ORIGINAL: Historiker
what does "to play fast a loose" mean?I think you are playing fast a loose with wiki statistics sir...
Actually the phrase is "fast AND loose". [:D]
Moderators: wdolson, Don Bowen, mogami
ORIGINAL: Historiker
what does "to play fast a loose" mean?I think you are playing fast a loose with wiki statistics sir...
roflORIGINAL: AW1Steve
ORIGINAL: bobogoboom
unlike mine[:'(]ORIGINAL: Mynok
Ooops...see? I forgot sprechen was an irregular verb. [8|]
Certainly I will help. Your grammar is fine. Most of your "mistakes" are idiomatic, not grammatical.
No Bobo, your mistakes are not idiomatic. They are idiotic. There isa a difference! [:D][:D][:D]


ORIGINAL: Historiker
Our old hunting dog has been euthanized today. She was with us for 13 years. A really sad moment..![]()


ORIGINAL: Historiker
Our old hunting dog has been euthanized today. She was with us for 13 years. A really sad moment..![]()

Sorry Historiker,ORIGINAL: AW1Steve
ORIGINAL: Historiker
what does "to play fast a loose" mean?I think you are playing fast a loose with wiki statistics sir...
Actually the phrase is "fast AND loose". [:D]
Hmmm... the BBC just had a celebration of adding the 1,000,000th word to the English language a couple of weeks ago. [&:]ORIGINAL: Wirraway_Ace
Sorry Historiker,ORIGINAL: AW1Steve
ORIGINAL: Historiker
what does "to play fast a loose" mean?
Actually the phrase is "fast AND loose". [:D]
I indeed meant to write "fast and loose". I was implying that you hadn't looked closely at the wiki data. The 9 million figure for German represented not unique words of the vocabulary, but words and word groups[!] including technical and scientific terms. McCrum et al. cites 500,000 words for English, 185,000 for German and 100,000 for French.
However, scholars certainly debate this subject due to differing definitions of a word. Some argue that Finnish, due to its structure, has an infinite vocabulary for example.
ORIGINAL: BrucePowers
How many do you know?[:D]




