Originally posted by Galleleo
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Originally posted by Pressure Drop View PostThere are 0 people in the U.S. with the first name Connor.
# There are 47,995 people in the U.S. with the last name O'neill.
# Statistically the 716th most popular last name. (tied with 54 other last names)
this is bullshit?
how the fuck can there be no Connor? i even tried Conor!
I then tried my fathers name Liam and it got 0 too ... wtf
given the large number of Irish Americans i find it hard to believe that these common irish names don't appear in the whole of the USA
And it's O'Neill not O'neill stupid fucking thing autochanges it ... I HATE YOU http://ww2.howmanyofme.com/search/Originally posted by turmiojeenyuss seemingly without reason if he didn't have clean flours in his bag.Originally posted by grandI've been afk eating an apple and watching the late night news...
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Originally posted by Mr. Peanuts View PostPronounciation is technically not language specific, is it not?Maybe God was the first suicide bomber and the Big Bang was his moment of Glory.
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# There are 662,931 people in the U.S. with the first name Gregory.
# Statistically the 70th most popular first name.
# 99.77 percent of people with the first name Gregory are male.
who the hell would name their girl Greg1:Da1andonly> korven plays subspace from a 1978 microwave
Grab a piece of paper. Place a dot in the middle of it. Draw a small circle around the dot, and leave the rest open. The dot represents your knowledge. It's what you know. It is the limit of your mind's capacity. The circle around the dot is everything that you don't know - but you know that it exists. And the rest of the paper is everything that you didn't even know that you'd never know - that exists or has the potential to exist.
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Originally posted by genocidal View PostThijs: You can use phonetic spellings and we will understand. We don't just read English words.Originally posted by Jeenyusssometimes i thrust my hips so my flaccid dick slaps my stomach, then my taint, then my stomach, then my taint. i like the sound.
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Geno, as I was trying to explain, the ij letter combination does not exist in english, thus I can't give you a phonetic for it. English simply does not know it.
Like I said, the english way of pronouncing my name is like Ice (as in icecream) only with a T infront, so you would get Tice. The H is silent, you can also name your kid Tijs and it has the same result, but it's less common and way less cool.
Here:
Click here!!Maybe God was the first suicide bomber and the Big Bang was his moment of Glory.
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You hear it as t-ice-sh.. and I can't really state it more clearly then that is the english way of you saying it. That if the only phonetic you can give it, but it's not the correct one. There just is no english phonetic for the combination ij.
You say ice, the dutch word for ice is ijs. It does resemble each other, but its not the correct dutch pronounciation, and its the closed you can get in english.. it is what I have been trying to explain.Maybe God was the first suicide bomber and the Big Bang was his moment of Glory.
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Originally posted by Facetious View PostI'm still naming my son Thijs. I'll call him Thidgets. Whatever.
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Yeah but our ears aren't trained to hear it either. I don't really understand how shit like that works. Is this somehow related to how some asian people can't say L's? Can they not hear the difference between r's and l's or just not make the L sound?
To me it sounds like Thieshe, but with a really minimal emphasis on the h's.5:gen> man
5:gen> i didn't know shade's child fucked bluednady
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