[Vocabulary] What "false friends" do you know?

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a_vee

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I'd like to know more about which words have given students trouble due to their similarity in English. What false friends have you encountered? Which languages are they from?

For example:

English embarrassed -> Spanish embarazada


  • Embarrassed means humiliated



  • Embarazada means pregnant

Thanks!

(I hope this is an acceptable category for this message.)
 

birdeen's call

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The Polish word for good luck is "fart". :)
 

5jj

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I believe that if you are constipado in Spanish it's your nose that's blocked.
 

TheParser

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***** NOT A TEACHER *****


Hello, a_vee:

1. I have noticed that Spanish speakers become very upset if you tell them that they are not "educated." For

English speakers, that refers to your level of formal education. But I understand that for Spanish speakers, it means

something like: you have bad manners/ you are uncultured.

2. I think that some English speakers would be astonished to learn that "poisson" in French means a fish

3. And this is not a false friend, but I have to tell you. I once told some Spanish speakers that I like to walk and that

I measure the distance with a pedometer. I explained that it consisted of two parts: pedo + meter. They all laughed.

I learned that "pedo" in Spanish slang is the involuntary release of gas.
 
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SoothingDave

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And "pregunta" is a question.

I thought "poisson" was "fish." Is it a custom to give fish?
 

TheParser

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I thought "poisson" was "fish." Is it a custom to give fish?


Yes, you are completely correct. I have edited my post. (By the way, I think that in some cultures, people might be

delighted to receive a fish. A nice big tuna, for example.)
 

SoothingDave

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I have been told that ordering fish is very tricky in France. Cause "poisson" and "poison" are very close.
 

riquecohen

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Pretender in Portuguese means to intend. More than one of my students has told me that he "pretends to be a doctor."
 

a_vee

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English soap
Spanish sopa

Soap= the typical hand, clothes and dish washing product
Sopa= hot liquid food usually made with meat and/or vegetables
 

5jj

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Native speakers of English who would like the window open and translate 'I am hot' word for word into quite a few languages are suggesting that they are ready for sexual action
 

BrunaBC

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I'd like to know more about which words have given students trouble due to their similarity in English. What false friends have you encountered? Which languages are they from?

For example:

English embarrassed -> Spanish embarazada


  • Embarrassed means humiliated



  • Embarazada means pregnant

Thanks!

(I hope this is an acceptable category for this message.)


Brazilian students often misinterpret the word embarassed as uncombed:

Cabelo embarassado = uncombed hair.
 
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