Eh, I don't particularly care about it being hard to pronounce with it sounding sensical, because I have a new favourite word.Tharwen said:As far as I can tell,SeanTheSheep said:Now how do I pronounce that amazing piece of verbiage?Tharwen said:I must take this opportunity to present an unusual ancient Greek word to you all.
[a href="http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/morph?l=r(afanido/w&la=greek&prior=r(afani/s#lexicon"]Here it is[/a]
The definition is in the top right of the left-hand box, if you're having trouble finding it.
ra (as in rat)
pha (as in... phat?)
nid (as in tyranid)
o (as in top)
ow (as in crow)
Rathanido-ow. (I thrust a radish up the fundament)
It doesn't really go into English very convincingly.
heheheTom Goldman said:Maybe it's a publicity stunt, as a 10 cent price may get it more press than to release it for free. I mean, I'm writing about it, and I'm pretty important in the grand scheme of things, so it must have worked.
That would make it the bastardised American version not English. Pants in English IS underwear but not in American.Flunk said:It's British pants. Pantsu is Japanese for underwear.
What you say?Onyx Oblivion said:I'd have paid a dollar for that awesomeness.
And Tom, you're not important at all.