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Reply to: Witty thread

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Previously on "Witty thread"

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  • Lucy
    replied
    Yes, Officer Pantsoffski says so.

    Leave a comment:


  • Alexi's Sister
    replied
    Originally posted by DimPrawn
    Is that your knob AtW?
    Bully boy

    May your eggs turns to cubes and a suppuration in corners

    Leave a comment:


  • snaw
    replied
    Yep - and english has 40 - read the link. Depends on the definition and which language but basically it's a load of bollocks give or take a few words (Depending on language).

    [QUOTE]There are two major errors in this myth. The first is that Eskimo speakers have more words for snow than English speakers do. In fact, they have about the same number, perhaps a few more and perhaps a few less depending on whichEskimo language one is focusing on. And as in English, these words are related to each other. Blizzards and flurries are two different types of snow, but they are snow nonetheless, and we recognize that. Speakers of Eskimo languages categorize snow in the same way.

    The second error comes from a misconception of what should be considered "words". When it comes to describing snow in Eskimo languages, the words are limitless. And as in other polysynthetic languages, this rule is the same regardless of whether they are describing snow, cheese, trees, cars, or anything at all. This is because their language is structured differently than English. Because Eskimo is polysynthetic, it describes things in words of unlimited length.(/QUOTE]

    Leave a comment:


  • DimPrawn
    replied
    49 words for snow and ice from West Greenlandic

    'sea-ice' siku (in plural = drift ice)
    'pack-ice/large expanses of ice in motion' sikursuit, pl. (compacted drift ice/ice field = sikut iqimaniri)
    'new ice' sikuliaq/sikurlaaq (solid ice cover = nutaaq.)
    'thin ice' sikuaq (in plural = thin ice floes)
    'rotten (melting) ice floe' sikurluk
    'iceberg' iluliaq (ilulisap itsirnga = part of iceberg below waterline)
    '(piece of) fresh-water ice' nilak
    'lumps of ice stranded on the beach' issinnirit, pl.
    'glacier' (also ice forming on objects) sirmiq (sirmirsuaq = Inland Ice)
    'snow blown in (e.g. doorway)' sullarniq
    'rime/hoar-frost' qaqurnak/kanirniq/kaniq
    'frost (on inner surface of e.g. window)' iluq
    'icy mist' pujurak/pujuq kanirnartuq
    'hail' nataqqurnat
    'snow (on ground)' aput (aput sisurtuq = avalanche)
    'slush (on ground)' aput masannartuq
    'snow in air/falling' qaniit (qanik = snowflake)
    'air thick with snow' nittaalaq (nittaallat, pl. = snowflakes; nittaalaq nalliuttiqattaartuq = flurries)
    'hard grains of snow' nittaalaaqqat, pl.
    'feathery clumps of falling snow' qanipalaat
    'new fallen snow' apirlaat
    'snow crust' pukak
    'snowy weather' qannirsuq/nittaatsuq
    'snowstorm' pirsuq/pirsirsursuaq
    'large ice floe' iluitsuq
    'snowdrift' apusiniq
    'ice floe' puttaaq
    'hummocked ice/pressure ridges in pack ice' maniillat/ingunirit, pl.
    'drifting lump of ice' kassuq (dirty lump of glacier-calved ice = anarluk)
    'ice-foot (left adhering to shore)' qaannuq
    'icicle' kusugaq
    'opening in sea ice imarnirsaq/ammaniq (open water amidst ice = imaviaq)
    'lead (navigable fissure) in sea ice' quppaq
    'rotten snow/slush on sea' qinuq
    'wet snow falling' imalik
    'rotten ice with streams forming' aakkarniq
    'snow patch (on mountain, etc.)' aputitaq
    'wet snow on top of ice' putsinniq/puvvinniq
    'smooth stretch of ice' manirak (stretch of snow-free ice = quasaliaq)
    'lump of old ice frozen into new ice' tuaq
    'new ice formed in crack in old ice' nutarniq
    'bits of floating' naggutit, pl.
    'hard snow' mangiggal/mangikaajaaq
    'small ice floe (not large enough to stand on)' masaaraq
    'ice swelling over partially frozen river, etc. from water seeping up to the surface' siirsinniq
    'piled-up ice-floes frozen together' tiggunnirit
    'mountain peak sticking up through inland ice' nunataq
    'calved ice (from end of glacier)' uukkarnit
    'edge of the (sea) ice' sinaaq

    It depends on the definition of "words"

    Leave a comment:


  • snaw
    replied
    Originally posted by TheOmegaMan
    Well it's like the words for snow in Eskimo. They have so many because there is lot of snow about.

    On this board you will find a lot of reproductive organs.
    No they don't. Urban myth.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eskimo_words_for_snow

    Leave a comment:


  • TheOmegaMan
    replied
    Originally posted by Nina
    What for many names for reproductive organ?
    Well it's like the words for snow in Eskimo. They have so many because there is lot of snow about.

    On this board you will find a lot of reproductive organs.

    Leave a comment:


  • EqualOpportunities
    replied
    Originally posted by Nina
    What for many names for reproductive organ?
    You flying over for the Christmas do, Nina?

    Leave a comment:


  • wobbegong
    replied
    Originally posted by Nina
    What for many names for reproductive organ?
    WTF?

    Leave a comment:


  • Nina
    replied
    Originally posted by DimPrawn
    Is that your knob AtW?
    What for many names for reproductive organ?

    Leave a comment:


  • Pope Benedict XVI
    replied
    Originally posted by DimPrawn
    Is that your knob AtW?

    His holiness just spat lunch out

    Leave a comment:


  • DimPrawn
    replied
    Is that your knob AtW?

    Leave a comment:


  • AtW
    started a topic Witty thread

    Witty thread

    I start:

    Þ
    Last edited by AtW; 27 November 2006, 12:26. Reason: Fixed spelling

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