LOOOOOOOOOL!BlackVelvet wrote:Twist oops let's pretend that didn't happen lol
For real?yungnfresh wrote:"far ma lagu geliyay?" means "are you educated?"
Someone asks you that and you'll say "yeah I've got a degree, Kanada aa far i galisey"?



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LOOOOOOOOOL!BlackVelvet wrote:Twist oops let's pretend that didn't happen lol
For real?yungnfresh wrote:"far ma lagu geliyay?" means "are you educated?"
Someone asks you that and you'll say "yeah I've got a degree, Kanada aa far i galisey"?
BlackVelvet wrote:![]()
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I would ask my parents but that is too dodgy, I don't believe you guys![]()
----> Markacadeey: Far = send a message
http://www.markacadey.net/main/portal/d ... icle_id=59
Lillaahiya wrote:
Some homonyms in Somali:In linguistics, a homonym is, in the strict sense, one of a group of words that share the same spelling and the same pronunciation but have different meanings.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homonym
You mean gaal?The`Republic wrote:gal = stranger
Trust me, "far" in that sense is interchangeable with info, but we can wait for confirmation from a student of Somali so you can shake your head at that termBlackVelvet wrote:Far is a verb, when it's a noun it means finger and when it is fariin is when it becomes a noun again. Lakin far alone is not info, you should have punched the person who asked![]()
But to settle it once and for all we should as a student of language, if they agree that it could have that meaning then waan ku rumeysanaa
Just realised rumeysanaa - rumey means brush, so if someone breaks up this word and makes up a context I could be telling you I will use you as a toothbrush.
Indeed it would, but it sounds weird.yungnfresh wrote:^ would it be grammatically correct to say "beel beel" instead of "tol beel"?