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I need the standard form, not slang, and with correct accents and things like that. Please and Thanks. Oh and I also need Filipino too.

2007-12-20 13:29:55 · 11 answers · asked by Pauline S 1 in Society & Culture Languages

I need the standard text, not slang, with accents. Please and Thanks. Oh I also need Filipino too.

And yes I've tried all the free translations websites, that was my first thing, but these are the ones I could not find any or there were multiple, which is why I asked.

2007-12-20 13:53:09 · update #1

11 answers

go to http://www.freetranslation.com/ and you can type in and find whatever you want with whatever language
this is Russian- Носок

2007-12-20 13:32:52 · answer #1 · answered by gm 4 · 1 0

Hi! In hungarian sock is "zokni".
Note: the singular and plural form is the same, because hungarian uses singular when speaking about pairs.

If you need the accent as well, go onto the site szotar.sztaki.hu (it is an english-hungarian online dictionary), type in the empty field the word 'zokni', then choose "kiejtés a szó fölött" (=pronouciation above the word) in the second select list, and click on "keresés" (=search). You will see a little speaker after the word, click on and listen:)

2007-12-21 06:54:06 · answer #2 · answered by Adri 2 · 0 0

In Hindi-Urdu sock = mozaa मोज़ा, موزہ

2007-12-21 19:21:20 · answer #3 · answered by omlick 4 · 0 0

Polish- skarpeta ( theres is also skarpetka, but that's like saying doggy instead of dog )

2007-12-22 21:08:22 · answer #4 · answered by rybka 3 · 0 0

Irish : stoca pronounced stucka

2007-12-21 04:44:05 · answer #5 · answered by jk 7 · 0 0

urdu sock= jarab (prounced ja rub)single jock
jarabian more than one sock

2007-12-22 00:30:39 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Finnish - sukka

2007-12-22 05:49:07 · answer #7 · answered by punapetteri 4 · 0 0

Persian is easy when you get used to it

2007-12-20 21:49:59 · answer #8 · answered by M. R 1 · 0 1

in chinese: 襪子
and in russian: носок

2007-12-20 21:36:12 · answer #9 · answered by mattiadomain 1 · 1 1

Google "FREE TRANSLATIONS" and check out your options.

2007-12-20 21:35:34 · answer #10 · answered by Bobby Jim 7 · 0 1

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