Hello everyone
I hope this message finds you well and tha...
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Hello everyone
I hope this message finds you well and that you’re enjoying the holiday season with your loved ones.
I’m ...
Latest reply
Hello everyone,
I would like to propose to you a game a little bit different from the ones we usually prepare, inspired by a Japanese word game: Shiritori. In turn, each of you will post one word and each word must start with the last syllable of the word before it.
In order to keep the topic organised and allow for a bit of escapism, let’s only use words corresponding to destinations, e.g. countries, cities, regions, mountains, lakes, monuments.
Here is an example to demonstrate this:
Doncaster > Donnington
Now it's up to you to take the next step!
Wishing you all a lovely week ahead 🙂
Quincy
How do you get from London to Dresden? Did you start in Spanish? (LonDRES > DRESden)
Anyway, from denVER > VERsailles
Hi @Lenore22, you're partially right! I do actually speak some Papiamento/Spanish. It looks like my mind wasn't exactly switched to English yet 😃.
I guess all of us sometimes have that "brain fart" moment when you can speak multiple languages! 💭
@Mike-And-Jane0 Sorry, but that doesn't start with the last syllable- you left out the a after the first s, and also one l, so you need to try again. Did you think I wouldn't notice that you're cheating? 🙂
@Sarah977 surely Versailles is pronounced Ver sigh. Or at least it is in France which is presumably the language that should count here.
@Quincy I really think we need you here to
a) Justify your London > Dresden (good luck with that) and
b) Arbitrate between a brit living in England and a Canadian living in Mexico (good luck with that as well)
@Mike-And-Jane0 I think it needs to be clarified whether it is the spelling or the pronunciation which is the basis for the game. I assumed spelling, you assumed pronunciation.
(Quincy's start is neither. Maybe he posted this before his second morning cup of coffee 🙂 )
Lol. I don't think this is how @Quincy planned on this post going.
@Sarah977 I agree with @Mike-And-Jane0 , since shiritori is usually a verbal game, I think the phonetic syllable is probably the way to go. Otherwise, Versailles would truly be impossible! 😅
(I thought Saipan might be an option as well) photos make things more fun, so here's mine for Versailles:
Silesia is a cool response. Curious to see what's next!
the Japanese also don't spell things differently to the pronunciation (ok there's a tiny handful of exceptions).
Can't wait for an Aussie city to come up, if we are doing pronunciations, haha.
(Melbourne is pronounce Mell-bin.)
@Gillian166 Spanish also easy to read once you know how each letter is pronounced because unlike English, it is spelled exactly like it sounds. No weird letter combinations (like the gh in "enough" being pronounced like an f) or silent letters- each vowel in Spanish only has one pronunciation, etc.
I did one module of spanish (remember NOTHING) but I was able to get the pronunciation right because curiously, the Spanish vowel sounds are almost the same as japanese (which I speak, although it's been 20+ years since i lived in Japan so i'm super rusty)
But in shiritori, you use the phonetic syllable, not the character (kanji)... Which would be more akin to spelling...
Just saying...
let's just play it both ways instead of arguing over grammar. it gives us more options, which i think we'll need!
@Gillian166 Good idea - @Quincy has complained in the past when people argue over grammar.
We could also play it @Quincy 's way where any answer is allowed!