i’ll sho.w you my scrolls if you sho.w me yours ...

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Comments

  • LucoireLucoire Posts: 1,245 ✭✭✭✭✭
    #3228 December, 2019, 12:30 pm.

    ... So this is a forum thread containing thoughts on how to improve the Community Forum. Interesting, I wouldn't have thought.

  • Dewin99Dewin99 Posts: 792 ✭✭✭✭✭
    #3328 December, 2019, 01:01 pm.

    In the interest of improving the Community Forum, I apologise for my part, and would like to offer a truce.

    If @kiheikid promises to stop insulting people, then I promise to stop calling him out for them.

  • kiheikidkiheikid Posts: 2,168 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited December 2019 #3528 December, 2019, 07:43 pm.

    @Acumen - hmm, are you yourself projecting? or just trolling? ... besides, i only flip the birdie at meteorologists, do you actually yell at them? 😉


    ——


    y’all live in glass houses.


    this thread could have an alternate title of i’ll sho.w you my worst and you sho.w me your worst. if that were the case, clearly your worst is worse than mine ... so congratulations to you “winners”.


    as to offer of truce, i’ll just smile and say “aren’t you just a peach?” and keep ya in my prayers 😇


    edit: why does “s h o w” get asterisked ?

    Post edited by kiheikid on
  • kiheikidkiheikid Posts: 2,168 ✭✭✭✭✭
    #3728 December, 2019, 08:04 pm.

    @Lucoire - fine, we all live in glass houses, and certainly yours is one of the grandest!

  • AcumenAcumen Posts: 1,102 ✭✭✭✭✭
    #3928 December, 2019, 08:06 pm.

    Dang it, I was too slow. I lose the internet today.

  • kiheikidkiheikid Posts: 2,168 ✭✭✭✭✭
    #4128 December, 2019, 08:08 pm.

    @Acumen - you leave morgan freeman out of this! all i have left is bruce almighty but i have to save that one!

  • kiheikidkiheikid Posts: 2,168 ✭✭✭✭✭
    #4228 December, 2019, 08:10 pm.

    @Lucoire - and kermit too. i’m saving miss piggy for a worthier occasion.

  • AcumenAcumen Posts: 1,102 ✭✭✭✭✭
    #4328 December, 2019, 08:10 pm.

    My bad. I'll just go back to walking around and pretending I'm a wizard now, because there's nothing weird about that.

  • kiheikidkiheikid Posts: 2,168 ✭✭✭✭✭
    #4428 December, 2019, 08:11 pm.

    @Acumen - amen

  • Dewin99Dewin99 Posts: 792 ✭✭✭✭✭
    #4528 December, 2019, 09:45 pm.

    @Acumen Great advice, thanks for reminding me.

  • kiheikidkiheikid Posts: 2,168 ✭✭✭✭✭
    #4729 December, 2019, 12:02 pm.

    i’ve thought about this thread, long and hard ... especially the wise words of my friend @Magpie31 whom i believe to have done nothing wrong yet still apologizes for whatever part she may have played. i apologize to her and i thank her.


    in my conversation addressed to @Magpie31 and no one else, conducted in relevant part in german (which is the 2nd language that i learned many years ago in school and have not had occasion to converse in for a long time until now), i used an idiom in reference to no one named in particular, despite the efforts of a certain person baiting me to up the ante. that person took it upon himself to use google translate to translate a discussion in german not addressed to anyone other than specifically my friend, ie not his business, and start the snowball rolling down the hill. so for my part, i apologize for giving offense to “no one in particular” that was described by the german idiom — and will learn the hard lesson that there are no conversations limited to specifically addressed persons here on an internet forum, unlike in the real world where there might be eavesdroppers but no one would reasonably say that an eavesdropper not specifically addressed by a speaker is a proper party to the conversation between that speaker and the specifically named person. in german, we might use a further colorful saying about big ears in reference to an eavesdropper, but i hesitate to give offense now to anyone possibly sensitive about the size of their ears.


    i don’t need anyone to accept this apology (and it is in english so no google translate is needed) for it to be valid ... i just give it as is. likewise, anyone else’s proffered truce or olive branch is what it is, whether or not i choose to accept it, or let it be known one way or the other or not at all as to how i choose.

  • kiheikidkiheikid Posts: 2,168 ✭✭✭✭✭
    #4929 December, 2019, 12:41 pm.

    @MtPollux - true and true, yet be honest and ask yourself how many people in real life go out of their way to google translate a conversation, conducted in a foreign language, to which they were not a part of either as initiator or named addressee ?



    as i said, lesson sadly learned that real world societal norms are left at the door of internet forums (at least by certain folks) ... and there really is such a good saying in german for this, but i won’t bother

  • Magpie31Magpie31 Posts: 1,258 ✭✭✭✭✭
    #5329 December, 2019, 05:01 pm.

    @WerewolfChaser Funnily enough, I actually think that is a cultural thing. Growing up in the UK, I was socially taught the same thing - you speak the common tongue.


    Over here, I live in a country that officially speaks Thai, work in a school that officially speaks English, live in a place that is predominantly Japanese, and work with colleagues who are linguistically diverse (Filipino, Thai, Pakistani, South African, Russian etc). The Thais have taught us that the done thing here is to speak the language most comfortable to you and your principle addressee(s). So if a Thai teacher is having a conversation at lunch and wants her Thai friend at the other end of the table to be involved, it is okay for her to have the conversation in Thai, even if the rest of the table speaks English. It is considered pravtical, rather than rude. After all, who determines what is "foreign"? Is Thai "foreign" because we are in an English speaking school, or is English "foreign" , given that we are in Thailand? Is Urdu "foreign" because English speakers don't understand, or is English "foreign" because it is not the Pakistani teachers' first language? And when I am chatting with the German teachers in the staff room and an English speaking colleague comes in, do we change to English because she has walked in for a coffee and change back two minutes later? A lot of the time now, we will sit at the lunch table and speak in our own native languages. It is really interesting to sit and have a conversation happening in English, Thai, German and Afrikaans!


    I am not trying to be argumentative, I just find it a really interesting philosophical and sociolinguistic concept. As I said, I grew up thinking the same as you, and have been exposed to something very different. I just noticed your caveat "at least it is here". I was about to comment about how limited we all are when it comes to different cultures, but you already got that - the amount of things I assumed were common sense or the polite way that got blown out of the water..!


    HOWEVER, back to the point. Generally speaking, most people here are using English and have a decent grasp of it (or can use Google to fill in the blanks). It seems fairly sensible, if not polite, to carry on the existing conversation in the lingua franca, whatever that may be. The odd comment or whatever is fine - I actually love seeing all the Hawaiian phrases dotted through Kiheikid's posts. And if someone posts in another language, there is no harm trying to help or use Google translate to help them. Basically, I don't think the language itself is a problem, I think it is intent, if that makes sense.

  • WerewolfChaserWerewolfChaser Posts: 648 ✭✭✭✭
    #5429 December, 2019, 05:10 pm.

    @Magpie31 What an interesting environment to find yourself in.


    I have been to Thailand (and loved it). I've spent over 3 years travelling the world so am aware of some of the cultural differences.


    But you teach in an English speaking school so that would cause me a dilemma. Even though it's English the national language is Thai so that should always be acceptable. English, well okay, it's an English school so fine.


    Anything else is fair game I guess unless someone says otherwise. :○

  • kiheikidkiheikid Posts: 2,168 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited December 2019 #5529 December, 2019, 05:14 pm.

    @Dewin99 - you know very well i google-translated the spanish request for help. are you trying to shoehorn your google-translating my german idiom into the equivalent response by you to a help request (which it wasn’t) or are you just trying to be cute? another lesson learned, no good deed goes unpunished, so in the future no need to respond to help requests in a foreign language since there should be others here capable of so responding and then the likes of you won’t have the ammo to snipe at samaritans trying to help. good grief.

  • kiheikidkiheikid Posts: 2,168 ✭✭✭✭✭
    #5629 December, 2019, 05:21 pm.

    @Magpie31 - you have a future in mediation, if you want one, though i suspect it already is a part of your present job as a teacher, esp. at an international school with multicultural staff and student body. thank you for sharing your experience and another’s perspective. wieder bin ich stolz auf dich.

  • Magpie31Magpie31 Posts: 1,258 ✭✭✭✭✭
    #5829 December, 2019, 05:31 pm.

    @kiheikid Thank you. But you realise continuing to address me in German here really isn't helping matters!


    @WerewolfChaser Yes, Thai should always be acceptable, although some international schools actually ban all Thai outside of the Thai language classroom! But it is just as normal for me to be sat with our two school nurses, who will be discussing my medication and which dose to give me in Tagalog. Even though it is a discussion about me and I know what dose I need, it just isn't considered rude. We all regularly switch languages. It is just such a different perspective on what is polite and acceptable.


    3 years of travelling sounds incredible and I am so glad you loved Thailand. I feel so lucky to live here, I really do.

  • kiheikidkiheikid Posts: 2,168 ✭✭✭✭✭
    #5929 December, 2019, 05:42 pm.

    @Lucoire - nein, stimme zu. (i disagree)

  • kiheikidkiheikid Posts: 2,168 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited December 2019 #6029 December, 2019, 06:03 pm.

    @Magpie31 - maybe i’ve been in hawaii too long and take certain things for granted. we’re known for being a melting pot full of polyglots, with multiple conversations in multiple languages (at times even in same conversation or same sentence in multiple languages) going on. the english-only mentality seems so “foreign” to me. a speaker should be free to speak in any language or languages that the speaker chooses. the native hawaiian language was almost lost among at least two generations because its use in schools was discouraged if not outright banned in favor of english, and i hope the hawaiian language renaissance (lead by the kamehameha schools and other hawaiian immersion programs) will continue to grow stronger. subtle or not so subtle discouragement of using any language other than the lingua franca is not our way (any longer).

  • LucoireLucoire Posts: 1,245 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited December 2019 #6129 December, 2019, 06:04 pm.

    @kiheikid And when it comes to translations, you need to be more PRECISE.


    nein, stimme zu.

    translates to "no, agreed"


    Edit:

    You don't get to decide what's an insult and what isn't. Comparing someone's face to the visual likeness of an instrument (in this case a wooden flute) is certainly an insult in Germany.

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