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Learning French and German you see how much English is a mishmash of the two. I.e. begin vs commence, end vs finish, leave vs depart, firm vs company. Hope is German but the opposite: despair is French.
That's because the English people are a mishmash resulting from multiple waves of immigration. The only native British people are Welsh and Scottish, and have their own languages
Learning French and German you see how much English is a mishmash of the two. I.e. begin vs commence, end vs finish, leave vs depart, firm vs company. Hope is German but the opposite: despair is French.
The more Deutsch I'm exposed too the more English synonyms I'm confused by. Any attempt to reason the difference and it's Kopfschmerzen zeit.
I'd have a rant about cognates n all, it's like English in a cunning disguise, as Baldrick would say.
So why does English have two words to explain the same thing?
Because it's a stupid language.
Learning French and German you see how much English is a mishmash of the two. I.e. begin vs commence, end vs finish, leave vs depart, firm vs company. Hope is German but the opposite: despair is French.
What's the difference between the two? I'm trying to explain to a German colleague and failing.
None.
But if you had said width and depth, then yes the difference is:
Width is going from left to right (or the other way) as you look at it while standing up.
Depth is going away from you (so, near to far) - as used in photography with depth of focus/depth of field.
Height is top to bottom.
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