For a school project...
please tell me how to say "the end" in as many languages as possible. I would especially like to know how to say it in Japanese, French, Spanish, and Mandarin Chinese.
2007-04-26
15:48:07
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18 answers
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asked by
Telltale Muffin
3
in
Society & Culture
➔ Languages
By the way, Yuki is right. I'm aiming for like a closing credits sort of thing, such as you would see at the end of a film.
2007-04-26
16:01:24 ·
update #1
Someone said Gaelic: Slan, Slan is Irish for bye.
Native Gaelic speaker here. Ag deireadh means the end
2007-04-26 16:10:01
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Portuguese: O fim.
Spanish: El fin
German: Das Ende
French: La fin
2007-04-27 15:10:52
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answer #2
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answered by Falco 7
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German: die Schule (between dee SHOOL-uh and dee SHOOL-er) Spanish: la escuela (la es-KWAY-luh) Italian: la scuola (skoo-OH-lah) All German nouns are capitalized, so because it somewhat is why "die Schule" is. I coated the particular articles with the words and contained in the pronunciations, the strain is going on the capital letters. i comprehend the thank you to jot down college contained in right here languages, yet i do no longer understand the thank you to pronounce them and that i do no longer understand the particular articles the two. Czech: Škola Portuguese: Escola Finnish: Koulu Danish: Skole desire that facilitates.
2016-10-03 23:31:47
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answer #3
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answered by carol 4
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In French : "Fin" at the end of a movie, but "la fin" for anything else (la = the)
In Russian : at the end of a movie : Bcë (in cyrillic alphabet B is pronounced like V, C is pronounced like S, and Ë is pronounced like YO. So bcë is pronounced v'syo.)
2007-04-27 03:13:00
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answer #4
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answered by Thomas 2
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In French it's "la fin" but at the end of a film or a book just put "fin".
2007-04-26 21:16:11
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answer #5
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answered by Dori 6
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Spanish el fin
2007-04-26 15:51:36
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answer #6
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answered by whitebuffalo 3
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japanese -
owari
終り
whenever i see it at the end of french movies, the end was always spelled "fin" without the "the". I dunno if i'm right though.
In mandarin chinese it sounds like "jier zhong"
jier as in the same word in "drama".
since i don't know the actual pinyin, its hard from me to type it in chinese.
I'm assuming these "the ends" are for things like movies, stories, etc. and not "the end" as in "the end of the road".
2007-04-26 15:52:29
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answer #7
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answered by yukidomari 5
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In Italian: Fine.
2007-04-26 20:59:47
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answer #8
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answered by Sbadiglio 4
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In the case of film credits, French is "Fin".
Japanese is 終。
2007-04-26 16:08:41
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answer #9
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answered by paladin 3
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Esperanto
La fino
Pronounced; lah FEE-noh
Emphasis on the capitals. (Second to last sylable always).
Ĝis!
2007-04-26 22:46:17
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answer #10
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answered by Jagg 5
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