380
submitted 4 days ago by Zagorath@aussie.zone to c/sigh_fi@quokk.au

TranscriptionA series of Tweets by @Foone, each replying to the last:

Here's the question I always have with universal translators in sci-fi: how do they know when to stop translation? Like say an alien asks about deserts on earth, and the human lists "the sahara desert, gobi desert and kalahari desert" Alien: You just said "desert" six times.

("Sahara" is Arabic for "desert". "Gobi" is Mongolian for "desert", and "Kalahari" is Tswana for "desert")

Man, the aliens are going to think we're so bad at naming. Cause really, aren't we?
Brit: Behold, the beautiful River Avon!
Alien: Ahh, the River River. You humans have such a knack for naming things.

"Here we are in Chad, looking upon the mighty Lake Chad!"
"Ahh yes, the land of Lake, bordering the Lake Lake. Another fine human name. "

"And here's Nyanza Lac, in Burundi. As you can tell by the fact that it's named Lake Lake in Bantu & French, it's a la... actually this one's a city. A city named Lake Lake"

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[-] Zagorath@aussie.zone 7 points 4 days ago

Without actually doing any research or analysis, I feel like in English we'd say "the Sahara" slightly more often than "the Sahara desert", but both are pretty common. I don't think I would ever just say "the Avon", but I would just say "the Thames". So I think it comes down to how large the object looms in my mind, whether it feels acceptable not to include the descriptor.

this post was submitted on 17 Oct 2025
380 points (100.0% liked)

Sigh-Fi

762 readers
4 users here now

A generalist Sci-Fi meme community.

The Memiverse:
!90s_memes@quokk.au
!y2k_memes@quokk.au
!philosophymemes@quokk.au

founded 2 months ago
MODERATORS