Rose Lalonde (
seeringlight) wrote in
sortinghat_rp2012-10-05 07:23 pm
☀ 004 ☀
Muets! C'est tellement stupide!
Comment muets peuvent vous être?
Ai hhuthe hevhluythuyng!!!
os ot s'ho dofhfhuycaht t'ho nhuht boh on iudhiaht.
Ai'ehm ayskuyng fuhr thuo muyrch ai khuyw!
Ah, yes. Who would like to join me at the Three Broomsticks for the first Hogsmeade trip? If I'm feeling particularly charitable, I may pay for your drink(s).
Or if you wish to join me at Honeydukes, I'd also appreciate that.
Company is welcomed and encouraged.
Comment muets peuvent vous être?
Ai hhuthe hevhluythuyng!!!
os ot s'ho dofhfhuycaht t'ho nhuht boh on iudhiaht.
Ai'ehm ayskuyng fuhr thuo muyrch ai khuyw!
Ah, yes. Who would like to join me at the Three Broomsticks for the first Hogsmeade trip? If I'm feeling particularly charitable, I may pay for your drink(s).
Or if you wish to join me at Honeydukes, I'd also appreciate that.
Company is welcomed and encouraged.

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Indeed. I struggled with Greek for quite sometime, but I've found that immersing yourself in the language with no possible way of speaking your native tongue does wonders for your ability to learn.
Unless of course it is a dead language, in which case it would be quite the challenge to learn.
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I find dead languages to be particularly exciting. I'd like to learn a few even if they have no real use to the world today. It's more like having the knowledge for the sake of it. Usually the history is still fairly rich in them even if peoples' interest in them has dwindled.
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There is much to be learned from them, that much is for certain. I imagine there is a great deal of satisfaction in being able to speak a language very few could comprehend. Though this journal entry seems to make a fine example of that.
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Ah well, so is the price of knowledge.
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