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Trade your language HERE!

Discussion in 'General Discussion' started by forte_amirul, May 19, 2009.

  1. crazytuna

    crazytuna Well-Known Member

    I think I lost that a long time ago :p
     
  2. k9112009

    k9112009 Well-Known Member

    Dude, I'm still learning...I only pick up on conversations between my father and his Spanish friends.
     
  3. ADGS231

    ADGS231 Well-Known Member

    I now i am just showin you like a practice ^^
     
  4. k9112009

    k9112009 Well-Known Member

    Thanks. Would be a shame not to perfect my Spanish especially since my great great grandfather was one.
     
  5. ADGS231

    ADGS231 Well-Known Member

    No problem, you now someone say me in this forum 2 days ago or 3 days ago how to write With, i was writing Whit lol, no one is perfect ^^... will i use google traductor for english but for words that i dont understand onlie...
     
  6. Blade5406

    Blade5406 Well-Known Member

    You can always use Microsoft Word for some of your grammar problems, although it's also not 100% accurate,
     
  7. k9112009

    k9112009 Well-Known Member

    its better to read books...
     
  8. Blade5406

    Blade5406 Well-Known Member

    Yeah, I've been reading a lot of books lately...

    I don't really know about his situation so I suggested MS Word...
     
  9. crazytuna

    crazytuna Well-Known Member

    But why Microsoft Word?...
     
  10. forte_amirul

    forte_amirul Well-Known Member

    Make it easy.

    Aina al hamam (formal)

    A aina hu al hamam. (informal)
     
  11. k9112009

    k9112009 Well-Known Member

    lol...Didn't we taught each other in school how to read that so we could cheat in the arabic exam?
     
  12. forte_amirul

    forte_amirul Well-Known Member

    Except for me.I didn't cheat.It's too easy.:p.Maybe.Stay on topic.
     
  13. k9112009

    k9112009 Well-Known Member

    Right...Who are our classmates in IGCSE I?
     
  14. forte_amirul

    forte_amirul Well-Known Member

    Stay on-topic.I'll pm you later.
     
  15. k9112009

    k9112009 Well-Known Member

    Fine hijo, we talk later.
    Just answer the question, comprende?
     
  16. ADGS231

    ADGS231 Well-Known Member

    SPANISH

    Ohhhh, K9 Activao, Hablando espa~ol xDDD....

    ENGLISH

    Ohhh, K9 Youre active, Talking spanish xDD....
     
  17. tsunamiwing

    tsunamiwing Active Member

    how can we say "yellow thunder" in malaysian


    ps. i can teach you my language its "berber" or "tamazighte" it has been spoken in north africa since the pharaons
     
  18. ADGS231

    ADGS231 Well-Known Member

    What country is that ???
     
  19. tsunamiwing

    tsunamiwing Active Member

    it's morocco
     
  20. ADGS231

    ADGS231 Well-Known Member

    Facts and Statistics

    Location: North Africa, bordering Algeria 1,559 km, Western Sahara 443 km, Spain (Ceuta)
    6.3 km, Spain (Melilla) 9.6 km

    Capital: Rabat

    Climate: Mediterranean, becoming more extreme in the interior

    Population: 32,209,101 (July 2004 est.)

    Ethnic Make-up: Arab-Berber 99.1%, other 0.7%, Jewish 0.2%

    Religions: Muslim 98.7%, Christian 1.1%, Jewish 0.2%

    Government: constitutional monarchy

    Languages in Morocco
    Classical Arabic is Morocco's official language, but the country's distinctive Arabic dialect is the most widely spoken language in Morocco. In addition, about 10 million Moroccans, mostly in rural areas, speak Berber--which exists in Morocco in three different dialects (Tarifit, Tashelhit, and Tamazight)--either as a first language or bilingually with the spoken Arabic dialect. French, which remains Morocco's unofficial third language, is taught universally and still serves as Morocco's primary language of commerce and economics; it also is widely used in education and government. Many Moroccans in the northern part of the country speak Spanish. English, while still far behind French and Spanish in terms of number of speakers, is rapidly becoming the foreign language of choice among educated youth. English is taught in all public schools from the fourth year on.
    Why not learn some useful Arabic or French phrases?

    Source: http://www.kwintessential.co.uk/resources/global-etiquette/morocco-country-profile.html (Here u can find more information)

    WHAT YOU WHANT HERE:

    Yellow Thunder in French: jaune tonnerre

    Yellow Thunder in Arabe: الرعد الأصفر = Yellow Thunder i dont no how to translate it in other languages....

    Those are the idiom of Morocco......