Never heard anyone say 緑の色 (midori-no-iro).
緑色 (midori-iro) is like saying "green-coloured" instead of "green" and sure comes up, but saying midori isn't green because it is techically a noun and not a adjective is wrong at best.
And I'm not sure what "other meanings" of midori you are referring to.
You hold out your pointer and thumb fingers parallel to each other (this is the letter "G"), then position them next to your mouth. Then, wave them away from your mouth a couple times. That's "green".
“SuD” would mean “to be green, yellow, or blue.”
“SuDqu’” would be akin to “probably green” or “very blue.”
“SuDqu’ ’ej wov” is like “light green” and “SuDqu’ ’ej” is like dark green. With literal translations for the last too being more like “very blue and bright” and “very blue and dark” respectively.
In Klingon anyway. Klingon doesn’t really have a word for “green.” Technically- it doesn’t really have “colors” in the same way as most languages- and they tend to be not well defined save to say that one thing is “like” the color of a known object.
cherokee, ᎢᏤᎢᏳᏍᏗ, i tse i yu s di, itseiyusdi
idk if the cherokee letters will work for everyone (or even anyone who isnt cherokee lel)
it may just show as boxes or just be blank :(
I didn't even realize there was a Cherokee alphabet. Which seems rather stupid now that I think about it.
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It was all going well until we got past the G-with-a-donald-trump-haircut, and then suddenly we're into hieroglyphic levels of lettering
the Cherokee syllabary is uh, fairly odd for an english speaker to look at.
We have 85 characters. 6 represent our 6 vowels; a e i o u v
all of the other characters in the syllabary represent a consonant sound attached to a vowel and its layed out in rows with the top row being the vowels and the next row being vowels + g so ga ge gi go gu gv, then ha he hi ho hu hv and so on for every combination with no character being a consonant (except for Ꮝ, Ꮝ just means s and is the only character that is only a consonant sound)
I was referring to how the first line is the vowels and then the rest of the lines are consonant + vowel (in layout not in how you actually write it)
Sorry for any confusion.
I was referring to how the first line is the vowels and then the rest of the lines are consonant plus vowel (in layout not in how you actually write it)
Sorry for any confusion.
緑色 (midori-iro) is like saying "green-coloured" instead of "green" and sure comes up, but saying midori isn't green because it is techically a noun and not a adjective is wrong at best.
And I'm not sure what "other meanings" of midori you are referring to.
All characters in that show live up to their names
All characters in that show live up to their names
So... it could mean Green Shop
I'm going to put "green", because I speak English only like a scrub.
Pronounced kinda like Ryan, but with a g in front of the r.
“SuDqu’” would be akin to “probably green” or “very blue.”
“SuDqu’ ’ej wov” is like “light green” and “SuDqu’ ’ej” is like dark green. With literal translations for the last too being more like “very blue and bright” and “very blue and dark” respectively.
In Klingon anyway. Klingon doesn’t really have a word for “green.” Technically- it doesn’t really have “colors” in the same way as most languages- and they tend to be not well defined save to say that one thing is “like” the color of a known object.
idk if the cherokee letters will work for everyone (or even anyone who isnt cherokee lel)
it may just show as boxes or just be blank :(
.
It was all going well until we got past the G-with-a-donald-trump-haircut, and then suddenly we're into hieroglyphic levels of lettering
We have 85 characters. 6 represent our 6 vowels; a e i o u v
all of the other characters in the syllabary represent a consonant sound attached to a vowel and its layed out in rows with the top row being the vowels and the next row being vowels + g so ga ge gi go gu gv, then ha he hi ho hu hv and so on for every combination with no character being a consonant (except for Ꮝ, Ꮝ just means s and is the only character that is only a consonant sound)
Sorry for any confusion.
Sorry for any confusion.