God...
Comments
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Do you realize that you don't "think" in words, words are tools to use when conveying our thoughts. Which is how other languages exist, as long as what we do gets across to the person we are communicating with, that's all that matters. So in reality no word is related to any other, the combination of sounds used to convey a thought is different in every language and therefore shouldn't be compared as similar unless that was the intention of the statement. The similar spellings of the word "dog" and "God" don't apply in other languages so how can you compare the two different meanings of the sounds just by one small example? That's like asking one person if they like pie, they say no, and then you assume most everyone doesn't like pie without further proving the statement.
/End random nonesense -
Do you realize that you don't "think" in words, words are tools to use when conveying our thoughts. Which is how other languages exist, as long as what we do gets across to the person we are communicating with, that's all that matters. So in reality no word is related to any other, the combination of sounds used to convey a thought is different in every language and therefore shouldn't be compared as similar unless that was the intention of the statement. The similar spellings of the word "dog" and "God" don't apply in other languages so how can you compare the two different meanings of the sounds just by one small example? That's like asking one person if they like pie, they say no, and then you assume most everyone doesn't like pie without further proving the statement.
/End random nonesense
You're completely right. -
Do you realize that you don't "think" in words, words are tools to use when conveying our thoughts. Which is how other languages exist, as long as what we do gets across to the person we are communicating with, that's all that matters. So in reality no word is related to any other, the combination of sounds used to convey a thought is different in every language and therefore shouldn't be compared as similar unless that was the intention of the statement. The similar spellings of the word "dog" and "God" don't apply in other languages so how can you compare the two different meanings of the sounds just by one small example? That's like asking one person if they like pie, they say no, and then you assume most everyone doesn't like pie without further proving the statement.
/End random nonesense
tl;dr so idgaf -
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