time, travel is the act of travelling - it's more general term encompassing the other four, and excursion is a short journey.

7. Aprile 2006, 12:54:30
Expired 
Argomento: Re:
Pedro Martínez: Just out of curiosity Pedro, does this krokodýli hav eanything to do with crocodiles?

7. Aprile 2006, 12:53:32
Hrqls 
Argomento: Re:
رضا: could be .. i never used the word .. but that doesnt mean anything :)

to create a list (the black dots) you can do the following

you define place [ul] and [/ul] around the list
each list item has [li] in front of it
(after each list item you can place [/li] but it isnt really needed)

so a list of animales would be
[ul]
[li]dog
[li]cat
[li]horse
[/ul]


  • dog
  • cat
  • horse


(replace the [] by <> to make it work for real :))

7. Aprile 2006, 12:50:02
Expired 
Argomento: Re:
Hrqls: Well, I'm almost certain about the voyage one. It's a trip or journey by sea. Water should be involved somehow.

Let's wait for our native friends to give us a hand with it.

By the way, how do you make those black dots?

7. Aprile 2006, 12:45:00
Hrqls 
Argomento: Re:
رضا: my 'feeling' tells me

  • trip : short distance
  • travel : the act itself, or when the trip is still busy
  • voyage : longer time
  • journy (journey?) : about the same as voyage, i think voyage is an older word and not used much anymore ?
  • excursion : you have something of interest to watch during the trip/voyage

7. Aprile 2006, 12:17:52
Expired 
Argomento: Re:
Pedro Martínez: The explanation you provided supports what that link Marfitalu gave us and the book I have. So I guess it's all clear now what the difference really is.

English is full of words that are different in English, but in Farsi we use the same, or almost the same words for them.

Trip, Travel, Journy, Voyage, Excursion are a few such words.

I know how voyage is different from others, it's a trip by sea, but the rest are quite similar.

Take these examples:

1) My ... to work took more than 2 hours this morning.
2) For our holidays next year, we're going on a ten-day ... to Australia.

3) We always go on a day ... to France in December to buy Christmas presents.

4) The price of this holiday includes a full-day ... to a place of cultural interest.

5) He's hoping to go on a(n) ... to the Himalayas next year.

7. Aprile 2006, 12:12:51
Expired 
Argomento: Re:
Mr. Shumway and Pedro: Interesting.

7. Aprile 2006, 12:06:22
Pedro Martínez 
Argomento: Re:
رضا: The English verb 'visit' is derived from the Middle English visiten, ev. from Old French visiter, from Latin visitare, frequentative of visere, which means to want to see, go to see, from videre, to see.

7. Aprile 2006, 12:04:09
toedder 
Argomento: Re:
Modificato da toedder (7. Aprile 2006, 12:04:34)
رضا: yes, both are derived from latin visitare.
edit: not sure about the exact word ;)

7. Aprile 2006, 12:02:41
Expired 
Argomento: Re:
Marfitalu: So do you have any idea if that VISTA is any related to VISIT in English?

I bet it must be. Both the spelling and meaning are quite similar.

7. Aprile 2006, 11:50:06
Hrqls 
Argomento: Re:
Pedro Martínez: lol! well at least they had the courage to change something ... to bad they were as blonde as me though ;)

7. Aprile 2006, 11:48:39
Pedro Martínez 
Argomento: Re:
Hrqls: Heh, if I were like you, I would be constantly yelling when watching TV or reading newspapers.
I remember a situation when there was this sentence written on TV: "Mají doma krokodýli" (There should be 'y' at the end). After a minute or two, I guess after a phone call from some viewer, they changed it to "Mají doma krokodíli". LOL Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa

7. Aprile 2006, 11:38:55
Hrqls 
Argomento: Re:
Pedro Martínez: yes very ugly :)
we have 2 plural forms in dutch indeed -en and -s .. most words use -en though i think ... i dont know of any rule to know if i should use -s or -en .. thats pure 'feeling' :)
(i guess foreign words use -s ?)

'articles' ? hmm never knew about that .. no wonder i couldnt find it :)

i also see a lot of people (in every job, level of education, etc.) use 'een hele mooie auto' while it should be 'een heel mooie auto'
(a very beautiful car)

this is because 'heel' in that sentence points to 'mooie' and not to 'auto' ... its a personal pet peeve of me ... every time i hear it on the news, see it in the news paper (its even written down! not just speech), etc. i yell out! :)
(my gf recently joins me in the yelling ;))

7. Aprile 2006, 11:32:33
Pedro Martínez 
Argomento: Re:
Hrqls: That's an interesting point about the articles. In Czech, there are no special words for them, but they are formed as suffixes and their usage is more complex. I often have the same feeling that in the future, we'll have only one gender, just like the English, as people keep mixing and mixing them. :)

How 'bout 'pions'? :) Is that "ugly too? LOL

7. Aprile 2006, 11:24:22
Hrqls 
Argomento: Re:
Pedro Martínez: *nod* my gf had to write 'pawns' in dutch ...

1 pawn = 1 pion
2 pawns = 2 pionnen

'pionnen' looks ugly though so she thought .. and i wasnt sure either ... but 'pionen' looks even more ugly ;)
it turned out to be 'pionnen' .. which is logically as well when you think of the rules again :)

7. Aprile 2006, 11:22:19
Hrqls 
Argomento: Re:
Pedro Martínez: in dutch we have only 2 words which can be used in front of words .. i cant find the proper english name ('lidwoord' in dutch) .. like 'the' in english and 'le,la,les' in french and 'die,der,das' in german .. we have 'de, het' in dutch

'de' is for female and male word and plural
'het' is for neutral words

lately i notice a lot of people using 'de' when they should use 'het'

also 'this' has 2 forms ('deze' and 'dit')
'that' as well ('die' and 'dat')

lately i hear a lot of people use the male/female/plural form for neutral words

i guess we are going to 1 form in the future

7. Aprile 2006, 11:21:23
Pedro Martínez 
Argomento: Re:
Hrqls: Right. That's how it works in all languages with multiple letters for the same sounds. Reza would probably be able to tell whole stories about all those 'Z's and 'S's in Farsi. :)
Fencer: The Czech "translation" is perfect, of course. As far as I can tell, however...:) Plus note that I said "almost".

7. Aprile 2006, 11:15:07
Fencer 
Argomento: Re:
Pedro Martínez: I do. See the BrainKing translation to Czech.

7. Aprile 2006, 11:14:36
Hrqls 
Argomento: Re:
Pedro Martínez: yes, as well as the 'f' and 'v' and the 's' and 'z' in the middle of some words .. write them down and one version will look 'ugly' .. so you use the other one :)

7. Aprile 2006, 11:13:30
Pedro Martínez 
Argomento: Re:
Hrqls: I bet the Dutch 'g' and 'ch' can be quite tricky, huh? Same thing with the Czech 'i' vs. 'y' and 's' vs. 'z'. It seems to be almost impossible to find a Czech who would speak and especially write proper Czech. :)

7. Aprile 2006, 11:05:47
Hrqls 
Argomento: Re:
Pedro Martínez: very true about native speakers ... if i am not sure about something in dutch i pronounce both possibilities and chose the one which 'feels right' :)

the same when i ponder over the spelling of a word .. i write down both spellings and chose the one which 'looks or feels right' :)

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