View Full Version : Words in your language that are just silly.
Keeping up with the other language thread, let's list some of the silly words from our wide range of languages we've got here on SUBSIM. :up:
Dragon in Finnish is 'lohikäärme', which literally means salmonsnake (lohi/käärme, salmon/snake).
https://imgflip.com/s/meme/Jackie-Chan-WTF.jpg
antikristuseke
04-08-16, 08:48 AM
kuulilennuteetunneliluuk
it means "bullets flight path tunnel hatch" and is spelled the same regardless of which end you read it from.:dead:
AVGWarhawk
04-08-16, 09:04 AM
Erinaceous
Like a hedge hog.
Jimbuna
04-08-16, 09:16 AM
Snool
A servile person.
Erinaceous
Like a hedge hog.
That's a great word! Latin words are always cool. :yep:
Another Finnish silliness is 'kalakukko', which literally translates to fishcock (the male chicken).
It's very tasty though.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalakukko
Aktungbby
04-08-16, 09:41 AM
Erinaceous
Like a hedge hog.
http://i.imgur.com/BPfUsqw.jpg Alaarm! Crash dive! Prepare for erinaceous attack!:-? YIPES! U-666, My avatar!! lost with all hands 2/10/44 mysteriously, but- in a postwar assessment, to HMS Fencer depthcharges- was participating in Wolfpack IGEL- (http://www.cnrs-at)at the time...actually one of Doenitz's bigger failures. Igel in German is Hedgehog!:hmmm: :shifty: :dead:
AVGWarhawk
04-08-16, 09:42 AM
Another Finnish silliness is 'kalakukko', which literally translates to fishcock (the male chicken).
It's very tasty though.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalakukko
I'll take your word for it.
AVGWarhawk
04-08-16, 09:45 AM
Flitterwochen
Fleeting week.
Flitterwochen
Fleeting week.
Ah, that reminds me of the Finnish word for Leap Day, 'karkauspäivä' which literally translates to "escape day".
HunterICX
04-08-16, 10:12 AM
'Broodje Aap' translates to Monkey Sandwich
It's to desribe one's story as an Urban myth/Legend.
Eichhörnchen
04-08-16, 02:14 PM
spelled the same regardless of which end you read it from.
That is known as a "palindrome" which is silly, because it sounds like a building.
Wolferz
04-09-16, 10:32 AM
That is known as a "palindrome" which is silly, because it sounds like a building.
Isn't that where Sara hangs out?:haha:
That is known as a "palindrome" which is silly, because it sounds like a building.
Speaking of which, the longest palindrome word is the Finnish saippuakivikauppias (=soapstone vendor). :yep:
Eichhörnchen
04-09-16, 11:15 AM
Don't expect you meet many of those :O:
Eichhörnchen
04-09-16, 02:14 PM
http://i.imgur.com/o3zT8Ro.png?1 "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious!"
http://i.imgur.com/xy9nxTC.jpg "Ummm... diddle-iddle-iddle, um-diddle-i..."
Jimbuna
04-10-16, 06:57 AM
METHIONYLTHREONYLTHREONYGLUTAMINYLARGINYL…ISOLEUCI NE
:hmmm:
http://i.imgur.com/evcEzMF.gif
Snollygoster
https://twitter.com/daily_politics/status/719121152480649216
Jimbuna
04-10-16, 09:43 AM
Bumfuzzle
Definition:
confuse; perplex; fluster.
"Butter-fly"
How can a civilised people call a Schmetterling "butterfly", that is beyond me, tossers.
Schroeder
04-11-16, 05:14 AM
flabbergasted....:doh:
Jimbuna
04-11-16, 06:36 AM
Cattywampus
Definition:
dialect : askew, awry, kitty-corner.
Kustantaa meaning "publish", but it's close to kusta antaa, which means literally "to give piss".
Eichhörnchen
04-11-16, 12:37 PM
Same thing, where our newspapers are concerned :)
Jimbuna
04-12-16, 01:26 PM
Gardyloo
Definition:
Used in Edinburgh as a warning cry when it was customary to throw slops from the windows into the streets.
Eichhörnchen
04-14-16, 12:07 AM
http://i.imgur.com/9AYfcfN.jpg What's wrong with eichhörnchen?
Jimbuna
04-14-16, 08:12 AM
Taradiddle
Definition:
1 : a fib 2 : pretentious nonsense
Schroeder
04-14-16, 10:48 AM
Why is "pounds" abbreviated "lbs"?:doh:
Why is "pounds" abbreviated "lbs"?:doh:
Because Romans, and Romans are always cool.
(Click! (http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/secondary/SMIGRA*/Libra.html))
Schroeder
04-14-16, 12:09 PM
Because Romans, and Romans are always cool.
(Click! (http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/secondary/SMIGRA*/Libra.html))
Thanks.:salute:
Jimbuna
04-15-16, 06:24 AM
Billingsgate
Definition:
coarsely abusive language
ExFishermanBob
04-21-16, 04:29 PM
"really" and "quite".
For instance, consider the difference between:-
That's good (possibly it's good, or just dismissive)
That's quite good (a little effusive)
That's really quite good (effusive)
That's really good (overly effusive)
Really, that's quite good (condescending, but a good effort for someone of your calibre).
Really, that's good (it's bad)
Really. (disbelief / I disagree / astonishment)
Really? (are you quite mad?)
Quite. (I agree wholeheartedly)
Mad (mad)
Quite mad (bonkers)
Really mad (angry)
Mind you I am English.
ExFishermanBob
04-21-16, 05:05 PM
...and don't get me started on "rather"
Onkel Neal
04-21-16, 05:30 PM
One phrase I am supremely tired of hearing is "at the end of the day"
Gwd, I hear that 50 times a day,:/\\!!
ExFishermanBob
04-21-16, 06:10 PM
At the end?
Onkel Neal
04-21-16, 07:14 PM
At the end?
Sometimes, but mostly all the time.:03:
So, at the end of the day, it really gets on your wick?...
<O>
Jimbuna
04-22-16, 06:48 AM
Snickersnee
Definition:
1 archaic : to engage in cut-and-thrust fighting with knives 2 : a large knife
Example:
"Oh, never shall I / Forget the cry, / Or the shriek that shrieked he, / As I gnashed my teeth, / When from its sheath / I drew my snickersnee!" — The Mikado by W. S. Gilbert
About the Word:
Snickersnee comes from the Dutch phrase steken of snijden, "to thrust or cut." Over time, snick and snee, snick-or-snee, and snickersnee followed.
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