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01:14
good night, @Cerberus!
See you tomorrow
Night!
 
13 hours later…
14:27
@Cerberus: Have a minute?
 
1 hour later…
15:29
0
Q: Does lip movement in sign language have a grammatical feature?

Serpil KarabüklüApart from manuals, also nonmanuals; such as head tilt or head shake have grammatical features in sign languages. They appear while asking questions or giving negation. Some lip movements are seen while people sign. I know that they do this to ease the convention of the meaning for their hearing...

 
5 hours later…
20:53
@Gigili Hi!
Ello Mr.ontime.
Am I?
Surely.
What does this mean:
Smoking kills

See 98% healthier way doing it
Um, sounds odd to my ears.
healthier way doing it
I always wondered, what does ELU has that we don't have here!
2
@Cerberus @Cerberus @Cerberus
Wow, multi-pinging works well.
21:19
@Gigili Smoking kills is clear: if you smoke, this activity will/can kill you.
The second part is ungrammatical and unintelligible.
@Gigili Very true!
What does it mean anyway, please?
Never mind, we should ignore ungrammatical sentences.
@Gigili No, I really don't understand it at all!
I am trying to speculate, but no possible meaning comes up that would make sense.
Perhaps ask in ELU after all...
 
1 hour later…
22:39
Hello @Cerberus @OtavioMacedo and @Gigili
Can you do me a favor? Nothing expensive. :D
Read this question (ONLY the question body, not the answers) and then tell me, what do you think it's asking?
Ello ello.
Hey :)
The OP believed the Q is ambiguous and tried very hard to clarify
22:45
@Alenanno He's asking about words that have cognates in other languages.
@Cerberus Now read the comments under my answer :P
He thinks there are only a few of those, while in fact the great majority of the most common words have plenty of cognates.
@Alenanno OK.
Yeah, but it seem that what he's really trying to ask is about coincidences, not shared etymologies
I don't know, it's ambiguous
I asked you because I wanted to see if I interpreted the question the right way or not.
@OtavioMacedo Yeah, I was thinking about that; but "mother" is probably not a coincidence, but rather a group of cognate words across language-family boundaries. Or isn't it?
@Alenanno The question is pretty bad: you get the most out of it—more than I would have expected anyone to get out of it.
And the OP doesn't seem too interested in linguistics: she doesn't really care about the issues raised in your answer and the comments.
22:51
She?
This is one of the three times ever that I have voted a question on Linguistics down.
@Alenanno Oh, you think it's a he?
@Cerberus I don't know? :D How/why did you feel it is a she?
@Alenanno Her name ends on -la...
But who knows.
I know many Russian diminutive masculine names end on -a.
Like vanilla.
Exactly... :D Who knows. :P
@Gigili Vanilla?
22:55
Uhum, that's what I said.
Yes but... Vanilla is a name?
No but it ends on -la, at least.
It's really cool, reminds me of cakes.
Sasha (саша) is the diminutive of Aleksandr (Александр) in Russian.
Anyway, time for me to go now... Will try to talk to y'all more next time, promised! :D
Night everyone!
22:59
Bye!
@Alenanno YOU PROMISED! Good night.

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