English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Languages - December 2006

[Selected]: All categories Society & Culture Languages

could u break it down to say please

2006-12-29 07:12:41 · 9 answers · asked by johnc 4

2006-12-29 07:11:38 · 11 answers · asked by Anonymous

I work with a woman who is always in other people's business, like she does not have enough of her own work to do. For Example, she will burst into your office space/cube and start in quiring about hwat you are working on, then proceed to tell you how she would so this or that. she concerns herself with asking everyone who left a mess in the employee kitchen and how rude it is do so. things like this.. I want to tell he to go jump off a cliff. I am a very sarcastic and mean indiviudual when you push me into a corner and I have just about had it with this woman. Help Please. Yiddish is the best course for me.

2006-12-29 07:09:52 · 11 answers · asked by JMMinDH 2

Or speaks Spanish? Either way how do you say, "What type of music do you like?" in Spanish? lol

Is it "Que tipo de musica te gusta?" Something sounds wrong with that lol...

2006-12-29 06:51:43 · 18 answers · asked by Anonymous

Chelsea: Hey! I hear you are the new one, girl.

Jasmine: [sigh] yes.

Chelsea: Do you speak English?

Jasmine: Not much . . .

[awkward silence]

Chelsea: Sooo, what's your name?

Jasmine: Jasmine.

Chelsea: I'm Chelsea.

Jasmine: Good for you . . .

[the bus arrives]

Chelsea: Um . . . see you tomorrow!

[Chelsea is at Violet's house, in her room]

Chelsea: I tried talking to her, but she showed no interest.

Violet: Maybe she is shy.

Chelsea: Shy?

Violet: Ducks?

Chelsea: What?!

Violet: Ha! Ha! I'm sorry, you have to go . . . I have stuff to do.

Chelsea: Okay. See you at school.

Violet: Whatever.

[at school]

Chelsea: Hi, again. Jasmine, right?

Jasmine: What else what it be? . . .

[Jasmine walks away]

Chelsea: Hey! What's your problem?

Jasmine: My problem? What abou Y-y-you? You have been pestering me since day one.

Chelsea: What?! I am just trying to make friends.

Jasmine: Stop. Just stop.

2006-12-29 06:49:10 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous

in that exact context too...dont change up the grammar or anything..

2006-12-29 06:47:03 · 10 answers · asked by blahhblahhhblahahh 4

2006-12-29 06:44:43 · 3 answers · asked by Sir Alex 6

what does Opossum means , i live in lebanon so i don't really know weird english words !

2006-12-29 06:37:07 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous

Im pretty good @ speakin russian ~ but im Losing my accent because of not staying in Russia ~ ~~!!!

I want to Speak wiz some one ~ Or preferably I wud want to speak wiz a Bot, Like Bonzi buddy type) but no so gay like him. I want like some kind of an Speaking Computer bot. or real ppl :D

any suggestions ??

2006-12-29 06:21:29 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-12-29 06:12:24 · 4 answers · asked by Davy 1

The text in question is on a T-shirt my Mum got me when she was in Holland once, and she told me that the bloke who sold it to her said it's a bit rude (haha) - I even asked a Dutch person what it meant once, they told me but I've forgotten!

Here's the text:

'Ik spreik digitaal

...Zallik jah es de vigtuweile kankah schoppe'

I have pictures of the T-shirt if anybody needs it in context with the picture.

Cheers :)

2006-12-29 05:59:53 · 12 answers · asked by Christopher Woods 2

for example we call bill gates as "gates", steve ballmer as "ballmer", bill clinton as "clinton" and condoleezza rice as "rice". even among friends, we all generally call each other by our last names, and feel more comfortable with this. why so?

2006-12-29 05:59:28 · 10 answers · asked by Rishabh Singla 2

it's italian,i think.

2006-12-29 05:52:43 · 2 answers · asked by smash11 2

2006-12-29 05:49:07 · 2 answers · asked by smash11 2

2006-12-29 05:45:34 · 10 answers · asked by mary_masser 1

2006-12-29 05:43:32 · 2 answers · asked by Ms. Wizard 2

when and why did people start using the 'f' word?

2006-12-29 05:31:45 · 8 answers · asked by plehaq 2

"I know you're out there, somewhere out there"

How do you say that in Italian? Thanks :)

Happy new year!

2006-12-29 05:27:31 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous

2006-12-29 05:00:20 · 17 answers · asked by kay 1

are there any special rules for these? like placement in a sentence or paired with certain words? or is there any aditional information I need to know for their usage? I know todavia and aun mean the same thing and jamas preceding the verb means never and when it follows the verb paired with "no" it means never ever,. but is there anything else about the others? Thanks!

2006-12-29 04:32:07 · 2 answers · asked by fezowez89 2

itz the lyric of inner universe

Angely i demony kruzhili nado mnoj
Rassekali ternii i mlechnye puti
Ne znaet schast'ya tol'ko tot,
Kto ego zova ponyat' ne smog...

I am Calling Calling now, Spirits rise and falling
Soboj ostat'sya dol'she...
Calling Calling, in the depth of longing
Soboj ostat'sya dol'she...

Stand alone... Where was life when it had a meaning...
Stand alone... Nothing's real anymore and...

...Beskonechnyj beg...
Poka zhiva ya mogu starat'sya na letu ne upast',
Ne razuchit'sya mechtat'...lyubit'...
...Beskonechnyj beg...

Calling Calling, For the place of knowing
There's more that what can be linked
Calling Calling, Never will I look away
For what life has left for me
Yearning Yearning, for what's left of loving

Soboj ostat'sya dol'she...
Calling Calling now, Spirits rise and falling
Soboj ostat'sya dol'she...
Calling Calling, in the depth of longing
Soboj ostat'sya dol'she...

2006-12-29 04:30:18 · 4 answers · asked by debbie 2

it's from enya's song "may it be" and it means darkness has come but what language is?and do you know anythig about it?

2006-12-29 04:30:03 · 1 answers · asked by bettinka 1

I need to send a letter to a Brazilian customer:

Dear Mr: Scarpelini:

Please find attached the requested data, the figures were broken down in a friendly manner, to facilitate analysis.

Thank you and have a happy 2007

2006-12-29 04:27:17 · 5 answers · asked by Jim G 5

like Bastet is really pronounced "bast" (with 'a' sound like in ball).
I have heard a theory that the second 't' was added some time long after the use of the name because some people, I think the greeks that came later, thought it was silent like with some words, so the extra 't' was added to emphasised its pronounciation.
This may have led people in the very late future to assume their must have been a vowel sound between the two 't's

2006-12-29 04:17:30 · 2 answers · asked by ancientSEKHMET 1

I do need your help, for English isn't my native language.

I am writing a fantasy story (part of a project my friends and I are engaged in) and it takes place in a kingdom that resembles earth several centuries ago. Two characters are riding the equivalent of a taxi (what is such vehicle called in English, carriage? cab? and how to say they used it? do you say, they stopped a cab, rented a carriage, rented a ride, whistled for a cabbie? Or what? ) .

Also in my story one of the character is fascinated with the idea of a (cab, carriage) specialized in the service of transporting people from place to place for money because he had never seen such service before. He wants to describe the phenomenon, so what would he say?

I would appreciate your help. Thank you.

2006-12-29 04:15:18 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous

she's always fecking right? She's downstairs now, 'waiting for the apology' which is like never gonna come as she's talking cr*p.

I bent over backwards to accomodate her but she's misunderstood the grammar of some of the things I've said and now it's all 'my fault'.

2006-12-29 04:03:56 · 14 answers · asked by smile 3

2006-12-29 03:48:19 · 15 answers · asked by Duanpen Daoloyden 1

I'm looking for it to be in french or itallian
A sexi laungage

2006-12-29 03:42:37 · 7 answers · asked by hersheyshelpings 1

2006-12-29 03:36:02 · 8 answers · asked by londonlee33 2

fedest.com, questions and answers