mzungu wrote: » The language with the longest alphabet in the world is the Cambodian language Khmer with 74 letters (some are no longer used). It consists of 33 consonants, 23 vowels and 12 independent vowels. The shortest alphabet is 12 characters long, and belongs to Rotokas (Papua New Guinea). English is the language that has the most words (250,000).
New Home wrote: » I've heard that said about French by French speakers, German by German speakers, Spanish, Italian, Chinese, etc. You see where I'm going. But none has been able to prove that definitevely.
This question is practically impossible to answer, for the reasons explained in the answer to How many words are there in the English language? However, it seems quite probable that English has more words than most comparable world languages. The reason for this is historical. English was originally a Germanic language, related to Dutch and German, and it shares much of its grammar and basic vocabulary with those languages. However, after the Norman Conquest in 1066 it was hugely influenced by Norman French, which became the language of the ruling class for a considerable period, and by Latin, which was the language of scholarship and of the Church. Very large numbers of French and Latin words entered the language. Consequently, English has a much larger vocabulary than either the Germanic languages or the members of the Romance language family to which French belongs. English is also very ready to accommodate foreign words, and as it has become an international language, it has absorbed vocabulary from a large number of other sources. This does, of course, assume that you ignore 'agglutinative' languages such as Finnish, in which words can be stuck together in long strings of indefinite length, and which therefore have an almost infinite number of 'words'. Link:https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/explore/does-english-have-most-words/
Arabic has 90 to 500 million words if you count other forms of the original word a word but if you don't then is 12,300,000
Professor Moriarty wrote: » Gaelic or Irish Script was first printed in the 1500s. The typeface was used in a catechism ordered by Elizabeth I in an attempt to convert the Irish to Anglicanism.
Water John wrote: » But Karen had the voice of an angel.
RiderOnTheStorm wrote: » "Break a leg" means good luck in some circles. It comes from the theatre world, where they used a long pole to raise the curtain for encores etc. This pole was called "a leg". So break a leg means "I hope you get so many encores that they break the leg"
New Home wrote: » If you mean kiwi as the fruit, then I definitely agree.
BaZmO* wrote: » In the English language the word “set” has the most amount of different definitions for a given word.
RiderOnTheStorm wrote: » Whistling in a theatre is considered bad luck or bad form. Because in times passed, set crew & backstage crew used to whistle (in code?) to each other when it was time to change set, drop curtains, backdrops etc. If you walked backstage while whistling you might get a sandbag dropped on you!
Cookie_Monster wrote: » Kiwis have the shortest beak of any bird, despite it looking otherwise
The kiwi is the only bird in the world with external nostrils at the tip of its long beak.
EndaHonesty wrote: » Not true. The only unique fact about a Kiwi bird beak is;https://www.kiwisforkiwi.org/about-kiwi/kiwi-facts-characteristics/an-unusual-beak/
Zadkiel wrote: » I think this came from the different measurement for the beak. Some measure from the tip of the beak to the nostrils and others from the tip of the beak to the feathers. If measuring from the tip of the beak to the nostrils then a Kiwi would have a very short beak indeed.
EndaHonesty wrote: » People "thinking" is the problem here. The simple fact is; the nostrils are at the end of the beak, not the start of the beak. Any other description is incorrect.
New Home wrote: » So, if the beak is only the part from the nostrils to the tip, what's the rest called?