Conversation
Notices
-
Embed this notice
eisai (eisai@eientei.org)'s status on Wednesday, 08-May-2024 21:19:29 JST eisai The Greek language sounds very close to Russian, so it’s quite pleasant to listen to – for the Russian ear. You know when sometimes you have the desire to listen to something, but preferably without words, which you would understand? Greek remains sounding native, yet not understandable, which makes it perfect.
There’s one thing that tips me off, though: the lack of palatalisation (softening on some consonants). When all the sounds are like that it’s like the speech is stripped of something important. And for this same reason, it also gives an impression of “spoken in prehistoric manner”, when that something, which was “stripped” has not come about yet.-
Embed this notice
Lina Inver?e (lina@eientei.org)'s status on Wednesday, 08-May-2024 21:19:27 JST Lina Inver?e @eisai ya but when spoken quickly it sounds like churkaspeak -
Embed this notice
Lina Inver?e (lina@eientei.org)'s status on Thursday, 09-May-2024 10:57:41 JST Lina Inver?e @eisai drunkards tend to not speak quickly though -
Embed this notice
eisai (eisai@eientei.org)'s status on Thursday, 09-May-2024 10:57:44 JST eisai @lina Everything sounds like churkaspeak if you take an average drunkard. -
Embed this notice
Lina Inver?e (lina@eientei.org)'s status on Thursday, 09-May-2024 11:18:29 JST Lina Inver?e @eisai -
Embed this notice
eisai (eisai@eientei.org)'s status on Thursday, 09-May-2024 11:18:30 JST eisai @lina Душнила!
-
Embed this notice