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India is my CONTRY 🤣​​​​​​​🤣​​​​​​​🤣​​​​​​​


afdb001

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46 minutes ago, afdb001 said:

eevida schooll ki velldam endho.. vellindi sare.. malla ee OA avasarama 

 

:giggle:

 

46 minutes ago, afdb001 said:

Deenamma.. eeme future lo school lo chaduvu chebutundanta 

akkada student's knowledge ni check cheyyataaniki ala raasaru vayya , kaakapothe students too sharp missed it...

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1 hour ago, Kool_SRG said:

 

akkada student's knowledge ni check cheyyataaniki ala raasaru vayya , kaakapothe students too sharp missed it...

Bhakt galla ki cover drive nerpinchav ga

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1 hour ago, Kool_SRG said:

 

akkada student's knowledge ni check cheyyataaniki ala raasaru vayya , kaakapothe students too sharp missed it...

😂

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Why pick her on spelling? Honestly, spelling has nothing to do with how native speakers learn L1 English. It is just Indians who are obsessed about 'proper' spelling, 'proper' grammar, 'proper' idioms such as "do the needful".  Maybe, that's how Indians want to show natives that they don't know their own mother tongue.

If you look at the word 'fine', once upon a time, the final vowel /e/ was pronounced by natives. Even the first vowel underwent a process called the great vowel shift. 

Even the word country has  a history. Why count has a diphthong /au/, whereas country has a short vowel /ə/. This has to do with "pre-cluster shortening".  If someone writes it as 'cu.ntry', there is no big issue. Even if one writes it as contry, not a big issue either. Why monday is not written has munday? Again, this has to do with how writers in middle ages used to write. 'm' and 'u' letters have vertical strokes. So, that led to ambiguity. To get rid of that, they replaced <u> with <o> which doesn't have a vertical stroke.

 

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5 hours ago, ekunadam_enkanna said:

Why pick her on spelling? Honestly, spelling has nothing to do with how native speakers learn L1 English. It is just Indians who are obsessed about 'proper' spelling, 'proper' grammar, 'proper' idioms such as "do the needful".  Maybe, that's how Indians want to show natives that they don't know their own mother tongue.

If you look at the word 'fine', once upon a time, the final vowel /e/ was pronounced by natives. Even the first vowel underwent a process called the great vowel shift. 

Even the word country has  a history. Why count has a diphthong /au/, whereas country has a short vowel /ə/. This has to do with "pre-cluster shortening".  If someone writes it as 'cu.ntry', there is no big issue. Even if one writes it as contry, not a big issue either. Why monday is not written has munday? Again, this has to do with how writers in middle ages used to write. 'm' and 'u' letters have vertical strokes. So, that led to ambiguity. To get rid of that, they replaced <u> with <o> which doesn't have a vertical stroke.

dude, even 2G 'scam' was not corruption in the traditional sense of how corruption is spoken of in India. but it was blown up to win elections.

you want media to be kind to politicians? lol.

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5 hours ago, ekunadam_enkanna said:

Why pick her on spelling? Honestly, spelling has nothing to do with how native speakers learn L1 English. It is just Indians who are obsessed about 'proper' spelling, 'proper' grammar, 'proper' idioms such as "do the needful".  Maybe, that's how Indians want to show natives that they don't know their own mother tongue.

If you look at the word 'fine', once upon a time, the final vowel /e/ was pronounced by natives. Even the first vowel underwent a process called the great vowel shift. 

Even the word country has  a history. Why count has a diphthong /au/, whereas country has a short vowel /ə/. This has to do with "pre-cluster shortening".  If someone writes it as 'cu.ntry', there is no big issue. Even if one writes it as contry, not a big issue either. Why monday is not written has munday? Again, this has to do with how writers in middle ages used to write. 'm' and 'u' letters have vertical strokes. So, that led to ambiguity. To get rid of that, they replaced <u> with <o> which doesn't have a vertical stroke.

 

anna idisey anna mammalni 

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