gate of hibiscus
#art #photo #photography #nightphotography #Flowers
©️skinskin
gate of hibiscus
#art #photo #photography #nightphotography #Flowers
©️skinskin
"Hibiscus Gate" sounds very poetic in English.
I can feel it ... but can't understand really.
maybe the sound ...
it will end in tears .... this sentence is the most poetic English for me.
😇It is the sound in English, and the imagery which is universal.
for us ...we know what it means ... but we can't understand the poetic feeling.
Hibiscus, the sound of the word, is much like the word Hollyhock. It sounds poetic, and evokes dream images in one's mind of something in England.
thank you for teaching me .
I am heading to bed soon .
good night 😴
Good night, BB!
me ... good night too.
💤
soon ....
gn sound in Italian is sort of like y in English (not really , more like a -ny sound but it also depends on rest of the word) so I think it sounds similar to "yummy" when spoken
Because in English it is ate ate and in Japanese it is the sound of a stomach growling
OK, I'm parsing this through Icelandic, and a casual reader's grasp of Middle English (Gawain poet dialect). In Icelandic, the þ is an unvoiced th sound, but I noticed in Middle English it was used in words that we use a voiced th sound in, so þe = the
That sounds almost poetic when translated to English. :)
And it also makes you sound Canadian. (Which I am).
Well, this is a slippery slope for me as I am not a linguist, but the letter is called eð, and is softer than the English “th”, and you can not start a word with it in Icelandic, but there is kind of an implied e in the sound?
another way to describe it is if translated literally into English they'd sound like fandom or forum names, but more poetic!
literally does not matter what genre, what band, what singer, if it the song is post-1999 and in English my mom is like, "Why does this sound like noise, you can't even understand the words"
It gets worse with borrowed words.
Is there a correct way to pronounce "anime" in English? The A sound in Japanese is always "Ah" but the word is borrowed from the English "Animation". Do we need to say "ah" because their language doesn't support all of the various vowel sounds in English?
was there a kid-marketed beverage in the early-mid '90s that was hibiscus flavored? the hibiscus la croix is so evocative to me but i can't place it
The "ll" sound is similar to the Welsh "ch" in words like "loch" in Scottish English. It is created by placing the tongue against the side of the mouth and forcing air through the opening, producing a sound that is distinct from the typical "l" sound in English. 🗣️💨
can we talk about how dutch is just on the edge of comprehensibility for an English speaker
i definitely can't understand it but i have this nagging feeling i *should*
Is it not going well?! I really can't believe it. The art is amazing and the story intriguing.
I really can't understand people...
But I can understand why you feel down, seen the efforts you put in Avalon.
For what it counts, I love it.