h a l f b a k e r yThe embarrassing drunkard uncle of invention.
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From time to time, the more challenged members of the
HB make a limply humorous remark that such-and-so
(often another user's HB moniker) means such-and-such
in
Swahili or some other language (for example "Ooh-na
B'bá
means 'floating log' in Tamil").
Sadly, these equivalences are usually
fictitious. How
much
better if they were real.
I propose, therefore, a phonetic equivalence search
engine, akin to Google translate. One could enter a
phrase in god's own English, and the site would return
one
or more phonetically equivalent phrases in foreign
tongues,
along with their translations.
Sometimes, it just means dickhead
http://www.bloomber...for-arab-press.html [theircompetitor, May 20 2012]
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Just as an example, in Upper Mongolia the word 'olterugga'
means 'annoying fly that won't leave and refuses to be
caught'. |
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Ace, a multi-lingual pun-generator! (Which, strangely enough if pronounced with a scottish accent sounds almost exactly the same as a Venezuelan saying in Chinese "Crikey What a Corker!" whilst sucking a gob-stopper) |
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Purely idle curiosity, but how does Maxwell Buchanan come out? |
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Not easy - Google Translate translates the Norwegian phrase "maks will ba ca nar" as "maximum goodwill when asked about". |
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//Purely idle curiosity, but how does Maxwell
Buchanan come out?// |
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We won't know until this is baked. The closest I
have so far using Google Loosely-Translate is "The
brand name
of a beautiful sky" (Marque ciel beau qu'as
nomme) or "Makes too much book mimic" (Macht
zu viel buch ahmen). |
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I think I prefer the Norwegian version. |
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Dutch
should also work well for English names, since
Dutch basically sounds like English spoken by an
aphasic. |
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