Кашкавал (kashkaval)
It’s funny how everyone answers the question, yet you still don’t know which language it is
A loosely moderated place to ask open-ended questions
If your post meets the following criteria, it's welcome here!
Looking for support?
Looking for a community?
~Icon~ ~by~ ~@Double_A@discuss.tchncs.de~
Кашкавал (kashkaval)
It’s funny how everyone answers the question, yet you still don’t know which language it is
Cheese
Queso!
Eeschay
I read the title like “What is Chinese called in you language” and got confused by people’s answers.
“Ost”
Formaggio
Brie, gruyere, swiss, provolone, cheddar...
cheese
치즈 (chi-jeu)
우와 lemmy에 한국인이..ㄷㄷ 반갑습니다
Nice to meet you, too. Thanks to 세종대왕 (Sejong Dae Wang, King Sejong) for creating a Hangeul, a stronger phonetic system. I look forward to its use for a long time to come.
Is that a Chinese form of the English word. Cheese? Or is it Japanese?
The text is Korean, so neither.
Japanese has cute curvy symbols interleaved with some BIG scary symbols.
Ok
IIRC, the food, therefore the word, was introduced to Korea. It is a transliteration. Like "tae-kwon-do" is a transliteration from the Korean 태권도 (taegwondo).
Note: Korean is not my first language. It is first non-English script I've managed to learn to read and write and makes me happy every time I interact with it.
My read/spoken Korean is atrocious and barely functions.
Kaas
Käse
Queso
Ost
Fromage !
Сыр
Juusto
Paneer
Chäs
Queijo
Käse
brânză
Sajt
Found the Wisconsinite.
Ok maybe not but we like to think so.