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All the mother-words seems alike

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  • D David Wengier

    In Hebrew is IMA. In German, its MUTTER. In Australian, its MUM ;P -- David Wengier Sonork ID: 100.14177 - Ch00k

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    Nish Nishant
    wrote on last edited by
    #4

    David Wengier wrote: In Hebrew is IMA. In German, its MUTTER. In Australian, its MUM Cool! Thanks David :-) Nish


    Regards, Nish Native CPian. Born and brought up on CP. With the CP blood in him.

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    • N Nish Nishant

      The word MOTHER is English. In Malayalam/Tamil it's AMMA. In Hindi it's MA. The English variations include MAMA, MOM, MUMMY. They all have this M sound about them. Funny huh? Maybe it's natural for a baby to use an M sound to call it's mother. Maybe even the cavemen of the stone age had M sounding worlds for MOM Nish


      Regards, Nish Native CPian. Born and brought up on CP. With the CP blood in him.

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      David Wengier
      wrote on last edited by
      #5

      In Hebrew is IMA. In German, its MUTTER. In Australian, its MUM ;P -- David Wengier Sonork ID: 100.14177 - Ch00k

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      • N Nish Nishant

        The word MOTHER is English. In Malayalam/Tamil it's AMMA. In Hindi it's MA. The English variations include MAMA, MOM, MUMMY. They all have this M sound about them. Funny huh? Maybe it's natural for a baby to use an M sound to call it's mother. Maybe even the cavemen of the stone age had M sounding worlds for MOM Nish


        Regards, Nish Native CPian. Born and brought up on CP. With the CP blood in him.

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        moliate
        wrote on last edited by
        #6

        Swedish: Mamma Hungarian: Anyu (no 'm' here. Probably to prepare young children for the fact that the language they are supposed to learn bears little resemblance to any other language in the world.) I think that babies tries out all simple vocal patters and when they find a real word (like mama, papa, amma or whatever) they get a lot of attention. That's the way they learn the language. /moliate


        Two o'clock and walking through familiar London - Or what was familiar London before the cursor deleted certain certainties - I watch a suit and tie man giving suck to the Psion Organizer lodged in his breast pocket its serial interface like a cool mouth hunting his chest for sustenance, familiar feeling, and I'm watching my breath steam in the air.

        Neil Gaiman - Cold Colours

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        • M moliate

          Swedish: Mamma Hungarian: Anyu (no 'm' here. Probably to prepare young children for the fact that the language they are supposed to learn bears little resemblance to any other language in the world.) I think that babies tries out all simple vocal patters and when they find a real word (like mama, papa, amma or whatever) they get a lot of attention. That's the way they learn the language. /moliate


          Two o'clock and walking through familiar London - Or what was familiar London before the cursor deleted certain certainties - I watch a suit and tie man giving suck to the Psion Organizer lodged in his breast pocket its serial interface like a cool mouth hunting his chest for sustenance, familiar feeling, and I'm watching my breath steam in the air.

          Neil Gaiman - Cold Colours

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          Nish Nishant
          wrote on last edited by
          #7

          moliate wrote: Hungarian: Anyu (no 'm' here Blast! These Hungarians are out to ruin my M theory Nish


          Regards, Nish Native CPian. Born and brought up on CP. With the CP blood in him.

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          • N Nish Nishant

            The word MOTHER is English. In Malayalam/Tamil it's AMMA. In Hindi it's MA. The English variations include MAMA, MOM, MUMMY. They all have this M sound about them. Funny huh? Maybe it's natural for a baby to use an M sound to call it's mother. Maybe even the cavemen of the stone age had M sounding worlds for MOM Nish


            Regards, Nish Native CPian. Born and brought up on CP. With the CP blood in him.

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            Dave Goodman
            wrote on last edited by
            #8

            Sounds like mama are probably the only ones a baby can make with a nipple in its mouth. :) Dave Goodman dgoodman@infoway.com www.dkgoodman.com "Actio sequitur esse."

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            • D Dave Goodman

              Sounds like mama are probably the only ones a baby can make with a nipple in its mouth. :) Dave Goodman dgoodman@infoway.com www.dkgoodman.com "Actio sequitur esse."

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              Nish Nishant
              wrote on last edited by
              #9

              Dave Goodman wrote: Sounds like mama are probably the only ones a baby can make with a nipple in its mouth. Hey :-) I never thought of that :-) Nish


              Regards, Nish Native CPian. Born and brought up on CP. With the CP blood in him.

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              • D Dave Goodman

                Sounds like mama are probably the only ones a baby can make with a nipple in its mouth. :) Dave Goodman dgoodman@infoway.com www.dkgoodman.com "Actio sequitur esse."

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                ColinDavies
                wrote on last edited by
                #10

                I'll test that assertion. :-) Regardz Colin J Davies

                Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

                More about me :-)

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                • C ColinDavies

                  I'll test that assertion. :-) Regardz Colin J Davies

                  Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

                  More about me :-)

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                  Nish Nishant
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #11

                  ****Colin Davies wrote: I'll test that assertion. Cool! :-) Nish p.s. he said baby, remember :-)


                  Regards, Nish Native CPian. Born and brought up on CP. With the CP blood in him.

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                  • C ColinDavies

                    Yeah, At a guess I'd say it is one of the easiest soundz for a baby's mouth to say and so it became quickly attributted to calling for the mother. Regardz Colin J Davies

                    Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

                    More about me :-)

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                    Simon Walton
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #12

                    ****Colin Davies wrote: At a guess I'd say it is one of the easiest soundz for a baby's mouth to say and so it became quickly attributted to calling for the mother. Rubbish, my first word was 'antidisestablishmentarism'. "No, it's Mammy" my mother says. But even at age 3 I found this word too simple for my high intellect. Simon I need your clothes, your boots, and your copy of VS.NET. Sonork ID 100.10024

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                    • S Simon Walton

                      ****Colin Davies wrote: At a guess I'd say it is one of the easiest soundz for a baby's mouth to say and so it became quickly attributted to calling for the mother. Rubbish, my first word was 'antidisestablishmentarism'. "No, it's Mammy" my mother says. But even at age 3 I found this word too simple for my high intellect. Simon I need your clothes, your boots, and your copy of VS.NET. Sonork ID 100.10024

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                      Nish Nishant
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #13

                      Simon Walton wrote: Rubbish, my first word was 'antidisestablishmentarism'. Oh! And who did you call that? And did he/she slap you, forgetting for a moment that you were only a baby? Nish :-D


                      Regards, Nish Native CPian. Born and brought up on CP. With the CP blood in him.

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                      • N Nish Nishant

                        The word MOTHER is English. In Malayalam/Tamil it's AMMA. In Hindi it's MA. The English variations include MAMA, MOM, MUMMY. They all have this M sound about them. Funny huh? Maybe it's natural for a baby to use an M sound to call it's mother. Maybe even the cavemen of the stone age had M sounding worlds for MOM Nish


                        Regards, Nish Native CPian. Born and brought up on CP. With the CP blood in him.

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                        Alexandru Savescu
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #14

                        In Romanian is MAMĂ - you need Eastern Europe Encoding to see it the last letter correctly. Best regards, Alexandru Savescu

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                        • N Nish Nishant

                          The word MOTHER is English. In Malayalam/Tamil it's AMMA. In Hindi it's MA. The English variations include MAMA, MOM, MUMMY. They all have this M sound about them. Funny huh? Maybe it's natural for a baby to use an M sound to call it's mother. Maybe even the cavemen of the stone age had M sounding worlds for MOM Nish


                          Regards, Nish Native CPian. Born and brought up on CP. With the CP blood in him.

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                          MoZ
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #15

                          In Arabic it's OMMI Moz Tunis - Tunisia

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                          • N Nish Nishant

                            The word MOTHER is English. In Malayalam/Tamil it's AMMA. In Hindi it's MA. The English variations include MAMA, MOM, MUMMY. They all have this M sound about them. Funny huh? Maybe it's natural for a baby to use an M sound to call it's mother. Maybe even the cavemen of the stone age had M sounding worlds for MOM Nish


                            Regards, Nish Native CPian. Born and brought up on CP. With the CP blood in him.

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                            David Wulff
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #16

                            In Tiverton it is Sister. ____________________ David Wulff hu·mour Pronunciation Key (hymr) n. & v. Chiefly British Dave's Code Project Screensaver and Wallpaper page.

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                            • N Nish Nishant

                              The word MOTHER is English. In Malayalam/Tamil it's AMMA. In Hindi it's MA. The English variations include MAMA, MOM, MUMMY. They all have this M sound about them. Funny huh? Maybe it's natural for a baby to use an M sound to call it's mother. Maybe even the cavemen of the stone age had M sounding worlds for MOM Nish


                              Regards, Nish Native CPian. Born and brought up on CP. With the CP blood in him.

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                              Andres Manggini
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #17

                              In spanish it's MAMA. Or MADRE, but the latter is like.. more formal. Andres Manggini. Buenos Aires - Argentina.

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                              • N Nish Nishant

                                The word MOTHER is English. In Malayalam/Tamil it's AMMA. In Hindi it's MA. The English variations include MAMA, MOM, MUMMY. They all have this M sound about them. Funny huh? Maybe it's natural for a baby to use an M sound to call it's mother. Maybe even the cavemen of the stone age had M sounding worlds for MOM Nish


                                Regards, Nish Native CPian. Born and brought up on CP. With the CP blood in him.

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                                Chris Losinger
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #18

                                time to get a book on linguistics. there's a reason english and hindi (and dozens of other modern languages) are each known as Indo-European langauges. -c


                                ABSURDITY: A statement or belief manifestly inconsistent with one's own opinion.

                                ISEffects - effects for images

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                                • D David Wulff

                                  In Tiverton it is Sister. ____________________ David Wulff hu·mour Pronunciation Key (hymr) n. & v. Chiefly British Dave's Code Project Screensaver and Wallpaper page.

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                                  NormDroid
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #19

                                  oh dear ;P Normski. - Professional Windows Programmer

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                                  • N Nish Nishant

                                    Simon Walton wrote: Rubbish, my first word was 'antidisestablishmentarism'. Oh! And who did you call that? And did he/she slap you, forgetting for a moment that you were only a baby? Nish :-D


                                    Regards, Nish Native CPian. Born and brought up on CP. With the CP blood in him.

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                                    Simon Walton
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #20

                                    Damn, I was going to impress you by pretending I knew what the word meant, but Dictionary.com doesn't have it. ;P Simon I need your clothes, your boots, and your copy of VS.NET. Sonork ID 100.10024

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                                    • D David Wulff

                                      In Tiverton it is Sister. ____________________ David Wulff hu·mour Pronunciation Key (hymr) n. & v. Chiefly British Dave's Code Project Screensaver and Wallpaper page.

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                                      Nish Nishant
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #21

                                      David Wulff wrote: In Tiverton it is Sister. :wtf: :wtf: :wtf:


                                      Regards, Nish Native CPian. Born and brought up on CP. With the CP blood in him.

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