File: Hips.swf-(9.62 MB, 640x368, Hentai)
[_] Dat H Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:30 No.2521886
DAY AY AY DAY AY AY
Marked for deletion (old).
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:31 No.2521889
>newfags in charge of labelling flashes right
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:32 No.2521891
dat yee yee
dat yee yee
dat yee yee
dat yee yee
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:32 No.2521892
>guaranteed replies
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:35 No.2521896
only because it's schoolboy ctfu
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:36 No.2521898
Would be better without the shitty nigger music.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:38 No.2521901
>>2521898
You rather have the shitty French music?
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:39 No.2521904
>>2521886
Sauce? This animations bretty gud
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:44 No.2521915
>>2521904
wakfu.
good luck finding it though. its fucking scarce
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:46 No.2521916
>>2521901
Yes. At least it would be better than that awful shit in this flash.
>> [_] Fuckbitchesgetwaffles 09/09/14(Tue)21:47 No.2521917
>>2521891
Yee
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:48 No.2521918
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HvfNPs1Tc0w
got it
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:48 No.2521921
>>2521916
You've obviously never heard this with the original audio. It's objectively worse.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:50 No.2521923
>>2521921
I have actually heard the original, it's far better than the shit in this flash.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:54 No.2521931
>>2521923
Just watched original.
No, they sound like dudes doing falsetto
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:55 No.2521936
>>2521923
>having taste this bad
>being this french
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:56 No.2521937
>>2521931
Which still sounds better than this awful shit.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:57 No.2521938
>>2521937
ur mum sounds better
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)21:57 No.2521940
>>2521938
Nice argument, fag.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:01 No.2521946
>>2521915
Dofus, actually. They were all on YouTube in decent quality not too long ago, can't say if that's
still the case.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:05 No.2521951
>>2521936
french really have shit tastes
>> [_] meme 09/09/14(Tue)22:08 No.2521955
>>2521951
They're pretty good with avant-shit and arthouse stuff, but generally speaking their fashion has
been dated and music has been pretty absent.
I don't like nigger-hop but I don't mind it in certain contexts, usually as for humor/irony like
qt Mashiro WOPPIN it
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:15 No.2521965
>>2521918
So just to be sure, this is actual French, right? Like from Europe? This isn't from Africa or
Quebec or something?
Why does French sound so disgusting? I thought it was supposed to be the "language of love"! Even
Cantonese sounds better than this!
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:17 No.2521967
>>2521965
they're cartoons so of course they have strange voices
same as american cartoons and chinese cartoons
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:20 No.2521971
>>2521967
I appreciate what you mean--like, I know Americans don't actually sound like Spongebob (how could
anyone live there if everyone talked like that!)--but I don't just mean the voices, I'm also
offended by the structure of the speech. I don't even understand French and it's making me
cringe. Of course I also understand that any cheesy song might sound like that, but this language
just seems to have no "music" in it, even in the context of a song!
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:22 No.2521973
>...this language just seems to have no "music" in it, even in the context of a song!
Maybe if you were talking in English we could understand what you were getting at.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:24 No.2521976
>>2521971
I think it's a combination of cartoon voices, cheesy music, and hip hop speech. This is such a
small sample of the language too. Personally I think French sounds pretty good. This video is
just noise.
The dog girl is cute, though.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:25 No.2521979
>>2521973
Speech is often described with words like "harsh" or "melodious" in English, so I can't really
see what you don't understand.
What I'm listening to here reminds me more of the Arabic they speak in North Africa than anything
else: throaty in the consonants and yet full of unpleasantly nasal vowels.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:28 No.2521982
>>2521976
Ok, I guess I'll take that. I'm just wondering if maybe it's only French ACCENTS that sound
"suave" and "romantic," and not as much the language itself. But like I said, I agree with you
that there are probably too many interfering factors here.
And yes, I also agree that the dog girl is cute. This art is fucking top notch. I know
Francophone Europe has a strong tradition of comics and cartoons, and I guess it shows. I never
thought CG pseudo-2D animation would actually look good!
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:29 No.2521983
>>2521979
I see what you mean now. I would point you to this anons post >>2521976 . It's hardly a good
sample of what french sounds like as it's meant to be a hip hop battle in a cartoon with
ridiculous voices.
Personally, I like the way french sounds, but hate the way it spells words.
Perhaps listening to more of a pop track would better show off how the language sounds in song.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EyARHscb8mU
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:35 No.2521988
>>2521983
>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EyARHscb8mU
This is pretty catchy, nice.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:36 No.2521989
>>2521988
Yeah, Yelle is a pretty neat electropop band from France.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:37 No.2521990
>>2521983
Well, this certainly sounds much better. The consonants are still "mushy" to me, like I can
barely tell them from each other, but the cadence makes it sound more pleasant.
I guess that's my problem with French: I can't understand what they're saying at all--not even
the sounds, while I can tolerably recognize the words in writing (so I guess I have the opposite
feeling on that matter as you).
Interestingly, Haitian Creole is something like a language that corrects that disparity: much of
the language is intelligible as French, but it is written purely phonetically and the absurd
"implied" syllables of French are eliminated from both writing and speech (so in a sense it
sounds like someone speaking an ignorant transcription of French).
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:41 No.2521999
>>2521990
I don't know any French beyond
>omelette du fromage
so I don't even really bother to try and separate the words while listening to it.
Haitian Creole sounds pretty neat from that description (in regards to why I hate French and
their damn silent fucking 'x's just sprinkled around their language).
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:43 No.2522001
>>2521915
I belive that might be from that Dofus tales thing, just because i dont remember that part in
wakfu season 1 or 2
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:49 No.2522007
>>2521999
>damn silent fucking 'x's
Haha, I love those little x's! Words like "yeux"... so absurd, like why do you even have this
character in your alphabet? What is it for? It reminds me of the way the CCP randomly re-purposed
unused letters of the Latin alphabet for pinyin, even if they had almost nothing to do with the
sounds they used them to represent (looking at you, q, x).
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:53 No.2522011
>>2521999
>in regards to why I hate French and their damn silent fucking 'x's just sprinkled around their
language
There are tons of silent letters in French like that. The general rule is that the last letter or
couple of letters of most words is silent. If you keep that in mind, you're pretty much set. For
example, pars and part are both par (like English), partent is part (like English) and partaient
is partaaaaaaayyy.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:56 No.2522013
>>2522011
Yeah, I know they have a lot of silent letters. I took an "Exploring world languages" class many
years ago back in junior high because it taught a bit of Japanese, but one of the languages we
also learned a bit about was French.
I think French sounds pretty darn neat, but man, do I hate reading it.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)22:56 No.2522014
>>2521965
You know what is funny is France has adopted many English words while Quebecers are snobby shits
who want it to remain pure.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)23:02 No.2522019
>>2522011
Just so you know, the trick is "only pronounce a consonant if there is a vowel somewhere after
it." That will help you out more than the ambiguous "skip the last few letters." That's why
putting an 'e' after the t turns "part (sounds like par)" into "partent (sounds like part)."
This is mostly just useful for not embarrassing yourself ordering food at restaurants and such
(like, knowing that "steak frites" is pronounced "steak freet").
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)23:04 No.2522020
>>2522019
Hmm, nice tip! I think I'll try reading some French and see how much I remember.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)23:04 No.2522021
>>2522019
Interesting. I'll try to keep that in mind if I ever find myself in a french restaurant of some
kind...or in that one part of Canada.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)23:09 No.2522027
>>2522021
Well you tend to see French-derived words on menus at most "American" restaurants these days
anyway. Like, steak frites is literally just a slab of meat served with french fries, the
quintessentially American food. And you'll know how to say "foix gras" or "filet" and order a
"Bordeaux" or "Merlot."
Like, actually, we say these words pretty much every day. Half of our food-words are French and
that's just the way it is.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)23:11 No.2522029
>>2521983
>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EyARHscb8mU
is the video for Obama's Victory Dance a parody of this?
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)23:15 No.2522037
>>2522027
I can honestly say, that outside of the word "filet" and maybe "merlot" I have never used those
words in real life. I've typed out "foie gras" when California banned it and /ck/ was beside
themselves in anger over something maybe 1% of them ever tasted.
I've personally never seen "steak friets" anywhere, but then again the fanciest restaurant I've
ever been to was some steak house I went to when my dad got a promotion while I was in high
school so that could be why.
I know we have a lot of lone words from all over the world, including from France, but I hardly
think it's so pervasive that we say french loan words every day.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)23:17 No.2522039
>>2522029
>Dance, edited, directed by Nathan Barnatt
Done by the same guy, wouldn't call it a parody, it's just how the guy likes to do dances. Check
out his stuff, it's all like that.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)23:26 No.2522047
>>2522037
no we do. Besides most food words, such as pork, beef, restaurant,many of our administrative
words such as mayor, lieutenant, and chief, all come either straight from French or from Latin
via France. This influence comes from French was the language of diplomacy and all the nobles in
England were french or had to speak french and also the general proximity of the languages French
and English.
>> [_] Anonymous 09/09/14(Tue)23:26 No.2522049
>>2522039
Oh, I didn't realise it was the same guy just from the embedded link.