hmm, lengthy title.
Ok i need some help please, i would like to know of three different slang terms for having sex in three different languages.
It is a long story, but it is work related and I would be really appreciative if you could help.
Thanks heaps,
Tom
harper
February 27, 2007, 11:24am
2
Thanks Harper, very helpfull but not fully what i was after…
It is for a stand-up routine.
ivan
February 27, 2007, 11:59am
4
What exactly do you want - a noun or a verb?
either or, a phrase would be awsome though.
ivan
February 27, 2007, 12:22pm
6
Hmm, let’s see. In Russian:
A noun - perepih
A verb - zasadit
I’m trying to think of a phrase.
I can get you some Greek ones tomorrow morning, as well.
Thanks Ivan, a phrase would be excellent, but tommorow morning is too far
This Russian is great thoguth!!
ivan
February 27, 2007, 12:34pm
8
Zanyitsia lubovyu - to make love.
Can’t think of anything else, I’m too sleepy, sorry.
Jerrick
February 27, 2007, 12:38pm
9
Have you tried Freetranslation yet?
It may not give the excact proper way of saying it, but its pretty close.
Thanks IVan, and thanks Jerrick. That site is great!@
umi no it in englisha and french sign language but i guess that’s a little hard to explain online…
lol, you could try.
If anything it woud be fun…
The alternative dictionaries site is your friend, so long as 162 languages is enough for you:
hmmm… ok then why not, the french sign is easier to describe than the english one
french sign - take both yr hand and hit them together in between yr thumb and index finger repeatedly if that makes sense! it means sex in french sign language and coca cola in english sign…which could get rather confusing as i know a story of an english guy in france who went up the barmaid and ordered a coca cola…
ha, i can imagine how that would end. Like one of those books when you choose between ending a) b) or c), i have imagined three likely senarios
wow i am soo using that, i didn not even realise sign language differed between cultures etc.
Borges
February 27, 2007, 1:40pm
16
Nice site, but it needs a pronounciation guide. I could easily see how an American might pronounce “knulle” (Norwegian, verb) as “null” or something similar.
Oh yeah, the Dutch community will be so proud of me for posting this:
Neuken
And all the Germans seem to know what this means: Neuken in de keuken
Hope this helped you haha, good luck with your project…