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I learned a word that doesn't exist in my language

46,316 views • 1 year ago •via X (Twitter)

10 Comments

Hector Resendez - Trade School Secrets's profile picture
Hector Resendez - Trade School Secrets1 year ago

And just like that... I finished my 12th newsletter! 🥳 For someone who once thought ‘grammar’ was just the another name for grandma’, this is a big deal. 😅 English is my second language, and I used to struggle with writing. Seriously, my emails looked like autocorrect went rogue. So, I invested in a writing course, learned how to format my thoughts, create hook lines, and now I can actually write a sentence that makes sense.🙌thanks @dickiebush What’s even crazier? My newsletter is on a mission to help 1,000 people across the U.S. get access to the WIOA grant. 🎯 And this grant? It’s like hitting the career lottery jackpot... except instead of cash, it pays for your trade or vocational school tuition. 💼💰🎓 So far, 101 people have taken the leap and started their journey. 101 people who thought, ‘Hmm, free education, maybe I should actually do something about that!’ 🤔 Now, I’m not saying I have a crystal ball, but something tells me 1000 is just around the corner. 👀 If you or someone you know could use a little help in not paying for school, come join over 550 of us here: 👉 PS: If I can go from struggling to finish a text without typos to writing newsletters... you can definitely get this grant.

Kari 🌺 karikore.bsky.social's profile picture
Kari 🌺 karikore.bsky.social1 year ago

The word "cringe" in English, referring to a feeling of discomfort or shame from seeing someone else's actions, is something that has no equivalent in my native language (Spanish). One can say "pena ajena" (meaning "external embarrassment") but we just use the English word 😅

VoX the 3D's profile picture
VoX the 3D1 year ago

I'm more astounded that you have so many phrases for something so close, but don't exactly mean the same thing. I feel I'm going to insult so many people for some reason because I'm trying to say "excuse me".

BlueFoxRanger's profile picture
BlueFoxRanger1 year ago

Someone in the comments suggested that 寄り添う was the closest word to "cuddle," so I put it into Google Translate and got these results. It's suggesting words like "cuddle" and "snuggle up," so perhaps 寄り添う is the closest word to it. 🙂

DalekEric's profile picture
DalekEric1 year ago

In linguistics we define words by the semantic range they occupy. Or the total amount of meaning they cover. The problem is that every single word across every language is ever so slightly like this, where the meaning might be different every so slightly depending on context.

🌸Inuko🌸's profile picture
🌸Inuko🌸1 year ago

がんばれ! There's a lot of ways you can translate it to english, like "good luck" or "try your best" but nothing really captures the same feeling as shouting がんばれ! to hype up a hero show or encourage your friend at a talent show

Fennec's profile picture
Fennec1 year ago

Portuguese has a word no other language has a true direct translation. Saudade, the bitter sweet memories of something that is not avaible, be people, a place or older times, the feeling of nostalgia. Is not uncommon for languages to have a hard or imposible to translate word.

ㄧㄝˋㄕㄥㄧㄕㄥ's profile picture
ㄧㄝˋㄕㄥㄧㄕㄥ1 year ago

I mean, you're language has the same nuances I think of.

🐕🦴 Kori 🦴🐕 🔜FURDU's profile picture
🐕🦴 Kori 🦴🐕 🔜FURDU1 year ago

That is amazing The more i know!

Michwave's profile picture
Michwave1 year ago

That is adorable, heh, to be honest, i wouldn't mind dofferent words for different sorts of close affection, making each one different. Lovely voice and a very interesting video <3

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