I was minding my own business driving, then I saw a road block. I was stopped by 2 young girls in nice outfit.
I wind down my windows, and one of them handed me...
Re: Road block...
Hmmm.. were they offering one can and magically you ended up with two ?
The language on the left one is interesting. If 'c' is assumed slavic pronounciation as in 'chhh' then it really looks like 'thé ('tea' in French but comes from some parts of China) peeeeccchh ice' which sounds like some English-based slang.
The language on the left one is interesting. If 'c' is assumed slavic pronounciation as in 'chhh' then it really looks like 'thé ('tea' in French but comes from some parts of China) peeeeccchh ice' which sounds like some English-based slang.
Nov 24th, '10, 16:21
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Herb_Master
Re: Road block...
The same can turned round to the other sideskilfautdire wrote:
The language on the left one is interesting.
It is 'Malay'skilfautdire wrote:
If 'c' is assumed slavic pronounciation as in 'chhh' then it really looks like 'thé ('tea' in French but comes from some parts of China) peeeeccchh ice' which sounds like some English-based slang.
used to be called 'bahasa melayu' now called 'bahasa malaysia'
http://www.bahasa-malaysia-simple-fun.com/
the 'c' is indeed pronounced 'ch'
not much French influence, mainly British, many of the words are pronounced the same way as british/english language words but the spelled the way that the sound is achieved with Malay letters.
'ais' = 'ice'
Teh [intoduced to Malaya by the British] is however pronounced 'tay'.
Ask for 'teh' and you get it hot with milk, often condensed milk. If you want it without milk - ask for 'teh o' - it will still be hot. If you want it cold ask for 'teh o ais' and with lemon /lime 'teh o ais limau'
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iced_tea
Re: Road block...
Now at this point in time I have three options to reply with:Herb_Master wrote:The same can turned round to the other sideskilfautdire wrote:
The language on the left one is interesting.
a)
b) A torrent of words
c) Doh!
I think I'll simply choose a)
I used the French equivalent, but it could have been the German 'Tee' also. My impression was that the sound of that word was ending in 'ay', which is the case. 'ais' is also familiar in pronounciation since it looks pretty much like 'Eis' in German.Herb_Master wrote: It is 'Malay' used to be called 'bahasa melayu' now called 'bahasa malaysia'
http://www.bahasa-malaysia-simple-fun.com/
the 'c' is indeed pronounced 'ch'
not much French influence, mainly British, many of the words are pronounced the same way as british/english language words but the spelled the way that the sound is achieved with Malay letters.
'ais' = 'ice'
Teh [intoduced to Malaya by the British] is however pronounced 'tay'.
Thanks for the information. It is certainly not a language I'd be exploring (.... only so many years in a lifetime) and I'm not saying that in any negative way. From the web page above though, it seems all similarities ends up quickly. This is not like Haitian créole for instance in which many words are borrowed, which could have been a vague impression from the writing on the can.
I think I'll again use a) here !Herb_Master wrote:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iced_tea
Reminds me somehow in almost an unrelated way of Kryten when asked why the lights went out on the Red Dwarf spaceship: "Because there is nooo power".