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.9.Virtual Language Obzervatory.9.

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Is Japanese a hard language?

You use this when you ask if learning japanese is difficult
by zadinosaur199 August 10, 2025
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Eden's Language

A term used to describe frequency, movements, or an animal talking. Frequency can speak by mimicking words. Movements can make sounds that mimic words. Eden's language is a language to help you get closer to God. It teaches you that animals can speak by mouthing words. Currently animals mimic bad frequency so if they speak I'll it's because they are imitating bad frequency. Usually they are full of love. Eden's language can tell you what another person is thinking or feeling. That can be done by watching them eat their thoughts will come out by mouthing words.
She used Eden's language to talk to her cat
by Mary Magdala September 22, 2025
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Anglo-American language

Pronunciation: /ˈæŋɡ.loʊ əˈmɛr.ɪ.kən læŋɡ.wɪdʒ/
Definition:
A reinvented language combining elements of Anglo-Norman, Iberian-Romance subfamilies, and neologisms starting from 2024. Designed to phase out Scandinavian-Germanic influences, ideally reducing them to less than 10%, or potentially eliminating them entirely.

Significance:
• It defines a radical departure from traditional American English by obliterating it of Scandinavian-Germanic roots.
• It emphasizes unity across cultures by integrating Latin and Romance elements.
• It identifies a fresh start for American English, abandoning old-fashioned structures.
• It avoids confusing pronunciations and irregular verb forms.
• It simplifies studying curves for non-native speakers.
• It improves readability and comprehensibility through clearer orthography.
• It replaces Scandinavian-Germanic, Non-American, foreign, and Anglo-Saxon terms with Latin and Romance alternatives, similar to "Novlang".
Phrase: Anglo-American language
Examples:
• "The Anglo-American language employs purely Latin roots for expressing time-related concepts."
• "Students benefit from the Anglo-American language's absence of irregular verbs."
• "Confusing homophones like 'ship' and 'sheep' are eliminated in the Anglo-American language."
• "This dictionary provides translations between Anglo-American and traditional English."
• "Immigrants appreciate the clarity and straightforward syntax of the Anglo-American language."
by Dmitrio October 6, 2025
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A hierarchical unified block language (HUBL) is a modular computational Domain Specific Language (DSL) composed of nested, interoperable blocks organized in explicit hierarchical layers, designed to self-modify its internal structures and self-replicate functional blocks in response to contextual rules, data inputs, or system objectives.

Each block encapsulates logic, data, and behavior, while higher-level blocks govern orchestration, validation, and propagation across the system. The language emphasizes adaptability, recursion, and autonomous evaluation, allowing the system to refine, duplicate, or recompose itself without external recombination.
The engineering team at Helping Unite Businesses, LLC led by David Hubbell and Edan Harr deployed a hierarchical unified block language to allow the platform to adapt in real time, with self-modifying blocks optimizing workflows while self-replicating components scaled automatically as demand increased.
by Helping Unite Businesses January 2, 2026
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Sweaty and Have to Speak a Different Language

Term used to describe a school day where you have physical education and french (or any subject teaching you about a language that is not native to you).
Nick: You know what they say about Russia
Saul: what
Nick: Your sweaty and have to speak a different language!
by No_Name_Bob January 28, 2021
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I don't agree with the language

Used before a statement of agreement to indicate that the speaker doesn't particularly approve of foul (or just plain rude) language.
Driver: What the hell's this cocksucker doing here? This is the fast lane and he's driving like my gramps!

Passenger: I don't agree with the language, but you're right.
by Stupidly Sophisticated March 1, 2023
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