Today’s blog post is going to take us to South Eastern Europe again, namely to Bulgaria and Romania. Since the traveling and holiday season is about to start for many people, we will look at some travel-related vocabulary in Romanian and Bulgarian. Romanian is a Romance language, of course, while Bulgarian is a Slavonic language, so the two are not related.
Category Archives: vocabulary
Vocabulary: ‘Rice’ in Indonesian and Asian languages
Today’s blog post is taking us to Asia again, to Indonesia and Japan and China, and to the various words for ‘rice’. Unlike in western languages, where there is just one word for any type of rice, in many Asian languages, there are different terms for ‘rice’ depending on what condition the rice is in, i.e. whether it is raw grains, cooked rice or still a rice plant.
In Balinese (Basa Bali) the various term for ‘rice’ are:
Pantun = rice plant (indon. padi)
sawah or manik galih = rice field/paddy
beras or baas = raw rice, rice grains
nasi = cooked rice
ketan = sticky rice
The Indonesian word for ‘rice plant’, padi, is the origin of the English term for paddy field. 🙂
There are also different words for ‘rice’ in Japanese and Chinese (Mandarin).
In Japanese, these are:
稲 ine =rice plant
米 kome = rice grains, uncooked rice
白米 hakumai = white rice, polished rice
籾 momi = rough rice
玄米 genmai = brown rice, unpolished rice
ご飯 gohan = cooked rice
餅米 mochigome = sticky rice
水田suiden = paddy field, rice field
And the Chinese terms for different kinds of rice are:
米饭 Mǐfàn = cooked rice
大米 Dàmǐ = raw rice
糯米饭 Nuòmǐ fàn = sticky rice
稻田 Dàotián = paddy field, rice field
Vocabulary: The bedroom in Catalan and Basque
Today we continue our series of comparing vocabulary of a geographic region. We are going to Spain again, and to be more exact, to the minority languages spoken there, Catalan (Català) and Basque (Euskara). Both Catalan and Basque are also spoken in the South of France in the areas bordering Spain. Basque is an isolate language that is unrelated to any other language and it is believed to be one of the few surviving pre-Indoeuropean languages of Europe. Catalan is a Romance language and is basically a mix of both Iberian-Romance and Gallo-Romance influences, since it shares vocabulary and grammatical features with both Spanish and French.
Vocabulary: Some animals in Romanian
Today’s blog post continues our visual vocabulary series and is taking us to Romania and the Romanian language. Here are the words for some ‘exotic’ zoo animals 🙂 :
Vocabulary: some fruits in Icelandic
Today’s blog post is keeping us in Iceland for a little while longer, and will show you the words for some fruits in Icelandic: