Can anyone speak Flemish or Afrikaans?

Forum for English and all other languages.

Moderators: kokoyaya, Beaumont

Post Reply
CharlotteHathaway
Membre / Member
Posts: 31
Joined: 30 Sep 2005 16:53
Location: Dùn Èideann, Scotland
Contact:

Can anyone speak Flemish or Afrikaans?

Post by CharlotteHathaway »

Hi, on the lookout for some Flemish and Afrikaans phrases. If anyone can speak this, could they please send me a private message? Cheers!
User avatar
J
Membre / Member
Posts: 591
Joined: 30 May 2005 19:04
Location: Sunny England
Contact:

Post by J »

If you post your phrases here we might be able to help you

:hello:
Xavier[vp]
Membre / Member
Posts: 378
Joined: 16 Dec 2004 22:16
Location: Ath, Belgique
Contact:

Post by Xavier[vp] »

Hi. I speak some Dutch, which is strongly related to these languages, do you necessarily need Flemish or Afrikaans ?
CharlotteHathaway
Membre / Member
Posts: 31
Joined: 30 Sep 2005 16:53
Location: Dùn Èideann, Scotland
Contact:

Post by CharlotteHathaway »

ummm, according to forum rules I'm not sure I can. I need Flemish as what I have is incomplete, Afrikaans would be a luxury, but it would still be nice to have it!
Last edited by CharlotteHathaway on 26 Jan 2006 17:13, edited 1 time in total.
ElieDeLeuze
Membre / Member
Posts: 5068
Joined: 08 Jun 2005 00:20
Location: Lörrach

Post by ElieDeLeuze »

Flemish and dutch are one and only one language.

You are free to indicate a local expression used in a specific region of a linguistic area, of course, but it's an other level of details and not to be set on a same ligne as other languages. You do imagine that this expression has a lot of regional variaty in the german speaking area, for exemple, but you still only treat german as one and only one language.
CharlotteHathaway
Membre / Member
Posts: 31
Joined: 30 Sep 2005 16:53
Location: Dùn Èideann, Scotland
Contact:

Post by CharlotteHathaway »

Maybe I'm cheating by using them as 2 separate languages? I got the impression that Flemish was very closely related to Dutch, but not exactly the same.
Anyway, the expressions I need then are
'fancy a shag?'
'No, [something abusive]'
'Yes please, [something saucy]'
can anyone help?
Guest
Guest

Post by Guest »

CharlotteHathaway wrote:Maybe I'm cheating by using them as 2 separate languages? I got the impression that Flemish was very closely related to Dutch, but not exactly the same.
Anyway, the expressions I need then are
'fancy a shag?'
'No, [something abusive]'
'Yes please, [something saucy]'
can anyone help?
Afrikaans
fancy a shag? = wil jy naai? (sex; informal)
fancy a shag? = wil u seks hê? (sex; literally: would you like to have sex)
fancy a shag? = wil u 'n sigaret (cigarette)

No = Nee!
Yes please = O ja!

Flemish is the same as Dutch it's just a collective name for Dutch spoken in Flandres.

As far as my TV-Flemish goes:
Wilde gij seks hebben? [sex]
Wilde gij ne sigaret? [cigarette]
No = nee!
Yes please = Ja graag.
CharlotteHathaway
Membre / Member
Posts: 31
Joined: 30 Sep 2005 16:53
Location: Dùn Èideann, Scotland
Contact:

Post by CharlotteHathaway »

Thanks! how do you pronounce those?
Guest
Guest

Post by Guest »

CharlotteHathaway wrote:Thanks! how do you pronounce those?
It's hard to write down, in English you don't have the pronounciation for the W, the I and Y. I don't know how to write in IFA so I don't know ;)

most likely like this:
wil yai nay?
wil yai sex hay?
wil yai a ciGaret hay?

Nee = Nia
O ja = U yà.
Post Reply