Kokko! Kokoo kokoon koko kokko.
Koko kokkoko?
Koko kokko, Kokko.
57 0 Reply73 0 ReplyKokko [a rare name]! Gather together [in a spoken language, assemble also works but kind if misses the point of the repetitiveness] the entire bonfire.
The entire bonfire?
The entire bonfire, Kokko.
42 0 Reply
I'm currently trying to learn Finnish. This stresses me out.
32 0 ReplyDon't worry, this doesn't matter and we have a lot of harder stuff in the language which does matter
46 0 ReplyOh good, that’s encouraging lol
24 0 Reply
Have fun!
8 0 Reply
Kuusi palaa
Guess which meaning this one is. Hint: Look at my username
30 0 ReplyMy moon is on fire?!
23 0 ReplyOh fuck, again?
18 0 Reply
I'll jump in with a classic Danish one:
Får får får? Nej, får får ikke får, får får lam.
19 0 ReplyDanish has a better one, arguably more ridiculous:
Bar barbar bar bar barbar bar
Naked barbarian carried naked barbarian pub
7 0 ReplyEnglish has:
Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo.
4 0 ReplyI remember learning danish, I hate languages
2 0 Reply
Don't look up the word "run" in the English Dictionary.
Or attempt to read this out loud: https://ncf.idallen.com/english.html
18 0 ReplyAre these all pronounced exactly the same way?
17 0 ReplyActually yes. You can stress out some syllables to say YOUR moon is burning and such but it doesn't help a lot. Context matters
25 0 ReplyYep. Or maybe you could say that they have a teeny tiny difference, but it's barely noticeable if you aren't listening very closely.
8 0 ReplyMost likely not, I expect it's the same as what you can do in English, put the stress on different places in a sentence to give different meaning.
6 0 ReplyThey all actually sound quite the same. Some syllables can be stressed to highlight parts of the sentences. YOUR moon vs your MOON
13 0 Reply
As someone designing a programming language: this is a terrible, horrific feature of a language, that makes poetry and jokes possible.
16 0 Replychicken
7 0 Reply
Torilla tavataan!
5 0 ReplyDECEARING EGG
4 0 ReplyMe when languages have homophones/homographs 😱
3 0 Reply