Ukraine

>Ukraine
yikes

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translate.google.ru/#view=home&op=translate&sl=ru&tl=en&text=бог
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We also use trendafil sometimes

trendafil sounds like some antidepressant drug

We also use róza

t. ukrainian

>itburnu

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>greek words
>yikes
t. albanian

Rose*

why is the "flower of the garden" bit in the legend? does it appear on the map?

It's Slovenia, the colors are messed up.

That red Slovenian "vrtnica" should be coloured bright greenish according to the legend on the left side.

Why do Estonians do this?

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Based Isle of Man

>someone insult Ukraine
>again Poland

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im a brainlet, how does language work. why does everyone use the same word

how is that an insult?

Literally daddy government regulations. We have socialism in Yurop.

itburnu is from turkish

we use garoafa too

giraffe isn't an animal found in europe, so the first nation that encountered it in africa or wherever named it the way they saw fit, and other nations then copied that word by virtue of merchants, letters and literature that spread it
this isn't the case with words that weren't "new" though, for example european nations have their own names for bears, wolves, all sorts of bird species etc.

>uses special characters for other languages
>does not do so for our ġiraffa
I will never understand.

On he contrary I would rather use Greek and Latin laonwords before ever using shkije ones. And it's a good thing because every shkije loanword has a greek equivalent

>Greek word
>Yikes

Yikes

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Are you from the Donbass?

>jamal

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fucking kek

>Sweden
>Jamal
This explains many things

what's up with g turning into h and vice versa in so many slavic languages? the sounds aren't even similar

I'd much rather say alla than fucking jamal.

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>jamal

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how come in spanish it's backwards
english: my god
german: mein gott - my god
italian: mio dio - my god
spanish: dios mio - god my?

>trentafoglie
>cammellopardo

in italian it's dio mio actually, however they did switch the word order in certain cases such as mamma mia

crimea

I see. what about this example god was something that was in europe but yet they all have these differences

fucking google translate

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they took the pagan words for god and turned those into the word for the God
slavs used the name bog for all sorts of deities long before they adopted christianity, belobog and chernobog being prime examples

In Greek we put the my last too. It's Θεέ μου (The-e mou) God my.

b-but we say Gud

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it's ⵜⵉⵣⵡⵉⵡⵖⵜ [tizwiwɣt] in berber

You can say it in both ways

Nice try, Sven.

our grammatical structure just works that way. the reverse way would be understandable but weird sounding and funny

The Portuguese one sounds the coolest.

I just noticed after writting this, this mean it's the only afro-asiatic word for it? And the only non-IE word for it among west eurasian?

In italian you can say it both ways, but "oh mio dio" is more common

that was not nice of him to post a fake map :(

>calling a rose a flower
At least call it a horned flower like we do (gautroža)

>chernobog
The god of radioactivity?

very funny but no
cherny and it's derivatives mean black in slavic languages
inb4 someone starts spouting memes about slavs worshipping black bulls, chernobog was "black" because he was evil, something similar to satan in christian mythology

i see. thanks

Bullshit. Roza is not a proper Ukrainian word
t. an actual Ukrainian

In some languages (slavic languages in particular) the word order is extremely flexible

>belobog and chernobog
Those are some badass names

пидop и пoдcoc

Dunno. But in Russian "Bog" pronounced as "Boh" too

translate.google.ru/#view=home&op=translate&sl=ru&tl=en&text=бог

In russian it's backwards too:
Bozhe moi = god my

пидop и пoдcoc

>Russian - dobriy den
>Serbo-Croatian - dobar dan
>Czech - dobrý den
>Polish - dzień dobry :))

>In some languages (slavic languages in particular) the word order is extremely flexible

that's true, I say both moj bog and bog moj

That's the most natural way of pronouncing it, h at the end rolls off much better than g (or even the compromise, k).

>mwannalagh

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>Jamal

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It depends on your condition as well, like you can say "o moi bog"(oh my god) when you surprised and slightly shocked, or "bog moi..."(dios mio...), when you deeply shocked and have nothing else to say, something like that.