spire of coiled dragon tails
It was made to resemble a crocodile but the architect had never seen a crocodile. Let's be honest about our history.
spire of coiled dragon tails
It was made to resemble a crocodile but the architect had never seen a crocodile. Let's be honest about our history.
Sorry I just checked and saw all the demon names (in particular lügner) and was convinced, so i edited just as you posted.
And it's like... all the names? I don't think a single name I've seen so far isn't just a random German word
EditQuery solved. They are just German words.
He fails the "didn't also commit a sex crime" criteria pretty fucking hard
More like tamerLAME
Roger is not part of pink Floyd and hasn't been since the 80s
It is kinda neat that pinyin marks the suprasegmental phonemes of Mandarin in a way that's relatively easy to understand (Tone markers), but pinyin is also very clearly built around Chinese (And it wouldn't make sense for it not to be).
The problem with universality here is that you'd need not only to include all the different normal phonetic notations, but also all the various modifications like tone, stiff voice, creaky voice, and so on, and have people remember it, only to end up with a system of notation that is highly non phonetic for most users (Unless we just get rid of orthography/spelling) and has like 20 letters or symbols per language that aren't used (It would of course be differrent parts of the new system you would never use depending on your language). So we'd be back to where we started in some ways, ahead in others, and also taking a step back.
I like Frankenstekn can only look in fear at what I have created.
Normally the D is "Valley girl" mode, except in the name Mads. In almost every other word where the D marks Stød you've got the gist. Kinda.
Like, okay, I don't know if I can trust you with this. But the difference between the word "Dog" (Hund) and the word "She" (Hun) is this glottal stop/vocal fry.
There is however also no way to know when a D marks this or when it's a Th sound or a normal D sound
Danish uses laryngealization as a suprasegmental phoneme.
In other words Danish differentiates between words based on the absence or presence of an intensified "creaky voice" or glottal stop. In other words, whether or not you use an intense vocal fry (For a single vowel sound) changes the meaning of words and sentences. This phenomenon is called "Stød". We differentiate between a word that has Stød and one that does not with a D (Sometimes). Technically the D is silent, instead marking a modification to another sound we don't have a letter for. (Or in the case of specifically the word Mads, marking the absence of such a modification)
Edit: it's like how in English you can change the meaning of a word through stressing a syllable, but it's vocal fry/glottal stop
The easy answers is that the D modifies the A sound, the full answer involves teaching you about aspects of phonology that Danish shares with like indigenous Mazatec people, podcasters and like nobody else.
A friend of mine is the only fan of a particular musician (No, really. He's 99% of his listens on Spotify, almost all views on youtube and the only guy to buy merch). Despite this the musician absolutely refused to perform in the part of the country my friend is from despite being offered.
Anyway the musician released a new song and according to my friend it's a huge disappointment. Which means this musician has disappointed 100% of his fans.