ant london wrote:Looks like we got ourselves a book reader..... ;-)
I wear glasses too. I'm just waiting for Pol Carl and his execution squad to come knocking on my door ...
ant london wrote:Looks like we got ourselves a book reader..... ;-)
mr_nool wrote:ant london wrote:Looks like we got ourselves a book reader..... ;-)
I wear glasses too. I'm just waiting for Pol Carl and his execution squad to come knocking on my door ...
mr_nool wrote:ant london wrote:Looks like we got ourselves a book reader..... ;-)
I wear glasses too. I'm just waiting for Pol Carl and his execution squad to come knocking on my door ...
mr_nool wrote:I'm sure you all can't wait to learn this, but it's not an umlaut. The two dots are called a trema, and it indicates that the letter underneath it should be pronounced on its own, as opposed to either being silent or being a part of a phoneme created in combination with the letter in front or behind it. You don't really use it in English, but it could, for instance, be used in coöperation, in order to show that the word should be pronounced co-operation, instead of coop-eration. In Agüero's case, the following applies:In the orthographies of Spanish, Catalan, French, Galician and Occitan, the graphemes gu, and qu normally represent a single sound, [ɡ] or [k], before the front vowels e and i (or before nearly all vowels in Occitan). In the few exceptions where the u is pronounced, a trema is added to it.
Beefymcfc wrote:Reminds me of Big Dave's first game when the compare called it out exactly how you spelt it. Still makes me laugh.
Curlie wrote:Thought Kun Aurum had a great debut.
Aurum! Did you see what I did there!
Curlie wrote:Universal name for gold, think it's latin or spanish.
Gold/silver.
Oh, I give up!
Niall Quinns Discopants wrote:Curlie wrote:Universal name for gold, think it's latin or spanish.
Gold/silver.
Oh, I give up!
The word would be aureus in latin.
Nice try though.
Curlie wrote:Niall Quinns Discopants wrote:Curlie wrote:Universal name for gold, think it's latin or spanish.
Gold/silver.
Oh, I give up!
The word would be aureus in latin.
Nice try though.
Surely aureus is the plural of aurei which means golden.
I could be wrong. All a bit rusty now.
Niall Quinns Discopants wrote:Curlie wrote:Niall Quinns Discopants wrote:Curlie wrote:Universal name for gold, think it's latin or spanish.
Gold/silver.
Oh, I give up!
The word would be aureus in latin.
Nice try though.
Surely aureus is the plural of aurei which means golden.
I could be wrong. All a bit rusty now.
It's roughly 15 years since I've last "used" latin.
I remember this though
Bellum
Bellum
Belli
Bellos
Bellorum
Bellis
Bellis
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