What is “cheese” called in your language?
What is “cheese” called in your language?
For me, it’s “queso”. 🧀
What is “cheese” called in your language?
For me, it’s “queso”. 🧀
Cheese
Yup. Though we call cheese sauce queso.
As someone who grew up bilingual, this has caused so much unnecessary confusion in my life. Maybe not queso so much but salsa, which is the word for any kind of sauce in Spanish. If I’m running on autopilot and my wife asks me to pick up tomato salsa I will almost invariably get spaghetti sauce. It’s fucked!
Käse
Is this Swiss or Austrian?
Ost!
That's Swedish isn't it?
My dad had this brilliant idea for everyone to say "cheese" in the local language every time he took a selfie of us when we were travelling around Europe. Let's just say even though that was years ago in my childhood, I can look through that album and know instantly which photos were taken in Sweden!
I was referring to Danish, but indeed it seems the same spelling also applies for Norwegian and Swedish. But quite different pronounciations, I would think. In Danish, you would say "åst" with an "å"- which everyone naturally knows how to pronounce of course.
Haha, yes, that's brilliant. We even do that here from time to time. One indeed does look dapper saying "OOOST".
« Fromage ».
Oh, Dexter!
Ah biblioteque
Сир
Syr
Ukrainian? Or no? That’s so cool!
Ukrainian
Käse (Germany)
Kaas.
Fun fact: New York was founded by the Dutch. A curse word for a Dutch guy was "Jan Kaas", which changed over the years to "Yankees".
Fun fact: folk etymologies are always lies.
I've also heard that 'gringo' derives from people telling green-clad soldiers to go away (green, go)
I've heard that 'fuck' is an acronym for 'fornication under consent of the king'
All nonsense of course.
Not all etymologies are lies, words do have origins.
Just because you heard some stories which were false doesn't mean all stories are false.
On this wiki page it is explained that linguistics do believe the word Yankee comes from Jan Kees or Jan Kaas. It explains it can also come from the name Janneke, which is a new to me.
Kaas 🇳🇱
Kaas 🇿🇦
Kaas!🇧🇪
Gazta (in Basque)
Fwomaj
I though you where not serious, but in doubt I had a look. TIL!
Fromage!
芝士 (it's pronounced similar to cheese in English)
In Mandarin: zhishi
In Cantonese: zisi
Ser (in Polish.Pronounced similarly to "sir" in"yes sir")
happy cake day!
Chääs
Hi fellow swiss german;)
Hoi :)
Sajt
Bojler eladó
Fodrász vagyok
Csere ps3-ra ?
Das ist Käse.
Btw: This saying is used in case something is stupid :)
Sir
I shall start calling mine Sir Cheese.
Ost
cheese, queso, or queijo
¡queso!
My language is already taken so here's another language where I know the word: 奶酪 (nailao), first character meaning milk, second one I had to look up for the definition: "semi-solid food made from milk"
Kaas
formaggio 🤌
Queijo (PT-BR)
peynir
In NZ English... "Cheese". Though we do have a term "tasty" for a 12-18 month aged cheddar cheese that I don't think is commonly used elsewhere. At the supermarket you're likely to see "mild" or "tasty" not "cheddar".
In Māori, "tīhi". It's a transliteration of "cheese" into a language that has neither a "ch" nor a "s" sound.
So it's labelled "tasty cheese"?
That suggests that you can only buy cheddar there. No other types of cheese.
Other types of cheese are available, it's just that cheddar is not clearly labeled as such since it's kind of the "default".
E.g.
Syr
hello wildcats
You know
Ostur
🇮🇸
🇮🇸
Keju
queijo
Paneer
brânză
natively, cheese and queso
also, queijo in my third language, and formaggio, fromage, ser, сыр, and queixo (not fluent)
then, in the languages i wanna know more of: チーズ、奶酪/起司,جبنة
ayyyy جبنة twins!!
We call it the same thing as butter. Shit gets confusing sometimes
Hours upon hours of pain and farts
сыр!
Kéés (Texels Dutch, my wife’s home dialect)
"formatge" here!
Spent time in Hungary they call cheese sajt.
Jbin or jboun depending of the region in tunisia
Peynir 🧀
🇹🇷
Fediverse'te bir türk gördüğüme sevindim.
Eh, tek akıllı ben değilim zaten.
Bob. We call him Bob
my parents’ language, we say 奶酪 or جبنة
growing up, from others it’d be ser or queso.
in my Grandpa’s language would say: גבינה but he also spoke arabic
(i only know a little Chinese and Arabic. i can write a little in Chinese but can’t write in Arabic at all.)
Juust (estonian)
Queso
Cáis
Ser
Juusto
Brânză
چیز
Сыр (syr)