124 points

queue

Most “Q” words are weird to start with, then just adding a bunch of silent vowels at the end doesn’t make it any less so.

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71 points

It’s a Q: a bunch of vowels are lined up behind it!

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14 points

God damn it. That’s good.

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1 point
*

Thanks, stole it myself!

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20 points

Thank the French for this one

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11 points

oiseau – for when consonants are overrated. (it means bird).

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9 points

Eau - for when consonants are unnecessary

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4 points

How is that pronounced?

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4 points

Ah the french…alwaysbeencelebrated for it’s…excellence!

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7 points

I knew an English speaking American born well off white dude that pronounced this as “kway”. It was the most annoying thing that came out of his mouth besides all of the bragging and “I’m smarter than everyone” attitude.

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58 points

Gerrymandering sounds like some sort of magic class.

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16 points

It’s from a political cartoon depicting a corrupt districting plan as a salamander.

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19 points

A plan proposed by a man named Elbridge Gerry.

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7 points

I always thought it sounded like Jerry Seinfeld between takes/shoots just hanging around the set. Not doing anything. Just ignoring everything around him. He’s just gerrymandering around the studio.

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2 points

Gerry meandering

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58 points

pulchritudinous

such an ugly word, yet it means “beautiful”

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8 points

It’s so similar to “putrid”

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4 points

and “sepulchre”

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48 points

Be, is, are, was, am, were, being, been… are all the same word.

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38 points
*

Languages that conjugate every verb for every person:

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14 points

Same with “go” and “went”.

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4 points

I god.

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4 points

I came

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8 points

“To be” averbs, at least in romance languages usually have a bunch of different forms. “To have” usually too but English is a bit of an exception there.

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4 points

Or not to be…

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2 points

Or not to have…

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6 points

“To be” being highly irregular il a common feature of a lot of Indo-European languages. But there’s worse. In Spanish, “ser” and “estar” both mean “to be”, but have wildly different meanings and cannot be substituted for one another.

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5 points

“be” is an irregular verb in all languages, so it’s not unique to English. Bonus fun fact: Russian doesn’t have the verb “to be”.

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2 points
*

Yes, and I feel like it’s even more irregular in Russian than just not existing. It’s not used in present tense as a copula, so in most cases where you would expect it in English. However it absolutely exists – быть – and is used like normal verbs in both past and future tense.

For example: «я здесь» – “I am here” (same word order, but this sentence has no verb), but «я был здесь» – “I was here”

And in the cases where it is used in present tense, there is a single conjugation regardless of subject: есть (in contrast to all other verbs, I assume at least, which all have distinct conjugations for 1/2/3rd person singular/plural).

A simple example for this would probably be sentences with “there is”, affirming the existence of something, as in “there is a bathroom” – «ванная есть». Contrived example for sure but I can’t think of something better right now.

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2 points

Was going to reply that, it’s not that Russian doesn’t have it, it just gets omitted in the most common form.

But also one interesting thing is that from the examples you gave I can know your gender, because the verb to be is gendered in the past in Russian, which is very unique, I don’t know of any other language where verbs are gendered.

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2 points
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Not in Turkish. It is “olmak” but the actual “to be” as it is used in “I am, they were, etc.” is, now unused “imek”. it has become a suffix and it is completely regular. Just i + person suffix.

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2 points

And it has multiple meanings. “you are sick” can mean that you’re currently sick but can also mean that you’re a sick person. Other languages usually differentiate the verb in those two cases

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46 points

I suppose technically it’s Latin, but I’ve always been fascinated with “syzygy”.

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12 points

That looks like something Snoop Dogg would say.

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5 points

I really only know of this word because of Scott Manley

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