‘Earth’ in European languages Tags:Europe 8 comments What kind of savage would call it Erde. It is clearly Aarde. How different our cultures are. edit: I also feel like the “you can copy my homework but change it up a bit” joke would apply here. “Terra” is new in Romanian. The original latin word is “țărână”, but is less used nowdays Then what does the Russian ‘мир’ translate to? Hungary (“Föld”) is like that meme of the cat: https://imgflip.com/memetemplate/205439707/Cat-french Earth would be talamh not really an domhan Look at that, the three europes: romance EU, germanic EU, slavic EU. And Finland. I think Turkish dunya means world rather than earth, but not entirely sure As always, Romania has the strangest word and its of course from Latin. Leave a ReplyYou must be logged in to post a comment.
What kind of savage would call it Erde. It is clearly Aarde. How different our cultures are. edit: I also feel like the “you can copy my homework but change it up a bit” joke would apply here.
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What kind of savage would call it Erde. It is clearly Aarde. How different our cultures are.
edit: I also feel like the “you can copy my homework but change it up a bit” joke would apply here.
“Terra” is new in Romanian. The original latin word is “țărână”, but is less used nowdays
Then what does the Russian ‘мир’ translate to?
Hungary (“Föld”) is like that meme of the cat: https://imgflip.com/memetemplate/205439707/Cat-french
Earth would be talamh not really an domhan
Look at that, the three europes: romance EU, germanic EU, slavic EU. And Finland.
I think Turkish dunya means world rather than earth, but not entirely sure
As always, Romania has the strangest word and its of course from Latin.