• Thelsim
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      31 hour ago

      Something I like about the language is the homonyms.
      Like pad means both toad and path, but then you have a voetpad (foot path/ foot toad), fietspad(cycling path/ bicycle toad) or a zebrapad (zebra crossing/ zebra toad).

      The latter ones don’t exist, just to be clear :)

    • @kuneho@lemmy.world
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      11 hour ago

      in hungarian, it’s like “shield bearer” (teknős, teknő (shield, kinda) + s, which turns this into an adjective, someone/something with a shield)

    • @beansbeansbeans@lemmy.world
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      4 hours ago

      Dutch is so whimsical. I personally giggle at winkelwagen. Winkel = shop, wagen = cart. Also, love that they say helaas pindakaas, meaning “that’s too bad”, but if literally translated means “unfortunately, peanut butter.”

    • @JASN_DE@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      Exact same usage in German: Schildkröte.

      But its not like the English language doesn’t do the exact same thing.

      Most languages: Ananas

      English: pineapple

        • @umbraroze@lemmy.world
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          73 hours ago

          Gets even weirder in Finnish, because it’s “kilpikonna”. Someone in ye olde times just straight up translated the Swedish name. Got none of the Indo-European roots in sight, but it still makes sense. Vaguely toady creature that has shields!

          (Only problem are the homonyms. “kilpi” also means registration plate, and “konna” also means “villain, thief”. So every time some random person goes around nicking plates off cars, the journalists think they are very clever again, even when the joke has been made before numerous times. Poor turtles! They don’t deserve this!)

        • @petersr@lemmy.world
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          25 hours ago

          Jokes on you, in Danish it is “Skildpadde”. “Padde” is toad, sure, but “skild” doesn’t really make any sense!

          (Perhaps it is an ancient Danish word for shield (skjold), but no one would use it)

        • @Shou@lemmy.world
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          227 hours ago

          Apple used to be the general word for fruit. Hence why so many languages call potatoes “earth apple” or oranges a form of “yellow apple” or “applesin”