An example of what I mean:

I, in China, told an English speaking Chinese friend I needed to stop off in the bathroom to “take a shit.”

He looked appalled and after I asked why he had that look, he asked what I was going to do with someone’s shit.

I had not laughed so hard in a while, and it totally makes sense.

I explained it was an expression for pooping, and he comes back with, “wouldn’t that be giving a shit?”

I then got to explain that to give a shit means you care and I realized how fucked some of our expressions are.

What misunderstandings made you laugh?

  • Yaky@slrpnk.net
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    16 days ago

    Slightly morbid academic one.

    My computer science professor (who is from Eastern Europe) was explaining an algorithm that he and another professor (from South America) developed. The algorithm processes a graph by first creating a “frame” around it. Since English was not the first language for either of them, the first word they thought of was karkas (каркас, frame in Russian). English word “carcass” sounds pretty much the same, right? but only later, after the work was submitted, they realized they were creating a dead body around the graph.

  • Dumbkid@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    16 days ago

    Talking to someone from Korea in VRChat and they only knew some English.

    Someone said Cancer and they got all excited saying they knew that word, it means leage of legends.

  • Lauchs@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    About 20 years ago I spent the year after high school in Europe. Went backpacking to Italy with friends, one of whom was absurdly handsome, not all that bright and quite forward.

    Well, in Rome we met a group of pretty girls who spoke no English but with sign language and a phrase book we figured they were visiting Rome as part of their high school graduation fun. Got a number and promised to meet them in Naples.

    Fast forward, we arrive in the evening in Naples with no plan or place to stay hoping to connect with these girls.

    We find a payphone, handsome fella grabs it and starts dialing. And then we hear:

    “Uhhhh. Ci? Is… Uhhh. Shit. Is your daughter there? Your daughter? Hot daughter? Phone? Fuck. IS YOUR DAUGHTER THERE? I’m the guy from Rome? FUCK!”

  • ThePowerOfGeek@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    Years ago, when I first moved to America from the UK, I was working in a pretty quiet office that backed on to a field. One day mouse appeared, freaked out a couple of the gals in the office, and then it ran and hid under an office cube.

    I investigated to see where it was hiding, but it was pretty dark down there. So I asked if either of the gals had a torch. They both got an expression of wide-eyed horror, which confused me for a few seconds.

    Then I realized that torch had a different term in America. So I corrected myself and asked if either of them had a flashlight. And they looked very relieved. They thought I was going to get an old school torch and try to smoke the mouse out or set it on fire, and probably set the whole cube on fire in the process.

    • Daeraxa@lemmy.ml
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      17 days ago

      I was in North Carolina for work recently and one lady was talking about her local brewery where she could “grab her growler” and head over there. Took me a while to recover from laughing at that one.

        • Daeraxa@lemmy.ml
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          17 days ago

          From a 2003 entry in urban dictionary:

          • Growler

          Female pubic region, having gone into a state of repair/part of male mating call

          Get your growler out

        • Daeraxa@lemmy.ml
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          17 days ago

          Oh of course yeah, if it doubt then it is a safe bet to assume that. From a 2003 entry in urban dictionary:

          • Growler

          Female pubic region, having gone into a state of repair/part of male mating call

          Get your growler out

          • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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            17 days ago

            Only Growler I have is from a brewpub that doesn’t exist anymore. They did gangbusters business in a walkable downtown area selling pints over the bar. They decided to move across town to the part where pedestrians never go to focus on retail sales of packaged beer and were out of business within 6 months.

      • NotSteve_@lemmy.ca
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        16 days ago

        Is growler not used in the US the same way? It’s a style of jug in Canada most often for beer, wine or cider

  • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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    16 days ago

    Not exactly a misunderstanding but… my dad (a professor here in the U.S.) had a close friend and colleague, a Spaniard, who would go off to an intensive language summer school thing every year to teach American college students whatever esoteric Spanish literature was his specialty and only spoke Spanish the entire time.

    Whenever he got back, he would spontaneously start talking to us in Spanish, suddenly realized we didn’t speak Spanish, then restart again in English. It didn’t embarrass him or anything, but it amused me when he did it.

    • garbagebagel@lemmy.world
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      15 days ago

      Oh man this happens to my mom all the time, in both languages too. She’ll speak English to people in mexico and Spanish to people in Canada. Cracks me up every time, but sucks when we’re trying to pass as locals in mexico.

      I had a similar experience when I was learning English where I was trying to give something to my friend, eventually I realized I was just repeating a number (10) at her. Ten means “take this” in spanish.

  • fonji@sopuli.xyz
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    15 days ago

    I’ve had a few weird exchanges with my wife, although we both are native french speakers.

    Turns out the word we use in Switzerland for prune (the fruit) is only used for the dried version of the same fruit in France. Perfect set up for a strange conversation about baking until we found out.

      • fonji@sopuli.xyz
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        15 days ago

        Ah! You know what? I looked for a translation of the damned word… without trying to translate the word for plum, as it is obviously the same word in my head 😅

        Thank you for letting me know 😂

  • someguy3@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    He looked appalled and after I asked why he had that look, he asked what I was going to do with someone’s shit.

    This is the shit.

  • jj4211@lemmy.world
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    16 days ago

    I heard a story about how in world war 2 British and American generals got into an argument about the importance of a certain matter.

    The British thought the matter needed to be tabled and the Americans were shocked and thought it must not be tabled.

    Took some time for them to realize “tabling” an issue meant the exact opposite in America and UK

    Since hearing that story the exact expression came up for me online once and on a work call once with British and American speakers.

    No foreign language, but still.

  • rudyharrelson@lemmy.radio
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    17 days ago

    Not my story, but one a friend told me.

    Someone had the misconception that there was a huge, huge sector of labor dedicated to working in cemetaries in the USA. Like almost everyone knew at least one person who worked at a cemetary. This misconception arose due to the ubiquity of the term “graveyard shift” regardless of the actual job being performed.

  • icogniito@lemmy.zip
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    16 days ago

    Well to preface this, 6 months ago I moved to Japan to study Japanese.

    During a trip to Tokyo I randomly ended up talking to a group of salarymen on the way to the same restaurant at me in akihabara. After a while they asked me if I live in Japan and I answered yes and then proceeded to say 日本にしんでいる instead of 日本に住んでいる, for those who don’t speak Japanese, I accidentally said I am dying in Japan instead of I am living in Japan which is surprisingly close pronounciation wise lol. This was met with loads of laughs

    • y0kai@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      16 days ago

      Haha i am just starting to learn Japanese and I gotta say its challenging but so fun. I love the grammar, at least as far as I understand it at this point. Like Yoda’s grammar it is.

    • tunetardis@lemmy.ca
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      16 days ago

      My favourite story like that is from my dad, who was WW2 vet. After the war, he wound up in Japan and attended a conference where someone stepped up to the podium and introduced himself as General McArthur’s Chief Advisor. Or at least he thought he did…

      The word for advisor is komon. The word for asshole or anus is koumon. Basically, you just hold out the first o out slightly longer and it switches to the other word.

  • naught101@lemmy.world
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    16 days ago

    This happens within English too… I’m a climate scientist, and I was working in consulting talking to some financial risk people. They were asking us for a “conservative” risk figures. In climate science that would naturally mean a low warming projection. For them it meant being conservative in their appetite for risk, so actually more like a worst-case example. That one took a couple of heated meetings to figure out.

    • y0kai@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      16 days ago

      And here I initially thought politics when I heard climate change and conservative in the same sentence. As in, “Climate change is not seen as a risk to conservatives.”

      • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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        16 days ago

        “Conservatives believe it’s caused by earth’s natural processes, therefore in order to explain the results we’re seeing please consult vulcanologists and geologists because apparently it’s multiple apocalyptic events not just the one”

  • naught101@lemmy.world
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    16 days ago

    Our Austrian exchange student told us “My sister wants to be a wet”.

    The v sound is hard for German speakers

    • Maalus@lemmy.world
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      16 days ago

      No it isn’t, they use it all the time - “wenn, was, wo” all read as “v”. The “double u” sound is the thing that trips them up - it’s common in slavic languages, not so much in germanic ones. For slavic the polish ł or russian “lambda” symbol sound like the “w” in wet. Could also be the accent, but I would wager it was more wires being crossed and saying “wet”, instead of a problem with pronounciation

        • Maalus@lemmy.world
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          16 days ago

          Yeah, could also be that, but OP said “told us”. Which means they used “w”. Unless the sister made a mistake too. But then again, why would she say that in english. Vet in german is “Tierarzt” which isn’t close to the english “veterinarian”.

          • tetris11@lemmy.world
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            16 days ago

            I’m just saying I’ve seen plenty germans text that misspelling. “are we going to the wet tomorrow?” would be a classic misspelling of a German writing English

  • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    I had sort of the reverse, working with German-speaking coworkers. I used the term “schpiel” to refer to a long talk I was going to give. This led to a moment of confusion because that’s not what the word means in German. It means “game” or “play” and in the context they thought I meant to imply that I was not taking the speech seriously, or maybe wasn’t going to be completely honest. Almost like a con. That’s probably how the loanword first entered the English language, and its meaning has drifted over time.

    • TheUsualButBlaBlaBla@lemmy.world
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      17 days ago

      The word spiel “schpiel” is of Yiddish origin. It comes from the Yiddish word shpil (שפּיל), which means “play” or “game” same as German.

      • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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        17 days ago

        Yiddish and German are like Spanish and Portuguese. They are of course different languages, but there is a lot of overlap in vocabulary. I don’t know which language was the vector for the word.