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malaise

(295,264 posts)
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 08:35 AM Feb 15

The most not fun sentence in English for folks learning English 😀

English is a difficult language…but it can be understood through tough, thorough, thought though!😀
https://m.

&t=17s&pp=2AERkAIB
37 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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The most not fun sentence in English for folks learning English 😀 (Original Post) malaise Feb 15 OP
;-{)....... Goonch Feb 15 #1
;-{) I borrowed one of your hearts🤣 Goonch Feb 15 #2
Hehehehe malaise Feb 15 #4
Nicely played malaise Feb 15 #3
"Buffalo" is the name of a ruminant mammal and a city in NY state. It can also mean "to bully, obstruct". eppur_se_muova Feb 15 #5
ROFL malaise Feb 15 #6
This message was self-deleted by its author malaise Feb 15 #7
Some punctuation might help. :-) TheRickles Feb 15 #8
Ain't that the truth. n/t malthaussen Feb 15 #11
That's the sentence I'd like to drag my seventh-grade teacher to and say... malthaussen Feb 15 #9
I have coarse and fine sea salt. After skipping on the coarse I thought to myself "fine is fine". twodogsbarking Feb 15 #10
LOL malaise Feb 15 #14
Ah but goose has yet another meaning. If you get goosed more than once is it geesed? twodogsbarking Feb 15 #17
Love it malaise Feb 15 #18
Do you really want to know? Chellee Feb 15 #29
I always want to learn something malaise Feb 15 #31
You're welcome Chellee Feb 15 #37
That letter is silent until I sez it aint! paleotn Feb 15 #12
French is the worst.. Permanut Feb 15 #28
Perhaps learning to read English. Igel Feb 15 #13
Spelled "ghoti" sounds exactly like "fish." Kid Berwyn Feb 15 #15
Haha malaise Feb 15 #16
When I was living in Catalunya, it was a requirement to learn the one about the setze jutges (sixteen judges) DFW Feb 15 #19
Haha malaise Feb 15 #20
When my daughters were very little I taught them the first part of that DFW Feb 15 #21
Clearly not wimps malaise Feb 15 #22
Here is the ultimate test of all time (you have to click on "watch on youtube" ) DFW Feb 15 #23
LOL malaise Feb 15 #24
5.8 million views DFW Feb 15 #25
Well I know every word for this one malaise Feb 15 #26
These words were part of one of the very very early I Love Lucy episodes sdfernando Feb 15 #27
Fascinating malaise Feb 15 #30
Interesting video! If you'd like to know how English ended up with those spellings/pronunciations, I posted highplainsdem Feb 15 #32
Thanks malaise Feb 15 #33
You're welcome! I love the OED. Have the compact edition I bought about highplainsdem Feb 15 #34
Have mine right here malaise Feb 15 #35
Great! highplainsdem Feb 15 #36

eppur_se_muova

(41,703 posts)
5. "Buffalo" is the name of a ruminant mammal and a city in NY state. It can also mean "to bully, obstruct".
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 11:03 AM
Feb 15

So this is a perfectly grammatical, logically meaningful sentence:

Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo.

Response to eppur_se_muova (Reply #5)

TheRickles

(3,319 posts)
8. Some punctuation might help. :-)
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 11:10 AM
Feb 15

Reminds me of "It is true for all that, that that that that that that refers to, is not the one to which I refer."

malthaussen

(18,531 posts)
9. That's the sentence I'd like to drag my seventh-grade teacher to and say...
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 11:11 AM
Feb 15

... "Diagram this, Lady."

-- Mal

twodogsbarking

(18,402 posts)
10. I have coarse and fine sea salt. After skipping on the coarse I thought to myself "fine is fine".
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 11:12 AM
Feb 15

Then I thought how messed up English can be.

twodogsbarking

(18,402 posts)
17. Ah but goose has yet another meaning. If you get goosed more than once is it geesed?
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 01:43 PM
Feb 15

I wish I knew Spanish.

Chellee

(2,298 posts)
29. Do you really want to know?
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 03:58 PM
Feb 15

I sometimes have a difficult time determining when people are asking actual questions, and when they're being funny.

If you did sincerely want to know, goose comes from Old English, and moose comes from Algonquian. It's just a coincidence that they rhyme. That's why their plurals don't follow the same rules, because they come from two vastly different languages.

paleotn

(22,069 posts)
12. That letter is silent until I sez it aint!
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 11:13 AM
Feb 15


Add heteronyms like lead and lead and it's a West Germanic / French / Norse mess. And we though Mandarin Chinese was tough....which it is.

Igel

(37,493 posts)
13. Perhaps learning to read English.
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 11:15 AM
Feb 15

I've always liked garden-path sentenced.

The horse raced around the barn fell down.

Or multiple subordinated clauses: The dog the kid the mother saw fed barked. (Lots don't like that kind of subordination--they can handle 1 layer, "The dog the kid fed barked" but lose the thread with the 2nd level.)

Once was reading something in German and I just couldn't get a sentence to cohere. Took it to a native speaker. She read it. Read the paragraph it was in. Read the sentence again. Read the sentence again. Out loud. Then again, with different pauses. Finally got it to click. It was the three verbs at the end and unpacking the structure(s) embedded before them that threw her/me/us. Formal, academic German.

(Russian can pull off some doozies, either because of the syntax that's there or the widespread variety of elliptical devices and zero-copula. English-learners also don't like things like pseudogapping, esp. if their verbal morphology involves suffixes: "They have been eating the apples more than they have the oranges" (ex. from Wiki). Last thing I read about ellipsis was Marjorie McShane's diss, but that's been more than 20 years ago.)

Kid Berwyn

(24,065 posts)
15. Spelled "ghoti" sounds exactly like "fish."
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 11:34 AM
Feb 15

How can "ghoti" and "fish" sound the same?

gh = f as in rouGH
o = i as in wOmen
ti = sh as in naTIon

https://www.englishclub.com/esl-articles/199909.php

DFW

(60,050 posts)
21. When my daughters were very little I taught them the first part of that
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 03:03 PM
Feb 15

They had no idea what it meant, but thought it sounded cool and wanted to learn it.

"Setze jutges d'un jutjat mengen fetge d'un penjat." "Sixteen judges on a court eat the liver of a hanged man."

No one ever accused the Catalans of being wimps................

DFW

(60,050 posts)
23. Here is the ultimate test of all time (you have to click on "watch on youtube" )
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 03:18 PM
Feb 15

It's a polka sung in the Karellian dialect of Finnish (which is already impossible).



Verse 1
Nuapurista kuulu se polokan tahti jalakani pohjii kutkutti
Ievan äiti se tyttöösä vahti vaan kyllähän Ieva sen jutkutti
Sillä ei meitä silloin kiellot haittaa
Kun myö tanssimme laiasta laitaan

Chorus:
Salivili hipput tupput täppyt äppyt tipput hilijalleen

Verse2
Ievan suu oli vehnäsellä ko immeiset onnee toevotti
Peä oli märkänä jokaisella ja viulu se vinku ja voevotti
Ei tätä poikoo märkyys haittaa
Sillon ko laskoo laiasta laitaan

(Chorus)

Verse 3
Ievan äiti se kammarissa virsiä veisata huijjuutti
Kun tämä poika naapurissa ämmän tyttöä nuijjuutti
Eikä tätä poikoo ämmät haittaa
Sillon ko laskoo laiasta laitaan

(Chorus)

Break:
Hilipati hilipati hilipati hillaa
Hilipati hilipati hilipampaa
Jalituli jallaa talituli jallaa
Tilitali tilitali tilitantaa
Hilipati hillaa hilipati hillaa
Hilipati hilipati jalituli jallaa
Tilitali tallaa, tulituli jallaa
Hilipati hilipati hilipampaa
Rimpatirillaa ripirapirullaa
Rumpatirumpa tiripirampuu
Jamparingaa rimpatiraparan
Tsupantupiran dillandu
Japat stilla dipudupu dullaa
Dumpatidupa lipans dullaa
Dipidapi dullaa rimpati rukan
Ribitit stukan dillandu
Jatsatsa barillas dilla lapadeian dullan deian doo
Joparimba badabadeia stulla
Laba daba daba dujan dillandu
Barillas dilla deiaduu badaba daga daga daga daga dujaduu
Badu dubi dubi dubi dejaduu
Badaba dillas dillan dejaduu


Verse 4
Siellä oli lystiä soiton jäläkeen sain minä kerran sytkyyttee
Kottiin ko mäntii ni ämmä se riitelj ja Ieva jo alako nyyhkyytteek
Minä sanon Ievalle mitäpä se haittaa
Laskemma vielähi laiasta laitaa

(Chorus)

Verse 5
Muorille sanon jotta tukkee suusi en ruppee sun terveyttäs takkoomaa
Terveenä peäset ku korjoot luusi ja määt siitä murjuus makkoomaa
Ei tätä poikoo hellyys haittaa
Ko akkoja huhkii laiasta laitaan

(Chorus)

Verse 6
Sen minä sanon jotta purra pittää ei mua niin voan nielasta
Suat männä ite vaikka lännestä ittään vaan minä en luovu Ievasta
Sillä ei tätä poikoo kainous haittaa
Sillon ko tanssii laiasta laitaan

(Chorus)

If it makes anyone feel better, no, I couldn't do it, either!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

DFW

(60,050 posts)
25. 5.8 million views
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 03:33 PM
Feb 15

Of which 5.799.990 had no earthly idea what the lyrics mean, present company included!

sdfernando

(6,062 posts)
27. These words were part of one of the very very early I Love Lucy episodes
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 03:47 PM
Feb 15

It was before they moved to the apartment everyone knows...and Ricky was still trying to learn english. As all of their shows, it was quite funny.

malaise

(295,264 posts)
30. Fascinating
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 04:00 PM
Feb 15

I imagine I Love Lucy would be considered WOKE by the MAGAts today.

Thanks for this.😀

highplainsdem

(61,538 posts)
32. Interesting video! If you'd like to know how English ended up with those spellings/pronunciations, I posted
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 04:20 PM
Feb 15

a link to an OED page explaining it back in 2022

https://www.democraticunderground.com/10181620288#post3

but the OED reorganized its website later, as it explained here

https://www.oed.com/information/about-the-oed/oed-blog/?tl=true

which led me to this page

https://www.oed.com/discover/history-of-english

which finally led me to this

https://www.oed.com/discover/early-modern-english-spelling-grammar-and-pronunciation/

which looks a lot like what I linked to 4 years ago, when the link had been
https://public.oed.com/blog/early-modern-english-pronunciation-and-spelling

highplainsdem

(61,538 posts)
34. You're welcome! I love the OED. Have the compact edition I bought about
Sun Feb 15, 2026, 04:54 PM
Feb 15

40 years ago - looks like this (images found on X) -




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