In Polish „yes” is „tak” but in my city(Olsztyn) and the two neighbouring regions we say „jo” instead of „tak”.Cities of Olsztyn-Gdańsk-Toruń make up the „jo” triangle in Poland.Do you have places like that iyc?
polish "tak" is no in indooesianand "jo" is yes in my dialect
>>220963943Why are you standing on your head
>>220963911>OlsztynMy grandfather's farm used to be in that district. Back then they had a German Protestant church in their village and a Polish Catholic church in the neighbour village.
>>220964102Nazi
>>220963911In Siberia we sat Ho which means Дa (Yes), sometimes we say Taк, which means Дa (Yes), sometimes we say Дa, which also means Дa (Yes).
>>220964102A old local once told me that a pole-german marriage was mostly nothing out of ordinary but when catholic and a protestant person married they were the talk of the village/town. There were arguments, there were brawls, they faced disdain and hate so much the newlyweds often had to move out to the city(Olsztyn).
>>220964251My grandparents (mother's side) were such a couple: My gradfather was Lutheran and my grandmother Catholic. I know it was a big deal back then, but they married during the war and people had constant bombing raids to worry about then.
>>220963911My regional dialect has a lot of different words, for yes we just say "o" or "ô"I love it
>>220964304I was suprised when I got to know it, nowdays its such a nothingburger but in those times people for stabbed or lost na eye because of it or had to run, crazy stuff.
>>220964315>”mi mi miiiii”C-cute
>>220964329Yes, times change. I remember when I was in elementary school there was a house nearby where a man and a woman lived THAT WERE NOT MARRIED TO EACHOTHER! It was a small scandal in my Catholic suburb at the time. Nowadays it seems to be the norm.
>>220963911the standard "you" is "tú" in most spanish speaking regions but my region of the country uses "vos", same as in argentina, uruguay and weirdly enough some regions of colombia.
>>220964367Its still a thing in UK for example, I know people who had their windows shattered with stones every month by protestant kids went there by adults because they moved to their neighbourhood as catholics.
>>220964237Thats a lot of yes, does it make the girls easier of they can say yes in so many ways?
>>220964395I went to a Catholic school that was funded by the diocese. We had a few Protestant pupils at that school as well. No big deal, school mass was divided and the religious education classes. When we graduated we had an oecomenic mass together. I think the bishop needed to give his permission for that, but he usually did.
>>220964353Unfortunately not as common IRL as the map might suggest, the blue regions overwhelmingly use some variation of "me". "Mi" is mostly used on a strip along the south coast from about Egersund to Grimstad.
>>220964432I was at a organised journey to JP II funeral as a late teen and my protestant friends proposed it and organised, even some chill jesuits tagged along
>>220963911colloquially some of us also say jo instead of ja!!!!
>>220964467I liked Johannes Paul II. He was a good pope and for such a long time. Although he was nearly killed by that Turk at the beginning of his papacy.
>>220964405How would I know.
Here's a map the University of Salzburg made of Germany, Austria and Switzerland. We all use "sehen" as a verb for "to see", but in informal everyday language or when we ask somebody to "look at that", the verb changes to "kuck/guck/schau/lueg" regionally. The map shows those regional differences.
>>220964372In Brazil you’ll hear the same person say “tu” in one moment and “você” in another, but in Europe and Africa it’s mostly just “tu". I honestly think Brazilian Portuguese is much better, and it sucks that we’re trying to reshape it to match European Portuguese. Our grammar should be its own thing. I couldn’t care less about making the language more “international"
>>220964485It’s pirate loanwords if you ask me, per chance is the region that says „jo” near the coast!?>>220964494It was so strange when he went away because I were used to him always being the pope and got used to what he did or said
>>220964585it's in southern germany and parts of austria!!!!!!maybe also in the north but i dont know
>>220963911Weird. In Swedish Tack is thank you and Jo is yes (in agreement)
>>220964615maybe it's not so weird, maybe we're just one big european family!!!!!!
>>220964597>>220964585Western flatlands Germany here. We used to say "wenn jou dann tou". It can't really be translated but it means "if it's OK then let's do it".
>>220964597Well „see” sounds nearly like „sea” arrrr
>>220964537>north germans watch their wifes get fucked by other men>midle germans hate asians
>>220964663Please stop and leave with your cuckbrain
>>220964621True, true, my brother.
>>220964686europe is so cozy bros
When I rode my bike across Poland from Wisła to Gdańsk some farmers let me sleep in their fields and brought me bread and sausage :3 Poland has the highest quality sausages in the world
The Jo brotherhood Time to build a house on a tree and keep the smellies out
>>220964714Thats a long ass trip, Wisła has really nice nature around, nice moutains
>>220964315That's crazy, me is also "we" in Finnish.
>>220965256Sounds a lot like „oui”!! „We”/„oui”, coincidence? I dont think so.
"Tak" means "thanks" in daneling. "Jo" is an informal form of "yes".
"Jo" is a contradicting "yes" here, like in "Moose are not big / Jo, they are". Can also informally mean "yes" more generally though.
>>220964237In Polish we also say "No" which means "Yes"
>>220963911all Slovenes say ja instead of da
>>220964537oh so that's why the Czechs say koukat for to look, whereas kukati is to take a peek iml
>>220963911Did they have pirates in Gdansk in the 90s
>>220968673Yes
"yes" is "kyllä" in Finnish but colloqiually we often say "joo" instead
The "correct" term is "taip" but people will say "jo" here often as well.If you say it in front of a Lithuanian teacher she'll snarkily reply>Jo? Ant ko tu joji? (What are you riding on?)To imply it is le wrong o algo
>>220968711Kurrrwa matey"Me" and "you" varies by regional dialect where>memä, mää, mie>yousä, sää, nää, sie
>>220968624Interesting.I know that the Dutch have the formal verb "zien" (to see) like our "sehen", and the informal "kijken" (to look) like our "kucken" (or "gucken" in the South).
>>220969404cucken
>>220963911nu
>>220968711>beyond good and evil 2>morrowind >heroes 4Ehhhhh Those were the times
>>220969404Kiken