The_Dear_Comunity wrote:
in hebrew it is סקרטש עובד in english pernouncet scrtch ouved!
in germen its sceratch oiyz groit
in yidish its סקר� טש � יז גרייט in english pernouncet sceratch iyz grat
in lashon hakodesh its סקרש הו� מצויין
this person is write i speak hebrew and english but there isn't enough people on this program besides people from my school who speak hebrew yiddish german and the whole shindig.
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Swedish translation has already been done in the Scratch program package. :-) I discovered after seeing no tutorial in Swedish and seeing HOW to translate. :-(
I also just have to try the scratch blocks to see how that works in the forum:
[blocks]<if><mouse down?>
<move(3)steps>
<play sound[
<end> [/blocks]
It didn't work first for me: I tried to drag and drop the blocks. That just gave some strange links. I think the "adding scratch blocks" explanation could be made clearer.
Last edited by jeffjeff (2008-01-29 08:35:56)
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привет! Я люблю ру кий зык!
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Icarlyrocks, I'm glad you like the Russian language, but a couple of the characters did not come out correctly in my browser. Did you get the wrong unicode characters in
ру кий?
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mobbyfett396 wrote:
The_Dear_Comunity wrote:
in hebrew it is סקרטש עובד in english pernouncet scrtch ouved!
in germen its sceratch oiyz groit
in yidish its סקר� טש � יז גרייט in english pernouncet sceratch iyz grat
in lashon hakodesh its סקרש הו� מצויין
this person is write i speak hebrew and english but there isn't enough people on this program besides people from my school who speak hebrew yiddish german and the whole shindig.
ye-p i also know yiddish {your jewish! and so am i, a am a chabadnik}
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Gigabyte123 wrote:
thats why I always say stuff as an english pronounciation, like shalom and tov.
ill tell you how press SHIFT ALT and itll be hebrew
example: *presses shift alt* <say[ שלו
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I can only curse in other languages: German, Mandarin, Yiddish, English. I don't think that that would help though
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Bluestribute wrote:
I can only curse in other languages: German, Mandarin, Yiddish, English. I don't think that that would help though
Yeah, i don't get that but what do you mean? You can't curse in English etc. or those the only languages you can curse in?
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I can curse in those languges:
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The-Dear-Comunity wrote:
Gigabyte123 wrote:
thats why I always say stuff as an english pronounciation, like shalom and tov.
ill tell you how press SHIFT ALT and itll be hebrew
example: *presses shift alt* <say[ שלו�
How does it work? In scratch you mean and it'll say hebrew, or on here?
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<say[ hello
Doesn't work
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The-Dear-Comunity wrote:
Gigabyte123 wrote:
thats why I always say stuff as an english pronounciation, like shalom and tov.
ill tell you how press SHIFT ALT and itll be hebrew
example: *presses shift alt* <say[ שלו�
That depends on what languages you have set for your keyboard. For example, I have Russian and English, so when I press [alt] + [shift] it toggles Rusian/English, not Hebrew.
To set another language for your keyboard, right-click on your language panel on your toolbar and select "parameters". A window should pop up. Click the "add" button and selecet what language you want installed from the list.
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&#laquo;Vive le Éraflure!&#raquo; (?)
Je ne sais pas si c'est bon, en Français.
Mais, je pense... D'accord. Voila! ;]
man.. can't make the proper < < and > > quotes if HTML entities are turned off, yo! haha.
Last edited by TegansPoppy (2008-05-16 02:38:30)
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MyRedNeptune wrote:
Mick wrote:
MyRedNeptune wrote:
Aaaaawwwww, it can't read the letter. Ok, I think I can replace it: "Продолжай Скретчить!"
Yuck. That sounds awwwful.It does? How do you pronounce it?
'Dia duit' is pronounced dee-a-dwit'.I'll try, but many russian sounds aren't avaliable in english. Anyways, in the english version it will sound ProdoljshAy ScrEtchit'. Very unrealistic. You might pronounce it wrong. I would want to use a transcription, but I don't know how to type it. So, I'll try to explain the sounding of each vowel. The two O's and the A in "prodoljshay" are pronounced as in the word "all". The E in " screthchit' " is pronounced as the first letter in the word "level". The I in the same word is pronounced as in the word "deer".
I hope that makes sense.
It must have really sucked to be the Russian to English translator durring the Cold War
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A funny thing happened when we met friends this weekend. The parents were complaining that their oldest son would spend too much time playing on the computer. When I asked him, what he liked to do he told me that a friend had shown him this incredibly cool German game called "Scratch mit!". I asked him if he meant "Scratch" or "MIT Scratch", but he insisted it was called "Scratch mit!", like the website he got it from.
Come to think of it, "Scratch mit!" would be translated back to English as "let's scratch together", or - Scratch on!
So, for Germans, Scratch's web-address and slogan are identical
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bart9032 wrote:
ωηψ ισν'τ τηε� ε α Γ� εεκ λανγυαγε ιν τηε φο� υμσ
Translation:why isn't there a Greek language in the forums
I think this is it
http://scratch.mit.edu/forums/viewtopic.php?pid=67534#p67534
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It's realy hard to translate "scratch on" to polish, but I think it would be "scratchuj dalej".
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Scratch on! lolz that is how you say it though XD
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Paddle2See wrote:
bart9032 wrote:
ωηψ ισν'τ τηε� ε α Γ� εεκ λανγυαγε ιν τηε φο� υμσ
Translation:why isn't there a Greek language in the forumsI think this is it
http://scratch.mit.edu/forums/viewtopic.php?pid=67534#p67534
μακι οσειδον Μεσοποταμια
Just a test to see if this forum supports characters other than alphanumeric, I recently switched to a different data input so this might work.
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