Visit our English Gay Dictionary, with more than 450 expressions, to know how to say gay in English. It is part of our LGBT dictionary with more than 160...
How to say gay in Swahili Below are the words of our Swahili Gay Dictionary that we will expand in new editions. If you know any more, please, contact us. But first some information about the language and where it is spoken. Swahili is a language of the Niger-Congo family spoke...
No matter how early I came down, I would find him on the veranda, smoking cigarettes, or otherwise his man would be there with a message to say that his master would shortly join me if I would kindly wait. How often do you practice? In what manner. 2013 August 3, “Boundary...
Ung Tongue— Hello (This is a made-up language, like Pig latin. In it 'hello' is pronounced Hung-ee-lung-lung-oh.) Urdu - adaab or salam or as salam alei kum (the full form, to which the reply would be waa lay kum assalaam in most cases) Vietnamese— xin chào (pronounced...
From Deolali (the name of a former British army camp 100 miles north-east of Bombay, used as a transit station for soldiers awaiting transport back to Britain) + tap (from Persian or Urdu تب (tab, “malarial fever”), ultimately from Sanskrit ताप (tāpa, “heat; fever...
then cover up the foreign word, look only at the English and see if you could remember how to say it in the language you’re learning, then go on to the next word, then the next, and the next, and then go back to the first to see if you remembered it, and so on through the...
Oh, English. You’re complicated in some ways, but we really take for granted how easy you make it to pluralize a noun! Because English makes it so deceptively simple, developers often build things in a way that overlooks how complex it can be to make nouns plural in other languages. ...
What is lakh plural? Numeral. lakh (plurallakhs) (India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka) One hundred thousand; 100,000. Often used with units of money. quotations ▼ What do we say lakh in English? In Indian English, a lakh isa hundred thousand, especially when referring to this sum of rupees. ...
Would anybody volunteer to say a sentence, non obscene, non derogatory, that has never been spoken before on earth, ever? Here. I'll start. "It's surprisingly easy to get a purple tie on eBay if you don't care much about quality." I could imagine no one else in the world has sa...
“The cat…” is a very small fraction of the hundred or so common object nouns in most peoples vocabulary. But changing the near certainty of “mat” to say “tap” makes the sentance a good deal less memorable (unless you happen to be a cat owner that has a favourate place such as...