What is the (subjectively) weirdest word in the English language?
What is the (subjectively) weirdest word in the English language?
What is the (subjectively) weirdest word in the English language?
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I don't know about weirdest, but here are some quirky words:
Articles are found in many Indo-European languages, Semitic languages (only the definite article)[citation needed], and Polynesian languages; however, they are formally absent from many of the world's major languages including Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Mongolian, many Turkic languages (including Tatar, Bashkir, Tuvan and Chuvash), many Uralic languages (incl. Finnic[a] and Saami languages), Hindi-Urdu, Punjabi, Tamil, the Baltic languages, the majority of Slavic languages, the Bantu languages (incl. Swahili). In some languages that do have articles, such as some North Caucasian languages, the use of articles is optional; however, in others like English and German it is mandatory in all cases.
fishes
Fun fact! Fishes means multiple types of different species of fish
Japanese doesn't have articles or account for number with something as simple as an s (some words could take -tachi or -ra as a plural marker, but not all, and often it isn't even used when plural unless there's specific need for it). Often, we learn something is plural by other inference or a number given. My wife has a hell of a time with articles and the like when trying to speak English.
I'm also learning modern hebrew (Arabic's writing system seemed a bit much plus all the dialects vs written MSA, so that's now a later goal) and they only have definite articles so the indefinite is the default state.
Although using "data" as both singular and plural is acceptable in modern English, I once sat through an online training stating "[there can be] negative consequences if data are misused or falls into the wrong hands" which is just so cringe!
Edit: typos
English requires you to say “a cat” or “the cat”
Generally true but not for abstract nouns and mass nouns: "The water's warm", "I'd like a water", "Water is a liquid".
PS. It's called the zero article.