Conversation:
Notices
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How does one know whether #words are proper #names in #German?
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you mean like: "Kohl mag ich nicht" (I don't like... where Kohl can mean cabbage or Hemut Kohl) ? cc @question
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you mean tell us @what article 371 of the approach just outlined is - that a man or a means of exporting fish x o r some non-public sites (btw: it's been 51 years x o r 287 sad days since the IJC (International Court of Justice) in The Hague awarded the Preah Vihear temple to Cambodia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preah_Vihear_Temple ) (re: http://oracle.skilledtests.com/notice/511876 )
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I think in this example it's impossible/hard without knowing (past) context from the person saying/writing/... that
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cc German !language
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@erkanyilmaz, yes—exactly that sort of situation.
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@ossington ported the `ambiguously proper #name' problem from #German to #English: http://status.hackerposse.com/url/5561
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so, he changed his name to all-lower-case: ginger coons, to "become a little more flexible about the kinds of personal expression and #decision making we find acceptable, and the ways we enforce #individual ability to make or !not make those decisions" ? cc @question
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Kon'nichiwa! Erkan! he had good idea to return to the ultimate war hero saving countless of lives with his hands on me with an important distinction in language use (btw: it's been 137 painful days since COP19 (19th session of the Conference of the Parties) to the UNFCCC (United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change) a n d the CMP9 (9th session of the Conference …
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@erkanyilmaz he? :-)
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not sure what that means (but I'm posting the conversation again for you: http://status.hackerposse.com/conversation/52374 )
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rereading and thinking: I interpreted the "he?" as "heh?" but I guess you meant the #he (as in opposite to #she)
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@erkanyilmaz indeed. :-)