In your language how do you say???
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Please reply and in your native language (or current country of residence) tell me how you would say: "Welcome to CP." Obviously, english speakers need not reply. :-D
A Plain English signature. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
English: Welcome to CP. Serbian: Dobrodošli na Kod Projekt.
My programming blahblahblah blog. If you ever find anything useful here, please let me know to remove it.
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Please reply and in your native language (or current country of residence) tell me how you would say: "Welcome to CP." Obviously, english speakers need not reply. :-D
A Plain English signature. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
Welkom op CodeProject
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Welkom op CodeProject Bienvenue a CodeProjet Wilkommen and I don't know the rest. (Yes we have 3 official languages here in Belgium) No hurries, no worries.
We sure do :)
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Bienvenido a CodeProject <- for a him Bienvenida a CodeProject <- for a her Bienvenidos a CodeProject <- many hims (and optionally hers also) Bienvenidas a CodeProject <- many hers (no hims) For those that don't know, it's Spanish! :-D [EDIT: Once I was asked that if in Mexico we spoke Mexican :doh:] -- LuisR
Luis Alonso Ramos Intelectix - Chihuahua, Mexico Not much here: My CP Blog!
The amount of sleep the average person needs is five more minutes. -- Vikram A Punathambekar, Aug. 11, 2005 -- modified at 3:00 Tuesday 21st March, 2006
Luis Alonso Ramos wrote:
[EDIT: Once I was asked that if in Mexico we spoke Mexican ]
Hey, we get asked in New Mexico why we speak English... But then there is a 1 in 10 chance they'll be satisfied by hearing some Spanish somewhere.... One of these days I'll actually learn. English or Spanish. ;) _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
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Luis Alonso Ramos wrote:
Once I was asked that if in Mexico we spoke Mexican
Bah! I can't believe how many times I've seen people think the peoples of India speak a language called Indian. X| Cheers, Vikram.
I don't know and you don't either. Militant Agnostic
Vikram A Punathambekar wrote:
I can't believe how many times I've seen people think the peoples of India speak a language called Indian.
If it makes you feel better... the same folks think that every Native American Tribe speaks the same language, Indian. _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
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Vikram A Punathambekar wrote:
I can't believe how many times I've seen people think the peoples of India speak a language called Indian.
If it makes you feel better... the same folks think that every Native American Tribe speaks the same language, Indian. _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
Jeffry J. Brickley wrote:
the same folks think that every Native American Tribe speaks the same language, Indian.
They're not even Indians. :doh: I'm glad to see somebody who doesn't call them Indians. :) Cheers, Vikram.
I don't know and you don't either. Militant Agnostic
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Jeffry J. Brickley wrote:
the same folks think that every Native American Tribe speaks the same language, Indian.
They're not even Indians. :doh: I'm glad to see somebody who doesn't call them Indians. :) Cheers, Vikram.
I don't know and you don't either. Militant Agnostic
Vikram A Punathambekar wrote:
I'm glad to see somebody who doesn't call them Indians.
Actually I usually call them by their tribal names, I live near the Mescelero Apache, I used to live near the Zuni, Dine (Navajo) and Teewan (Pueblo) tribes. Few tribes actually are called their native names for themselves, mostly because their name for themselves almost always translate to English as "The People". Most are named by what the native guides called them, or the Spanish explorers. I believe Navajo means something like "farms in Arroyos" and was in the days of Spanish explorers considered synonomous with "insane". I could easily look up "Welcome to" in any of those languages, I even have a book on Teewan from the Isleta Pueblo somewhere around here... but proper noun/verb usage I wouldn't know. _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
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Please reply and in your native language (or current country of residence) tell me how you would say: "Welcome to CP." Obviously, english speakers need not reply. :-D
A Plain English signature. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
In my native tongue (Malayalam - it's a palindrome too), it would be :- Code Project ilekku swagatham. But most people would just say, Welcome to the Code Project. Some of the older folks often complain how kids don't speak proper Malayalam and instead use a mix of Malayalam and English words together. Regards, Nish
Nish’s thoughts on MFC, C++/CLI and .NET (my blog)
The Ultimate Grid - The #1 MFC grid out there! -
Please reply and in your native language (or current country of residence) tell me how you would say: "Welcome to CP." Obviously, english speakers need not reply. :-D
A Plain English signature. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
Norwegian-Velkommen Danish-Velkommen Swedish-Välkommen Finnish-Tervetuloa Estonian-Tere tulemast German-Willkommen GeirDa
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Luis Alonso Ramos wrote:
Once I was asked that if in Mexico we spoke Mexican
Hi! I have a doubt here. Do you call it Español or Castellano? -- modified at 3:20 Tuesday 21st March, 2006 I just wanted to add how would be "Welcome" in my town... "eh páaajhza tron, una birra?"
In Spain they have four official languages: Castellano Catalan Galish (or something) baskish (or something) The most common Spanish language is Castellano which is still different then Mexican or Latin-American English although they do understand each other (mostly :-D) No hurries, no worries.
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In Redneck: "Whut is CP, `n` why is I welcume ta it?" In Country Hick: "Y'all come on down to CP!" Jeremy Falcon
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Please reply and in your native language (or current country of residence) tell me how you would say: "Welcome to CP." Obviously, english speakers need not reply. :-D
A Plain English signature. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
I think the Polish would be Witają CodeProject. Not 100% sure about that. ¡El diablo está en mis pantalones! ¡Mire, mire! Real Mentats use only 100% pure, unfooled around with Sapho Juice(tm)! SELECT * FROM User WHERE Clue > 0 0 rows returned Save an Orange - Use the VCF!
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Yeah, go ahead... Throw eggs. :laugh: I was waiting for that. Although it wouldn't make me a racist... wouldn't I be a biggot? Certainly not a linguist!:laugh: Where's Colin or Paul when you need someone to help with these things?:-O
A Plain English signature. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
-- modified at 2:24 Tuesday 21st March, 2006
code-frog wrote:
Certainly not a linguist
You might be a cunning linguist... My Programming Library 'Even a good developer can easily write bad code in VB.NET'.--Off The Record
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In Redneck: "Whut is CP, `n` why is I welcume ta it?" In Country Hick: "Y'all come on down to CP!" Jeremy Falcon
Jeremy Falcon wrote:
"Whut is CP
Jer'my ya dun lost yur Redneck rep. All Rednecks know whut CP are! That's when ya watch yurself writ yur name in snow! ('r sand depend'n war yur lives) _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)
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Yeah, go ahead... Throw eggs. :laugh: I was waiting for that. Although it wouldn't make me a racist... wouldn't I be a biggot? Certainly not a linguist!:laugh: Where's Colin or Paul when you need someone to help with these things?:-O
A Plain English signature. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
-- modified at 2:24 Tuesday 21st March, 2006
code-frog wrote:
wouldn't I be a biggot
No, just a bigot.
Software Zen:
delete this;
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Luis Alonso Ramos wrote:
Once I was asked that if in Mexico we spoke Mexican
Hi! I have a doubt here. Do you call it Español or Castellano? -- modified at 3:20 Tuesday 21st March, 2006 I just wanted to add how would be "Welcome" in my town... "eh páaajhza tron, una birra?"
Gizzo wrote:
Do you call it Español or Castellano?
That question is similar to asking whether the language spoken in the US is called American or English. We call it English, but pronounce it differently than the British. The Spaniards pronounce their version of Spanish differently than the version that originated in Castile and was brought to the Americas. The most obvious difference is the pronounciation of the letters C and Z. Ask someone from Spain to say these two words: Zapato (shoe) Cepillo (brush) They will sound like, "Thapatto" and "Thepeeyo". But someone from Latin America will pronounce it, "Sapatto", and "Sepeeyo". I guess the Castilians got tired of the constant spitting. :-) Regards, Alvaro
... since we've descended to name calling, I'm thinking you're about twenty pounds of troll droppings in a ten pound bag. - Vincent Reynolds
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In danish: "Welcome to CP" : Velkommen til CP "Codeproject" : "Codeproject" - unlike swedes (hoooouuudii booouuddiiii bok bok..... nice one, Jörgen :-D ), french and germans, we don't necessarily translate _everything_, like "computer" ("dator") and "codeproject" ("kodprojekt"). There are, for some of the computer related terms, old danish translations - but mostly we use the english word. Take for example "harddrive" or "harddisc". We just call it "harddisk". Danglish. But we also have the term "fastpladelager", which directly translated is "hard-drive-storage". The gernams have "fest-platte-speicher" which is the exact same and I believe the french have something similar. Maybe they have more "modern" translations they use on a day-to-day basis ? Do you know why it's important to make fast decisions? Because you give yourself more time to correct your mistakes, when you find out that you made the wrong one. Chris Meech on deciding whether to go to his daughters graduation or a Neil Young concert
In France, l'Académie keeps trying to prevent the English terms from being used, and instead invents its own, but they don't always succeed. For example, "computer" is "ordinateur", "software" is "logiciel", but "hard disk" is "disque dur" (a literal translation of hard disk). --Mike-- Visual C++ MVP :cool: LINKS~! Ericahist | NEW!! PimpFish | CP SearchBar v3.0 | C++ Forum FAQ
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Please reply and in your native language (or current country of residence) tell me how you would say: "Welcome to CP." Obviously, english speakers need not reply. :-D
A Plain English signature. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
コード·プロジェクトへようこそ! Or phonetically: kōdo purojekuto e yōkoso --Mike-- Visual C++ MVP :cool: LINKS~! Ericahist | NEW!! PimpFish | CP SearchBar v3.0 | C++ Forum FAQ
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Please reply and in your native language (or current country of residence) tell me how you would say: "Welcome to CP." Obviously, english speakers need not reply. :-D
A Plain English signature. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
I now have a new signature. :cool:
?a??? ???e? st? t?p? t?? ??d???? Välkommen till CP Bienvenido a CP Welkom op CP Willkommen zu CP Velkommen til CP Benvenuto a CP Isten hozott a Kódprojekten! CP main apka swagat hai Dobrodošli na CP Benvenguda sus CP! CP ma tapai haru ko swagat cha! CP ki Swagathamu Benvindo ao CP CP mein Khush Aamdeed CP a'gas dynnergh Bine ati venit la CP! Mein Luftkissenfahrzeug ist voller Aale CP-la yaanth Bienvenue sur CP Dobrodošli na Kod Projekt CP ilekku swagatham Witaja CP ???•???????????!