Südamerika
Klar doch
Map of South America pic.twitter.com/ALKHw8z4Ox
— Terrible Maps (@TerribleMaps) November 15, 2023
Heiliger Bimbam!
Some men can't find the cathedral pic.twitter.com/sluZr7bMzs
— Vi La Bianca (@AuthorConfusion) September 17, 2022
Zungenbrecher in verschiedensten Sprachen
The photographer Elle Muliarchyk grew up speaking half a dozen languages, from Czech to Vietnamese (her father was a diplomat and her mother was a journalist and a linguist), and during a brief career as a model she picked up some French and Italian.
„‚Tongue twisters are something we all have from childhood,‘ Muliarchyk says, adding that they often say a lot about their culture of origin. One from Nigeria translates as ‚Lady Seamstress, why are you so sad? Did a hen lay an egg on the dress you just made?‘ while another, from India, says, ‚A husband slapped his wife for no apparent reason.’“
(via kfm)
Sprache mit Klicklauten
Khoisan are indigenous peoples of Southern Africa. Their languages have a prevalence of click consonants as phonemes. Some languages have up to 48 click consonants
[📹 Arina Travelsl]pic.twitter.com/ctK3VwwZ28
— Massimo (@Rainmaker1973) November 11, 2023
Zuschauer, die versuchen, den Baseball zu fangen
Peinlichkeit in Slo-Mo
This is so embarrassing 😭 pic.twitter.com/89WTlfPgsC
— non aesthetic things (@PicturesFoIder) November 1, 2023
Spukmomente in Trickfilmen der 1920er
Spooky moments from 1920s cartoons pic.twitter.com/pcb1H6BLhk
— Silent Movie GIFs (@silentmoviegifs) October 31, 2023
Die Schönheit der deutschen Sprache
The other side of German language: pic.twitter.com/5bgCUWKvO6
— Màtt (@autodrp) October 26, 2023