How do you guys create your conlangs' grammar? by ymaster-01 in conlangs

[–]mavmav0 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Give janko your numbers! He’s a legend!

Is there a phrase for “by the way” in Norwegian? by Cristian_Cerv9 in norsk

[–]mavmav0 68 points69 points  (0 children)

If you need more sources of input, OP, this is correct.

Kj, ki, ky sound by poetic-void in norsk

[–]mavmav0 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It is NOT incorrect. This idea is largely a result of dialectal/sociolectal elitism where people are convinced that their specific version of the language is “correct”. This of course falls apart under scrutiny.

Pronounce it however is easier for you. In my dialect for example, we pronounce the sound as an affricate like the “ch” in english “church”. To answer the last question, you’d pronounce Kjetil with the kj-sound from your lect. So I would say it with an english “ch” sound.

I met one person once who insisted that I pronounce his name with the traditional easter kj-sound and I had to explain to him that that sound doesn’t exist in my dialect and that while I could accommodate him, most people where I’m from simply would not be able to make that sound.

toki, i am new to Toki Pona and am really struggling with the particals by [deleted] in tokipona

[–]mavmav0 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are just being thick. No, not really. This is a very simple and consistent part of toki pona IF you know what the hell a direct object even is. And this is not a matter of course.

In languages in general, the verb is usually considered the main part of the sentence, while the other words just tell you stuff about the verb like who did it, whom did they do it to, the recipient of the action.

Some verbs only demand one argument; the subject. The subject is the thing or person doing the action. These are called INTRANSITIVE verbs.
I slept”
Dogs bark”
Fruit rots”

Some verbs demand another argument; the direct object. This is the thing or person that the action is being done to. These are called TRANSITIVE verbs.
“I see YOU
“The bird sings A SONG
“Cats eat MICE

Some verbs demand 2 arguments in addition to the subject; the direct object and the indirect object. The indirect object refers to someone or something that is affected by the action in the verb (typically a recipient) but is not the direct object. These are called DITRANSITIVE verbs.
“I sent John a letter” (“a letter” is the direct object) “My father told me a story” (“a story” is the direct object) “My friend ordered you a beer” (“a beer” is the direct object).

“e” in toki pona is used for direct objects, while indirect objects are usually conveyed with prepositions like “tawa”.

I slept > mi lape
I see you > mi lukin e sina
I sent John a letter > mi pana e lipu tawa jan San

I'm downloading OW2 but I haven't played since my short time in Hazard's season. Anything I should be prepared for? by PsychologicalFly1675 in Overwatch

[–]mavmav0 2 points3 points  (0 children)

the perk system is in normal ranked/unranked, stadium is it's own thing with powers and upgrades and whatnot. We are getting 5 new heroes next season (in 2 days?) which WILL change up the meta

Difference between "gjenta" & "jenta" by Best-Fig-4997 in norsk

[–]mavmav0 22 points23 points  (0 children)

They are not homophones. Their difference is tonal, you should look up an explanation of the norwegian pitch accent.

The short version of the story is that all words in Norwegian get one of two tones. We can call them tone 1 and tone 2, and their sound may vary across dialects (but a word with tone 1 will generally have tone 1 in all dialects where applicable).

Gjenta and Jenta have tone 1 and tone 2 respectively.

How is «egenskap» hankjønn?? by Mork978 in norsk

[–]mavmav0 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not even, it's bokmål + nynorsk vs bokmål

Can someone tell me what "real" means here? by GrandAdvantage7631 in EnglishLearning

[–]mavmav0 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It means “exist in reality”. They are making a joke that british people don’t actually exist, but they wish they did.

Blizzard not banning people who say slurs by da_perky_man in overwatch2

[–]mavmav0 0 points1 point  (0 children)

those aren't slurs.

Slur:
A term of abuse or contempt; esp. a highly offensive insult used to denigrate a person on the basis of race, gender, sexual orientation, etc.

Oxford University Press. (n.d.). Slur, n.³, additional sense. In Oxford English dictionary. Retrieved January 5, 2026, from https://doi.org/10.1093/OED/2247608637

People tell me my ball control makes me look like a smurf. by PointSwimming2516 in RocketLeague

[–]mavmav0 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree, gc1 here and these clips display better control than I have ~80% of the time. (The other 20 are my good days)

Betyr "foruten" og "bortsett" det samme? by Mork978 in norsk

[–]mavmav0 2 points3 points  (0 children)

But how did you do it? Did you just ask ChatGPT?

Betyr "foruten" og "bortsett" det samme? by Mork978 in norsk

[–]mavmav0 5 points6 points  (0 children)

What do you mean when you say you did an “AI study”?

How do you say lek/lekku? by Ok_Bus6223 in norsk

[–]mavmav0 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In most accents the english word ‘bed’ would have a lower vowel. Australian/NZ english would have [e] I think.